Literature DB >> 2911282

A national health program for the United States. A physicians' proposal.

D U Himmelstein1, S Woolhandler.   

Abstract

Our health care system is failing. Tens of millions of people are uninsured, costs are skyrocketing, and the bureaucracy is expanding. Patchwork reforms succeed only in exchanging old problems for new ones. It is time for basic change in American medicine. We propose a national health program that would (1) fully cover everyone under a single, comprehensive public insurance program; (2) pay hospitals and nursing homes a total (global) annual amount to cover all operating expenses; (3) fund capital costs through separate appropriations; (4) pay for physicians' services and ambulatory services in any of three ways: through fee-for-service payments with a simplified fee schedule and mandatory acceptance of the national health program payment as the total payment for a service or procedure (assignment), through global budgets for hospitals and clinics employing salaried physicians, or on a per capita basis (capitation); (5) be funded, at least initially, from the same sources as at present, but with all payments disbursed from a single pool; and (6) contain costs through savings on billing and bureaucracy, improved health planning, and the ability of the national health program, as the single payer for services, to establish overall spending limits. Through this proposal, we hope to provide a pragmatic framework for public debate of fundamental health-policy reform.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1989        PMID: 2911282     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM198901123200206

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  24 in total

1.  You can't leap a chasm in two jumps: The Institute of Medicine health care quality report.

Authors:  G D Schiff; Q D Young
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2001 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.792

2.  Prevention in medical education: an uncertain future.

Authors:  R A Fried
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1990 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 5.128

3.  Ethics and value strategies used in prioritizing mental health services in Oregon.

Authors:  D A Pollack; B H McFarland; R A George; R H Angell
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  1993-09

4.  Canada's experiment with health insurance. Somewhere over the rainbow?

Authors:  S Andreopoulos
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1992-04

5.  Access to medical care for documented and undocumented Latinos in a southern California county.

Authors:  F A Hubbell; H Waitzkin; S I Mishra; J Dombrink; L R Chavez
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1991-04

6.  Pity the poor gatekeeper: a transatlantic perspective on cost containment in clinical practice.

Authors:  T R Taylor
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1989-11-25

Review 7.  National health insurance in America--can we practice with it? Can we continue to practice without it?

Authors:  K Grumbach
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1989-08

8.  Lessons from the frozen North.

Authors:  G N Burrow
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1989-08

9.  Will the National Medical Association support a comprehensive national health plan?

Authors:  R L Peniston
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  1989-10       Impact factor: 1.798

10.  Global budgets in Maryland: early evidence on revenues, expenses, and margins in regulated and unregulated services.

Authors:  Margit Malmmose; Karoline Mortensen; Claus Holm
Journal:  Int J Health Econ Manag       Date:  2018-04-02
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