
Entire Proceedings (335 pages, 667K)  |
June 15–17, 2005
Editor: Jane Sneddon Little
How should we value – and pay for – health
care? How can we ensure that medical progress continues
unabated and that its blessings are equitably distributed?
How do we prevent future health care commitments from
absorbing resources that might better be spent on other
important components of current and future well-being?
Finally, is the key to maintaining balance among these
goals to be found in better functioning markets, better
regulation, better information, better IT management,
or in a better understanding of human behavior?
This
conference brought together economists, health practitioners,
and policymakers to explore the best ways to measure,
finance, and distribute the benefits of modern health
care.
Contents
Entire Proceedings (335 pages, 667K) 
1. Introduction
Reforming the U.S. Health Care System: Where There’s
a Will, There Could be a Way
Jane Sneddon Little and Teresa Foy Romano
2. Understanding the Political Challenge
The Politics of U.S. Health System Reform
Theodore R. Marmor
3. Defining the Health Care Challenge
What Is Good Care, and What Is Bad?
David M. Cutler, with discussions by Richard G. Frank, William D. Nordhaus, and Kieke G. H. Okma
4. The U.S. Health Care System under Managed Care: A Case Study
The U.S. Experience with Managed Care and
Managed Competition
Alain C. Enthoven, with discussions by Michael E. Chernew and Sherry A.M. Glied
5. How the U.S. Health Care System Affects U.S. Labor
Markets
The U.S. Health Care System and Labor Markets
Brigitte C. Madrian, with discussion by Henry S. Farber
Employer-Funded Health Care and Labor Markets: An Insider’s View
Robert S. Galvin, M.D.
6. The U.S. Health Care System and U.S. Fiscal Stability
It’s Health Care, Stupid! Why Control of Health Care Spending Is Vital for Long-Term Fiscal Stability
Henry J. Aaron, with discussion by Mark V. Pauly, C. Eugene Steuerle, and Alan R. Weil
7. Reform Options: Matching the Tools with the Goals
Will the United States Continue to Allocate a Growing Proportion of Its GDP to Health Care?
Stuart H. Altman, with discussion by Judith Feder, David O. Meltzer, M.D., and Joseph P. Newhouse
8. Policy Debate: Reforming the U.S. Health Care System,
the Road Ahead
Economic Perspectives on Health Information Technology
David J. Brailer, M.D.
Reforming the U.S. Health Care System: Improving Coverage,
Quality, and Efficiency
Karen Davis
Health Financing: Challenges and Opportunities,
Coverage and Cost
James J. Mongan, M.D.
|