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Published: October 2007
The process of paying for health care reform is influenced not only by financial and economic concerns but by political matters as well.
In this paper, the author reviewed relevant political factors in financing health care reform.
Key Findings:
A mixed system of financing health coverage in the United States will likely continue in the near future with options for health reform still grounded in employer-sponsored insurance programs. Being aware of the role of politics in financing coverage is important in understanding and crafting future health care reform efforts.
Keywords: Administrative Cost/Structure, Public Plans, Financing, Political Feasibility
Listed below is one grant that supported this project.
| Grant | Awarded to | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Convening of experts to evaluate health care coverage reform |
Stanford University (Stanford, CA) ID#: 60436 John B. Shoven, Ph.D. 650-723-3273 shoven@stanford.edu http://www.stanford.edu/ |
Actual award: $495,972 June 2007 to December 2010 |
RWJF may have supported this project with other grants that are not listed.
Comprehensive Health Care Reform and Biomedical Innovation
By:
Emanuel EJ
Publication date:
December 2008
Summary:
This paper explores the need to address the costs of technological innovation in order to arrest the excessive inflation of health care.
Funding Health Care For All Americans: An Economic Perspective
Publication date:
December 2007
Summary:
This paper shows that a substantial change in the U.S. approach to health care funding is central to any sustainable, comprehensive reform that focuses on improved quality.
Plan Competition for Health System Efficiency
By:
Garber AM, Goldman DP and Lakdawalla D
Publication date:
December 2008
Summary:
This paper proposes a reform plan with Qualified Insurance Exchanges, tax-free health investment accounts and an independent federal oversight authority, among other traits.
Fresh Thinking - Legal and Regulatory Issues Presented by Health Care Reform
By:
Jost TS
Publication date:
2007
Summary:
This paper explores four key areas where changes in federal and state law that will be necessary to implement health care reform.
The Regulatory Component of Health Care Reform
By:
Noll RG
Publication date:
2007
Summary:
This paper examines the rationales for regulation and argues that regulatory changes alone are not likely to significantly control costs or improve efficiency.
Accountable Care Systems for Comprehensive Healthcare Reform
By:
Shortell SM and Casalino LP
Publication date:
August 19, 2008
Summary:
This paper calls for national organizations dedicated to performance measurement, best practices and provider incentives as a part of reform.
Outcomes Assessment and Health Care Reform
Health System Reform: The Value and Price of Innovation
By:
Thier SO
Publication date:
2008
Summary:
This paper shows that even if new national standards for care are developed at the federal level, trial-and-error creativity will still be needed on the state level.