Pricing Life
Title | Pricing Life PDF eBook |
Author | Peter A. Ubel |
Publisher | MIT Press |
Pages | 236 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 9780262710091 |
A rational look at health care rationing, from ethical, economic, psychological, and clinical perspectives. Although managed health care is a hot topic, too few discussions focus on health care rationing--who lives and who dies, death versus dollars. In this book physician and bioethicist Peter A. Ubel argues that physicians, health insurance companies, managed care organizations, and governments need to consider the cost-effectiveness of many new health care technologies. In particular, they need to think about how best to ration health care. Ubel believes that standard medical training should provide physicians with the expertise to decide when to withhold health care from patients. He discusses the moral questions raised by this position, and by health care rationing in general. He incorporates ethical arguments about the appropriate role of cost-effectiveness analysis in health care rationing, empirical research about how the general public wants to ration care, and clinical insights based on his practice of general internal medicine. Straddling the fields of ethics, economics, research psychology, and clinical medicine, he moves the debate forward from whether to ration to how to ration. The discussion is enlivened by actual case studies.
Health Care for Some
Title | Health Care for Some PDF eBook |
Author | Beatrix Hoffman |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 357 |
Release | 2012-09-15 |
Genre | Health & Fitness |
ISBN | 0226348032 |
The 2010 Affordable Care Act is a sweeping reform to the US health care system. Hoffman offers an engaging and in-depth look at America's long tradition of unequal access to health care. She argues that two main features have characterized the US health system: a refusal to adopt a right to care and a particularly American type of rationing. Unlike rationing in most countries, which is intended to keep costs down, rationing in the United States has actually led to increased costs, resulting in the most expensive health care system in the world.
What's Your Life Worth?
Title | What's Your Life Worth? PDF eBook |
Author | David Dranove |
Publisher | FT Press |
Pages | 216 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 9780130671653 |
One of the world's leading healthcare economists offers a hard-nosed analysisof the frightening reality of soaring healthcare costs--and shows how it willfeel to be at the mercy of a system that can't afford to cure anyone.
Strong Medicine
Title | Strong Medicine PDF eBook |
Author | Paul T. Menzel |
Publisher | |
Pages | 264 |
Release | 1990 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN |
In one form or another, health care now gets rationed. Not everything beneficial is done for every patient. For the individual the consequences are sometimes tragic. Rationing decisions thus raise a classic dilemma: how can we treat with dignity and genuine respect the person who gets short-changed by an efficient policy that seems best overall? Strong Medicine argues that we can, if those policies represent the hard trade-off preferences of patients controlling resources for their larger lives. Rationing is still strong medicine to swallow, but then it becomes what patients as well as the doctor ordered. Menzel develops this central idea and applies it to major issues of health policy and economics: the notion of pricing life, the long-run cost of prevention, measuring quality of life, imperiled newborns, adequate care for the poor, containing costs by market competition, malpractice suits, procuring organs for transplant, and dying expensively in old age. He provides a hard-hitting, critical philosophical discussion of these issues, in non-technical language accessible to a wide range of readers interested in policy questions the book takes up. The issues are fascinating, the arguments are careful, and the results often surprising.
Can We Say No?
Title | Can We Say No? PDF eBook |
Author | Henry J. Aaron |
Publisher | Brookings Institution Press |
Pages | 232 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 9780815701200 |
"Examines the use of rationing as a means to curb health care spending, using the experience of Great Britain to highlight the promises and pitfalls of this approach"--Provided by publisher.
Allocating Health Care Resources
Title | Allocating Health Care Resources PDF eBook |
Author | James M. Humber |
Publisher | Springer Science & Business Media |
Pages | 222 |
Release | 1995-01-11 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 1592594476 |
In ALLOCATING HEALTH CARE RESOURCES, leading authorities and researchers expose the basic philosophical, ethical, and economic issues underlying the current health care debate. The contributors wrestle with such complicated issues as whether it is ethical to ration health care, the morality of the worldwide bias against children in allocating health care resources, whether sin taxes can be defended morally, and how to achieve a just health care system. The book also includes an insightful analysis of the Clinton health care reform plan. ALLOCATING HEALTH CARE RESOURCES will be of interest to philosophers, health policy experts, medical ethicists, health professionals, and concerned citizens. It serves to clarify and illuminate the logic and rhetoric of health care reform, and so to help us all achieve a fair and equitable distribution of these precious resources.
Priced Out
Title | Priced Out PDF eBook |
Author | Uwe E. Reinhardt |
Publisher | Princeton University Press |
Pages | 232 |
Release | 2020-09 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 0691208530 |
Uwe Reinhardt was a towering figure and moral conscience of health care policy in the United States and beyond. Famously bipartisan, he advised presidents and Congress on health reform and originated central features of the Affordable Care Act. In Priced Out, Reinhardt offers an engaging and enlightening account of today's U.S. health care system, explaining why it costs so much more and delivers so much less than the systems of every other advanced country, why this situation is morally indefensible, and how we might improve it.