Cases for Courses

Resources for teaching nonprofit management and strategy.

Cases for Courses »

NEWSLETTERS & ALERTS

Stay in touch with the latest Bridgespan Group research, case studies, articles and recruiting information.

National Council on Aging: Widening the Net for Medicare Drug Benefits

Published Date: 2006-05-01
Author(s): William Foster  Samantha Levine   

National Council on Aging: Widening the Net for Medicare Drug Benefits William Foster and Samantha Levine A quarter of Medicare beneficiaries forgo medications due to cost. That proportion rises to nearly 45 percent for low-income seniors lacking drug coverage. Improving this situation is a priority of the National Council on Aging (NCOA), a nonprofit organization which has been working since 1950 to enhance the health and independence of older persons. NCOA’s leadership team watched with great interest in December 2003 as Congress passed the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act, which included a drug benefit called Medicare Part D. They were excited by the new benefit’s promise for bringing prescriptions within low-income seniors’ reach. However, experience told them that enrollment would not be a simple matter—nor one the organization could tackle on its own. In early 2005, with funding from The Atlantic Philanthropies, NCOA teamed up with the Bridgespan Group to develop a strategy for enrolling the greatest possible number of low-income seniors. Together they determined the true size of the challenge and researched agencies across the country to document strong enrollment practices. They then laid out a plan for sharing those practices with other agencies and for influencing funders—government and private—so that they could use their resources in the most effective ways. www.ncoa.org 

To read the full article, please download the PDF version.

Download: NCOA-Case-Study.pdf(2)


Email this to a Friend!

Comments:

Send us your comments!

 
 
 

« Top of page

Conversation Starters

Beneath the capital markets' continuing gyrations lurks another phenomenon foreshadowing what may be an even worse economic crisis...a critical lack of qualified teachers. Add your voice to the conversation >>

What should the high school of the future look like? Houston-based education reform leader Kelly Trlica suggests that it means the elimination of Carnegie Units, higher standards and more personalization. What do you think will define the high school of the future? >>