The Health Care Mess: How We Got Into It and What It Will Take To Get OutHarvard University Press, 2009 M06 30 - 307 pages In this important new book, Julius Richmond and Rashi Fein recount the fraught history of health care in America since the 1960s, showing how the promises of medical advances have not been matched either by financing or by delivery of care. As a new crisis looms, and the existing patchwork of insurance is poised to unravel, American leaders must again take up the question of health care. This book brings the voice of reason and the promise of compromise to that debate. |
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Page xii
... patients, physicians, and other health professionals, as well as to all those in the private and public sectors who pay higher and higher premiums and allocate larger and larger budgets for ever more re- stricted coverage. This book ...
... patients, physicians, and other health professionals, as well as to all those in the private and public sectors who pay higher and higher premiums and allocate larger and larger budgets for ever more re- stricted coverage. This book ...
Page 1
... patients, physicians, legislators, and others who encounter or fund American medicine. We do not believe that the “mess” we are in is preordained. Neither do we believe that it is self-correcting. The American health care sys- tem, the ...
... patients, physicians, legislators, and others who encounter or fund American medicine. We do not believe that the “mess” we are in is preordained. Neither do we believe that it is self-correcting. The American health care sys- tem, the ...
Page 9
... patient with a random illness met a randomly selected physi- cian, the patient had only a fifty-fifty chance of benefiting from the en- counter. Those odds increased remarkably over the century, and that increase began in the early ...
... patient with a random illness met a randomly selected physi- cian, the patient had only a fifty-fifty chance of benefiting from the en- counter. Those odds increased remarkably over the century, and that increase began in the early ...
Page 24
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Contents
1 | |
7 | |
Part II In the Wake of Medicare and Medicaid 19651985 | 53 |
Part III Moving to the Present 19852005 | 127 |
Part IV Anticipating the Next Revolution 2005 and Beyond | 189 |
Notes | 265 |
Index | 295 |
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Common terms and phrases
AAMC academic administration American Medical American Medical Association approach behavior benefits budget changes cians clinical Clinton Committee concern Congress corporatization costs decades delivery system disease dollars economic efforts employers enacted enrollment expansion faculty members federal financing Flexner Report for-profit funds Furthermore growth Harvard Medical School health care system health expenditures health maintenance organization health policy health sector health services HMOs hospital impact important improve income increase individuals Institute of Medicine institutions insurance program issues legislation malpractice managed care medi Medicaid medical education medical malpractice medical schools medical students Medicare Medicare and Medicaid medicine ment million national health insurance NEJM Nevertheless not-for-profit organization patients percent PGPs physi physicians political population premium President problems proposal public health Rashi Rashi Fein Report role single payer social insurance specialty subscribers surance teaching tion uninsured United various