Making Health Care Markets Work: Competition Policy for Health Care

Many studies have examined trends toward increasing consolidation of physician practices and hospitals in the US health care system and the negative effects of decreased competition on the quality of patient care and health care costs. Despite general consensus among economists and health policy exp...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2017-04, Vol.317 (13), p.1313-1314
Hauptverfasser: Gaynor, Martin, Mostashari, Farzad, Ginsburg, Paul B
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container_title JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
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creator Gaynor, Martin
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description Many studies have examined trends toward increasing consolidation of physician practices and hospitals in the US health care system and the negative effects of decreased competition on the quality of patient care and health care costs. Despite general consensus among economists and health policy experts that competition enhances patient choice, improves quality, and reduces cost, few actionable policy recommendations have been offered beyond greater antitrust enforcement by the Federal Trade Commission. Here, Gaynor et al propose a new competition policy for health care that involves multiple federal agencies in addition to the antitrust enforcement agencies, state governments, and private stakeholders.
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subjects Antitrust
Competition
Competition policy
Cost Control
Economic Competition
Health Care Costs
Health care policy
Health Care Sector - trends
Practice Patterns, Physicians' - trends
Quality of care
Quality of Health Care
Risk Sharing, Financial
United States
title Making Health Care Markets Work: Competition Policy for Health Care
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