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Journal ArticleDOI

Health Spending, Access, And Outcomes: Trends In Industrialized Countries

TLDR
The United States has the lowest percentage of the population with government-assured health insurance, and it also has the fewest hospital days per capita, the highest hospital expenditures per day, and substantially higher physician incomes than the other OECD countries.
Citations
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Posted Content

Physicians' Conflicts of Interest in Japan and the United States: Lessons for the United States

TL;DR: The United States is starting to integrate institutional and physician payment and align their incentives, in a traditional Japanese way, which creates new physicians' conflicts and reduces the role of countervailing incentives and power, an advantage of previous policy.
Posted Content

Financing Health Care: Taxation and the Alternatives

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify characteristic patterns of performance in tax-financed (TF) systems, contrasting them with systems relying more heavily on other revenue sources, such as taxes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the Multidisciplinary Field of Public Health Services and Systems Research

TL;DR: Citation network methods and latent position cluster modeling were used to examine the network of documents and there was little crosstalk among the non-core clusters, a pattern consistent with multidisciplinary fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Length of stay and hospital readmission for persons with disabilities.

TL;DR: Length of stay and hospital readmission for persons receiving medical rehabilitation were examined and age was not a significant predictor of rehospitalization.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Foundations of cost-effectiveness analysis for health and medical practices.

Abstract: Limits on health-care resources mandate that resource-allocation decisions be guided by considerations of cost in relation to expected benefits. In cost-effectiveness analysis, the ratio of net health-care costs to net health benefits provides an index by which priorities may be set. Quality-of-life concerns, including both adverse and beneficial effects of therapy, may be incorporated in the calculation of health benefits as adjustments to life expectancy. The timing of future benefits and costs may be accounted for by the appropriate use of discounting. Current decisions must inevitably be based on imperfect information, but sensitivity analysis can increase the level of confidence in some decisions while suggesting areas where further research may be valuable in guiding others. Analyses should be adaptable to the needs of various health-care decision makers, including planners, administrators and providers.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Iconoclastic View Of Health Cost Containment

TL;DR: Effective global budgets would address the rising opportunity costs of health care, however, they would threaten ongoing innovation and probably would increase distortions from pricing errors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of the educational costs and incomes of physicians and other professionals.

TL;DR: The difference in the average future hourly income between a given professional and a high-school graduate of the same age, after educational expenses are subtracted, was greatest for specialist physicians and attorneys; dentists and businesspeople had intermediate values; and primary care physicians had the lowest value.
Book

Purchasing Population Health: Paying for Results

TL;DR: This proposal for a new health outcome purchasing standard is derived from Dr. Kindig's training as a physician and his experience in public and private health care management and envisions using health outcomes as a public- and private-sector purchasing standard for medical care as well as other health-promoting sectors such as education and the environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population health and health care use: an information system for policy makers.

TL;DR: Policy makers have found this information system useful in providing answers to questions they are often asked: Which populations need more physician services?
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