MinnesotaCare

MinnesotaCare

Author: DIANE Publishing Company

Publisher: DIANE Publishing

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 108

ISBN-13: 9780788103803

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Seemed Like a Good Idea

Seemed Like a Good Idea

Author: Mark Pauly

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2022-07-28

Total Pages: 425

ISBN-13: 1316519031

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Informs stakeholders about which changes in health care provision and financing work and which don't. Provides evidence on the evidence.


An Affordable Step Toward Universal Coverage

An Affordable Step Toward Universal Coverage

Author: DIANE Publishing Company

Publisher: DIANE Publishing

Published: 1995-10

Total Pages: 70

ISBN-13: 0788123661

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Contains the Minnesota Health Care Commission's recommendations for a financing strategy to improve coverage for uninsured Minnesotans. Includes recommendations for: insurance reform, purchasing pools, subsidized coverage, freeloader penalty, community health insurance pools, public health & local government programs, prevention, evaluation, & a financing model. Charts, tables & graphs.


Big Med

Big Med

Author: David Dranove

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2022-11-18

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13: 022682392X

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There is little debate that health care in the United States is in need of reform. But where should those improvements begin? With insurers? Drug makers? The doctors themselves? In Big Med, David Dranove and Lawton Robert Burns argue that we’re overlooking the most ubiquitous cause of our costly and underperforming system: megaproviders, the expansive health care organizations that have become the face of American medicine. Your local hospital is likely part of one. Your doctors, too. And the megaproviders are bad news for your health and your wallet. Drawing on decades of combined expertise in health care consolidation, Dranove and Burns trace Big Med’s emergence in the 1990s, followed by its swift rise amid false promises of scale economies and organizational collaboration. In the decades since, megaproviders have gobbled up market share and turned independent physicians into salaried employees of big bureaucracies, while delivering on none of their early promises. For patients this means higher costs and lesser care. Meanwhile, physicians report increasingly low morale, making it all but impossible for most systems to implement meaningful reforms. In Big Med, Dranove and Burns combine their respective skills in economics and management to provide a nuanced explanation of how the provision of health care has been corrupted and submerged under consolidation. They offer practical recommendations for improving competition policies that would reform megaproviders to actually achieve the efficiencies and quality improvements they have long promised. This is an essential read for understanding the current state of the health care system in America—and the steps urgently needed to create an environment of better care for all of us.