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建立人际资源圈The_Grand_Scheme_Of_Things
2013-11-13 来源: 类别: 更多范文
The Grand Scheme Of Things
For more than two decades, health care cost containment has been at the forefront of the health policy agenda. However, the approaches used to achieve cost containment have changed. One of the first policies adopted by states (and that for a time was required by federal statute) was certificate-of-need laws (CON). Such laws, which focused on hospitals and nursing homes, were adopted to curb needless duplication of services and consequent excess capacity. At the time, retrospective reimbursement provided guaranteed reimbursement even if facilities operated at well below capacity. Also, given nearly complete insurance coverage for hospitals, competition for patients occurred on a non-price basis (Robinson and Luft 1987; Dranove, Shanley, and Simon 1992). The hospitals that could offer the most sophisticated range of services and equipment were most attractive to patients and their physicians.
The price of such care did not matter, or at least it mattered much less. Competition by service expansion and proliferation of new technology has been termed the "medical arms race." At least in principle, CON regulations could control the medical arms race by requiring that organizations demonstrate need for a facility, service, or equipment before investing in them. Also,
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