Abstract This paper presents an assessment of the economics of healthcarecosts. The paper argues that the problem is a complex maze of related issues such as funding mechanisms, delivery structures and individual responsibility. Additionally, the paper recommends a national healthcare system for managing family healthcarecosts that is based on universal access to healthcare.
From the Paper "Health care economics is entering another state of turmoil in the United States as the moderating effects of the managed care concept on increasing health care costs appears to have run its course. The Congress and state governments believed the promises of managed care proponents that managed care would lower health care costs dramatically and are resisting rapid increases in health care costs. Managed care companies are responding by dropping governmentally-funded patient groups including Medicare and Medicaid raising charges to..."
Abstract This paper discusses the issue of rising healthcarecosts in the United States, and relates the issue to the government, business, and healthcare industries. The paper further looks into these organization's roles in halting rising healthcarecosts, and discusses professional opinions in relation to the matter. The addition of technology and its affects on healthcare are also discussed.
From the Paper "In the United States there are many poor, aging, and young who have traditionally been without health insurance due to the rising costs associated with care. When society considers those entities that should play a significant role in reducing health care costs the organizational elements of government, industry, and health care providers them selves are logical considerations. Yet, while the United States patiently waits for some type of health care cost relief there does not appear to be any notable action being taken to reduce these costs. During the December 2002 online discussion posted on NewsHour, with Jim Lehrer, the issue of health care costs was discussed in relation to insurance providers, hospitals, and health care workers. Lehrer spoke with many professionals in these organizations, and discovered that there are primary causes for the rise in health care costs in the United States. "
Abstract This paper explores all of the myriad and complex causes of the high cost in today's healthcare environment and recommends changes that would be the most likely to positively impact change. Charts and graphs are used to help illustrate important points.
Introduction
Prescription Drugs
Medical Devices and Medical Advances
Rising Provider Expenses
General Inflation
Government Mandates and Regulations
Government Programs and Tax Laws
Increased Consumer Demand
Lack of Consumerism
Litigation and Risk Management
Fraud and Abuse
Managed Care System
Conclusion
From the Paper "Priority Health also believes that the United States government is at fault for not imposing price controls on pharmaceutical products as do most other industrialized nations, thus leading to drugs costs that are as much as one hundred percent higher in this country. Additionally, the United States government imposes regulations for drug distribution and sales that make drugs less readily available and more expensive than in other countries. Also, government granted patents protect drug for up to seventeen years, limiting competition and driving up prices."
Tags:health, care, spending, managed, care, health, insurance, employers, premium
Abstract In this article, the writer discusses that a full-scale healthcare benefits crisis appeared to loom as employers were reported to spend $300 billion annually on the health insurance of employees, their dependents and retirees. Further, the writer discusses that healthcare related costs and premiums were expected to adversely affect the U.S. economy and, therefore, these preferred strategies could not continue indefinitely without a proportionate and adverse impact on total employee compensation. The writer looks at how employers act to reduce healthcarecosts.
From the Paper "The mass media, major consulting groups and health care experts agreed that health care costs were a critical or significant concern to the vast majority of chief operating officers, chief human resource officers and other business leaders. As against the estimated 14% increase, employers said they could accommodate only an average annual increase of 9%. This difference meant that employer costs would increase by approximately 54% in the next five years. During that period, employee contributions could increase three times until all the involved parties resorted to some proactive approach to contain the rise. HR leaders agreed that better value and lower health costs at between 83% and 96% if they worked together with employees for this purpose."
Abstract This paper takes a look at the reasons healthcarecosts continue to rise in the United States. It points out that many factors interact to increase costs and these factors include certain elements that, ironically, are thought to reduce costs or that may have been intended to reduce costs. The paper adds that costs increase in part for natural economic reasons, such as the cost of developing new drugs, or the added costs accruing due to the creation and implementation of new medical technology. The paper maintains that one of the primary reasons fo cost increases is that the public does not pay for what it uses in medicine, meaning that people do not pay directly out of their own pockets. Instead, millions have their costs paid by insurance or a company health plan, and this increases the overall costs. To conclude, the paper calls for a better and more certain analysis of how costs could be reduced.
