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Timothy Stoltzfus Jost

Researcher at Washington and Lee University School of Law

Publications -  149
Citations -  1206

Timothy Stoltzfus Jost is an academic researcher from Washington and Lee University School of Law. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health law. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 148 publications receiving 1178 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy Stoltzfus Jost include Washington and Lee University & Ohio State University.

Papers
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Toward a 21st-century health care system: Recommendations for health care reform

Kenneth J. Arrow, +49 more
TL;DR: The FRESH-Thinking project convenes a multidisciplinary group of scholars who collaborate to comprehensively study the specific, detailed challenges to health care reform, finding common ground on 8 fundamental policy recommendations to achieve needed fundamental reforms.
Posted Content

Private or Public Approaches to Insuring the Uninsured: Lessons from International Experience with Private Insurance

TL;DR: It is concluded that true private markets for health insurance to cover entire populations are not possible, and that publicly regulated and subsidized markets do not offer efficiency advantages over public programs.
Journal Article

Private or Public Approaches to Insuring the Uninsured: Lessons from International Experience with Private Insurance

TL;DR: In the recent past, a broad consensus has emerged in the United States that the best way to expand coverage of the uninsured is to use tax subsidies to encourage the purchase of private health insurance policies as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Making Health Care Truly Affordable after Health Care Reform

TL;DR: Measures to address these challenges must build on the ACA to provide greater protection to millions of Americans and to address continued dissatisfaction with the health care financing system among middle-income Americans.
Book

Health Care at Risk: A Critique of the Consumer-Driven Movement

TL;DR: How other countries have achieved universal access to high-quality health care at lower cost, without relying extensively on cost sharing, is described and a proposal for how the United States might do the same, incorporating aspects of CDHC while recognizing its limitations is proposed.