Literature DB >> 20019312

Designing HIGH-COST medicine: hospital surveys, health planning, and the paradox of progressive reform.

Barbara Bridgman Perkins1.   

Abstract

Inspired by social medicine, some progressive US health reforms have paradoxically reinforced a business model of high-cost medical delivery that does not match social needs. In analyzing the financial status of their areas' hospitals, for example, city-wide hospital surveys of the 1910s through 1930s sought to direct capital investments and, in so doing, control competition and markets. The 2 national health planning programs that ran from the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s continued similar strategies of economic organization and management, as did the so-called market reforms that followed. Consequently, these reforms promoted large, extremely specialized, capital-intensive institutions and systems at the expense of less complex (and less costly) primary and chronic care. The current capital crisis may expose the lack of sustainability of such a model and open up new ideas and new ways to build health care designed to meet people's health needs.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20019312      PMCID: PMC2804630          DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2008.155838

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  11 in total

1.  The role of the capital markets in restructuring health care.

Authors:  J B Silvers
Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 2.265

2.  HAVEN EMERSON: October 19, 1874-May 21, 1957.

Authors: 
Journal:  Am J Public Health Nations Health       Date:  1957-08

3.  The impact of sanitary reform upon American urban planning, 1840-1890.

Authors:  J A Peterson
Journal:  J Soc Hist       Date:  1979

4.  Re-forming medical delivery systems: economic organization and dynamics of regional planning and managed competition.

Authors:  B B Perkins
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1999-01       Impact factor: 4.634

5.  Henry E. Sigerist: from the social production of disease to medical management and scientific socialism.

Authors:  E Fee
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 4.911

6.  Health planning in the United States and the decline of public-interest policymaking.

Authors:  Evan M Melhado
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 4.911

7.  The Health Foundation for Recovery: Part I.

Authors:  H Emerson
Journal:  Cal West Med       Date:  1935-04

8.  Economic organization of medicine and the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care.

Authors:  B B Perkins
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1998-11       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 9.  Investment decision making in the health care industry: the future.

Authors:  H W Long
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  1979       Impact factor: 3.402

Review 10.  How did social medicine evolve, and where is it heading?

Authors:  Dorothy Porter
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 11.069

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