From the Paper "The patient may pay something on his or her bill, but it is usually only a part of the whole. Alterio (2007) notes how some of the efforts to control costs can harm patients, which in turn increases health care costs over time because patients may have to wait longer for treatment and need more medical attention when they do get it. Alterio notes that keeping down costs in HMOs often means requiring doctors to see more patients per hour and to give each patient less time, which saves money in the short-term while increasing costs in the long run."
Abstract This nine page undergraduate paper examines future aspects of healthcare from the perspective of healthcare administrators and managers. The writer notes that it is evident that challenges must be overcome, despite the numerous problems presented by historical, social, ethical, technological, and financial factors. The writer points out that at the present time, the healthcare system in the United States is confronting rising costs and undiminished expectations, and the system is in crisis. Further, the writer discusses that controversial issues of socialized medicine, cost shifting, and budget deficits will have to be addressed if needed reforms of the American healthcare system are to be implemented.
From the Paper "In examining future aspects of health care from the perspective of health care administrators and managers, it is evident that they must overcome the numerous challenges presented by historical, social, ethical, technological, and financial factors. At the present time, the health care system in the United States is confronting rising costs and undiminished expectations, and the system is in crisis. Controversial issues of socialized medicine, cost shifting, and budget deficits will have to be addressed if needed reforms of the American health care system are to be implemented. But reforming health care in the United States is contentious because it will affect the level of services and involve tens of millions of beneficiaries and taxpayers."
Abstract The paper discusses the issue of healthcare spending in the United States. The paper further discusses the American hospital system and expenditures and the costs of services and the hospital conglomerates that affect spending. The paper further examines these issues in relation to staffing and quality of care. The writer points out that this issue is significant because it affects millions of Americans and their health in modern society.
From the Paper "Health care in modern society is funded through various means. The primary source of funding is achieved through the American consumer with the purchase of health care insurance and services. Health care is also funded through the government in programs such as Medicare and Medicaid. In some circumstances funding of many organizations is achieved through grants that are directed toward the performance of programs aimed at societal need. Additionally, private funding serves some health care institutions, though this does not speak to funding for all health care facilities. This funding is required to cover health care spending in the country, which has increased dramatically in the past few decades. Spending for health care is primarily comprised of expenditures in advanced technologies, research and patient care."
Abstract The paper discusses how with the billowing costs of healthcare recalcitrant to conservative control measures, it is apparent that more aggressive policies need to be formulated that target not only the physician corporate medicine and hospitals, but also the consumer. The paper says that there is no doubt that both state and federal legislature will be needed to enforce some of the policies mentioned. The paper contends that there is also no doubt that state and federal governments will become more inept at handling the US healthcare crisis on a financial level.
From the Paper "It is not new to state the fact that the present health care system in the US is in a state of disarray. It is no surprise either, that even before the advent of corporate medicine, managed care, health maintenance organizations (HMOs), etc. that the application of medicine, public health, politics and economics was, and still is, exceedingly complex, much less than palatable. Form the outset, the issue of policy formation in health care using an economic knowledge base is indeed daunting, as the most unpredictable variable in a myriad of other variables predicting health care consumption patterns - people - do not lend themselves kindly to theory. People are constantly aware of the many medical advances taking place every day. They are likewise constantly made aware of their health and how much more precious a commodity it is to them."
An examination of the current US healthcare system, highlighting the necessity for the introduction of reform and improvements in order to assist all sections of the community.
Abstract This paper deals with the necessity to introduce a healthcare program in the US that is available to all persons and that deals with all relevant issues. The paper highlights the decline in the effectiveness of the current system and calls on the nursing profession to introduce a cost effective program and to encourage co-operation between patients and the healthcare programs. The paper continues by emphasizing that the nursing profession is in the front line and is able to introduce an affordable medical aid system to suit all facets of society.
