Literature DB >> 10135458

Making competition in health care work.

E O Teisberg1, M E Porter, G B Brown.   

Abstract

Health care reform in the United States is on a collision course with economic reality. Most proposals focus on measures that will produce one-time cost savings by eliminating waste and inefficiency. But the right question to ask is how to achieve dramatic and sustained cost reductions over time. What will it take to foster entirely new approaches to disease prevention and treatment, whole new ways to deliver services, and more cost-effective facilities? The answer lies in the powerful lessons business has learned over the past two decades about the imperatives of competition. In industry after industry, the underlying dynamic is the same: competition compels companies to deliver constantly increasing value to customers. The fundamental driver of this continuous quality improvement and cost reduction is innovation. Without incentives to sustain innovation in health care, short-term cost savings will soon be overwhelmed by the desire to widen access, the growing health needs of an aging population, and the unwillingness of Americans to settle for anything less than the best treatments available. The misguided assumption underlying much of the debate about health care is that technology is the enemy. By assuming that technology drives up costs, reformers neglect the central importance of innovation or, worse yet, attempt to slow its pace. In fact, innovation, driven by rigorous competition, is the key to successful reform.

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 10135458

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Harv Bus Rev        ISSN: 0017-8012


  4 in total

1.  The Jeremiah Metzger Lecture. Academic medicine: building on the strengths of the past as we approach a cloudy future.

Authors:  J C Bennett
Journal:  Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc       Date:  1995

2.  Health care competition, strategic mission, and patient satisfaction: research model and propositions.

Authors:  Patrick A Rivers; Saundra H Glover
Journal:  J Health Organ Manag       Date:  2008

3.  Issues in measuring and improving health care quality.

Authors:  M A Friedman
Journal:  Health Care Financ Rev       Date:  1995

Review 4.  A marketing perspective on consumer perceived competition in private ophthalmology services.

Authors:  Consuela-Mădălina Gheorghe; Victor Lorin Purcărea; Iuliana-Raluca Gheorghe
Journal:  Rom J Ophthalmol       Date:  2018 Apr-Jun
  4 in total

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