Communities and health care: the Rochester, New York, experiment

During the 1992 presidential campaign, candidate William J. Clinton praised Rochester's hospital experimental payment (HEP) program for containing costs and providing access to high quality health care. "If Rochester, New York, can do it with two-thirds of the cost of the rest of us,"...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Liebschutz, Sarah F. (Author)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Rochester, NY University of Rochester Press 2011
Series:Rochester studies in medical history
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Online Access:BSB01
UBG01
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Summary:During the 1992 presidential campaign, candidate William J. Clinton praised Rochester's hospital experimental payment (HEP) program for containing costs and providing access to high quality health care. "If Rochester, New York, can do it with two-thirds of the cost of the rest of us," Clinton asserted, "America can do it too." This book is a detailed case study of a community that devised and implemented a unique, successful, and celebrated hospital cost containment experiment in the 1980s. Author Sarah Liebschutz describes the economic and social culture of Rochester dating to the early part of the twentieth century that provided the fertile soil for regional health planning and the HEP program.
This study also examines how the changing economy ultimately stimulated robust competition among health care insurers and providers.<BR> What does Rochester's experience tell us about the role communities play in organizing and financing health care? The national government has long played --and will continue to play --
a central role in determining health policy, funding health insurance, and reimbursing health care providers. The responsibility for dealing with the interlocking issues of access, quality, and costs, however, is not exclusively national. State governments shape the health system as they legislate, regulate, and finance such key components of health care as insurance coverage, quality of care, hospitals, and other providers.<BR> Communities matter because they organize and deliver health care at the ground level through private and employed health care professionals and public, private, and nonprofit hospitals.
Item Description:Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 12 Apr 2018)
Physical Description:1 online resource (xvi, 255 pages)

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