Health Policy Issues: An Economic Perspective uses concise, topical chapters to provide a comprehensive overview of the forces influencing healthcare financing and delivery. Concerns over health equity and the rise in healthcare costs are just a few of the timely and vital issues that are discussed through the lens of economics. Each chapter includes a clear explanation of the topic, diagrams, and charts to aid comprehension, and a summary and discussion questions at the end. This eighth edition has been revised to reflect the most recent research and data, as well as changes in laws and government policies. A new chapter compares the US health system to those of five European countries.
New and updated content includes coverage of:
• Current Medicare proposals
• COVID’s effect on medical services delivery
• Medicaid effectiveness
• Strategies for addressing the physician shortage
• Affordable Care Act updates
Health Policy Issues shows how the economic approach to healthcare policy is important not only for understanding the structural and dynamic forces pressing for change in healthcare but also for explaining why the health system has evolved to its current state.
Author(s): Paul J. Feldstein, Glenn Melnick
Edition: 8
Publisher: AUPHA/HAP Book
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 799
City: Chicago
Front Matter
Brief Contents
Detailed Contents
List of Exhibits
Preface
Chapter 1: The Rise of Medical Expenditures
Chapter 2: How Much Should We Spend on Medical Care?
Chapter 3: Do More Medical Expenditures Produce Better Health?
Chapter 4: In Whose Interest Does the Physician Act?
Chapter 5: Rationing Medical Services
Chapter 6: How Much Health Insurance Should Everyone Have?
Chapter 7: Why Are Those Who Most Need Health Insurance Least Able to Buy It?
Chapter 8: Medicare
Chapter 9: Medicaid
Chapter 10: How Does Medicare Pay Physicians?
Chapter 11: The Shortage of Physicians and Emerging Solutions
Chapter 12: Why Is Getting into Medical School So Difficult?
Chapter 13: The Changing Practice of Medicine
Chapter 14: The Economic Outlook for Registered Nurses
Chapter 15: Do Nonprofit Hospitals Behave Differently from For-Profit Hospitals?
Chapter 16: Competition Among Hospitals: Does It Raise or Lower Costs?
Chapter 17: The Future Role of Hospitals
Chapter 18: Cost Shifting
Chapter 19: Can Price Controls Limit Medical Expenditure Increases?
Chapter 20: The Evolution of Managed Care
Chapter 21: Has Competition Been Tried - and Has It Failed - to Improve the U.S. Healthcare System?
Chapter 22: Comparative Effectiveness Research
Chapter 23: Who Bears the Cost of Employee Health Benefits?
Chapter 24: The High Price of Prescription Drugs
Chapter 25: Ensuring Safety and Efficacy of New Drugs: Too Much of a Good Thing?
Chapter 26: Why Are Prescription Drugs Less Expensive Overseas?
Chapter 27: The Pharmaceutical Industry: A Public Policy Dilemma
Chapter 28: Should Kidneys and Other Organs Be Bought and Sold?
Chapter 29: Should Profits in Healthcare Be Prohibited?
Chapter 30: The Role of Government in Medical Care
Chapter 31: Health Associations and the Political Marketplace
Chapter 32: Medical Research, Medical Education, Alcohol Consumption, and Pollution: Who Should Pay?
Appendix: Inframarginal Externalities in Medical Education
Chapter 33: The Canadian Healthcare System
Chapter 34: Employer-Mandated National Health Insurance
Chapter 35: National Health Insurance: Which Approach and Why?
Chapter 36: Financing Long-Term Care
Chapter 37: The Affordable Care Act: Did It Achieve Its Goals?
Chapter 38: Comparative Health Systems
Glossary
Index
About the Authors