Literature DB >> 21301368

Vulnerability of health to market forces.

Mayer Brezis1, William H Wiist.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This article reviews adverse influences of for-profit enterprises on health care and public health, and examines significance for public policy. RESEARCH
DESIGN: Narrative review.
RESULTS: For-profit health-care industries may increase costs and reduce quality, leading to market failure and contributing to the USA's unflattering position in international comparisons of health-care efficiency. Drug and device corporations use strategies such as making biased inferences, influencing scientists and physicians, marketing rather than informing the public, and lobbying to control their own industry regulations to create market advantage. Successful marketing leads to the increased use of costly profit-making drugs and procedures over cheaper, nonpatented therapies. Because resources are limited, the overuse of costly modalities contributes to expensive health care, which presents a challenge to universal coverage. The free market also fosters the proliferation of industries, such as tobacco, food, and chemicals, which externalize costs to maximize profits, seek to unduly influence research by paying experts and universities, and attempt to control the media and regulatory agencies. Most vulnerable to the cumulative harm of these tactics are children, the poor, the sick, and the least educated.
CONCLUSIONS: The free market can harm health and health care. The corporate obligation to increase profits and ensure a return to shareholders affects public health. Such excesses of capitalism pose formidable challenges to social justice and public health. The recognition of the health risks entailed by corporation-controlled markets has important implications for public policy. Reforms are required to limit the power of corporations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21301368     DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0b013e31820ab638

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Care        ISSN: 0025-7079            Impact factor:   2.983


  10 in total

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Review 8.  Interactions between non-physician clinicians and industry: a systematic review.

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Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2013-11-26       Impact factor: 11.069

Review 9.  The use of expensive technologies instead of simple, sound and effective lifestyle interventions: a perpetual delusion.

Authors:  Silvia Carlos; Jokin de Irala; Matt Hanley; Miguel Ángel Martínez-González
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Review 10.  Human rights education in patient care.

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Journal:  Public Health Rev       Date:  2017-07-11
  10 in total

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