Outline:
The issue
Background
Nurse's relevance on the issue
Conclusion
From the Paper "The quality of health care continues to decline and be inadequate as crisis management is more and more becoming the patchwork solution for the nation's ineffectual healthcare system. This is not to say that there are not certain elements that of the current health care system that should not be maintained and continued. Reform should build upon the best parts of the current health care system and begin moving toward patient wellness and care. Nursing organizations realize what is needed in the area of reform and plan to convert rather than eliminate the current health care system."
Abstract This paper contends that in the United States, the public's view of healthcare is low and that there are significant reasons for this opinion. It looks at how these reasons include the high cost of health insurance, the inability of both industry and individuals to be able to afford health insurance and a lack of staffing at major hospitals.
From the Paper "The public view of health care in the United States appears to be one of great concern. In today's medical profession there is a shortage of licensed professionals to care for patients, a surging cost of medical care, and a growing trend of industry to cut health care insurance because rates are too high. As the complications persist throughout the country, there is little evidence that a significant solution is soon to be found. Mary Wakefield, and P. J. Maddox wrote a 1999 article entitled, "Staffing Our Health Care", in which the authors began by discussing a patient that had recently died in the Shady Grove Health Adventist Hospital in Rockville, Maryland."
Abstract This paper examines how the question of whether healthcare is a right or a privilege is highly controversial. It looks at how some feel that in a wealthy country such as the U.S.A., all citizens should have access to free healthcare, as a basic human right and how others believe that, like all commodities, healthcare should be paid for. The paper argues that healthcare is a basic human right that should be available to all U.S. citizens, regardless of whether they are able to pay for it.
Abstract This paper argues that the above quotation accurately sums up the situation of healthcare in the United States. As is argued, there are many aspects to this mess. The writer points out that the most important is that millions of Americans do not have healthcare, or have insufficient healthcare. Further, the writer notes that millions of Americans are unproductive because of this, and thousands die. Other problems mentioned are that the healthcare system is more expensive than it needs to be, due to a number of factors.
Abstract The paper discusses how the shortage of healthcare and poorer standards of quality have tested the ability of society to provide the medical support that the population needs. The paper relates that the present standard of care has raised concerns among healthcare providers and patients regarding the implementation of new methods of improving the standard of care. This paper provides an overview of the healthcare industry's standard of care and suggests concepts that hospital management and healthcare providers could utilize to improve the quality of healthcare overall.
Outline:
Introduction
Standard of Care Conclusion
From the Paper "In the medical profession, the business process perspective refers to internal processes. Metrics based on this perspective allow the managers to know how well their business is running, and whether its products and services conform to patient's requirements. These metrics have to be carefully designed by those who know these processes most intimately, usually includes the identification of mission-oriented processes, and support processes. Mission-oriented processes are the special functions of government offices, whereas the support processes are more repetitive, and easier to benchmark and measure using generic metrics. The patient perspective can be improved by enhancing the quality of care, and perhaps by offering additional services needed by the physicians that are not currently addressed or not stressed enough. The final perspective, financing healthcare, involves timely and accurate funding where the implementation of a corporate database would ideally centralize the majority of the processing of the data in addition to automating the processing of financial data. A hospital or health care provider could successfully implement this perspective by including additional metrics, such as other types of financial related data, such as risk-assessment and cost-benefit data."
Abstract My research compares and contrasts the healthcare system of the United States and that of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Without a doubt, the most noticeable difference between the two health systems is that the United States system works under the managed care model while the UAE system follows that used in one way or another by most of the developed nations: the universal healthcare system.
Abstract This paper contends that healthcare is not administered on a gender-equal basis. The author points out reasons for engendered inequity in the healthcare system. The paper relates the attitude toward homosexual women that impact healthcare delivery.
From the Paper "This research examines gender issues relative to women's health care. The research will examine why even in the ... century health care is not administered on a gender-equal basis. It will be shown that despite attempts by the health-care infrastructure ..."