Literature DB >> 11562002

How the United States exports managed care to developing countries.

H Waitzkin1, C Iriart.   

Abstract

As their expansion slows in the United States, managed care organizations will continue to enter new markets abroad. Investors view the opening of managed care in Latin America as a lucrative business opportunity. As public-sector services and social security funds are cut back, privatized, and reorganized under managed care, with the support of international lending agencies such as the World Bank, the effects of these reforms on access to preventive and curative services will hold great importance throughout the developing world. Many groups in Latin America are working on alternative projects that defend health as a public good, and similar movements have begun in Africa and Asia. Increasingly, this organizing is being recognized not only as part of a class struggle but also as part of a struggle against economic imperialism--which has now taken on the new appearance of rescuing less developed countries from rising health care costs and inefficient bureaucracies through the imposition of neoliberal managed-care solutions exported from the United States.

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11562002     DOI: 10.2190/BQDD-59K2-3PQD-RE9Q

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Health Serv        ISSN: 0020-7314            Impact factor:   1.663


  2 in total

1.  Increasing access to Latin American social medicine resources: a preliminary report.

Authors:  Holly Shipp Buchanan; Howard Waitzkin; Jonathan Eldredge; Russ Davidson; Celia Iriart; Janis Teal
Journal:  J Med Libr Assoc       Date:  2003-10

2.  Towards an Explanation of the Social Value of Health Systems: An Interpretive Synthesis.

Authors:  Eleanor Beth Whyle; Jill Olivier
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2021-07-01
  2 in total

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