Wiley Publishers Since 1807   Shopping Cart  Shopping Cart  My Account  Help  Contact Us  
Home Technology Solutions Who's My Rep About Wiley
 
Product Search
Home > Public Health > Health Care Management and Policy > Health Policy - Public Health
Changing the U.S. Health Care System: Key Issues in Health Services Policy and Management, 3rd Edition
Changing the U.S. Health Care System: Key Issues in Health Services Policy and Management, 3rd Edition
Ronald M. Andersen, UCLA, School of Public Health
Thomas H. Rice, UCLA, School of Public Health
Gerald F. Kominski, UCLA, School of Public Health
Abdelmonem A. Afifi
Linda Rosenstock
ISBN: 978-0-7879-8524-0
©2007
744 pages
INSTRUCTORS
STUDENTS
TITLE INFORMATION
Description  |  Author Info  |  Table of Contents  |  Sample Chapters  |  Reviewer Comments  |  Supplements
Description
Praise for the 2nd edition: " This superb book provides a thorough and authoritatve overview of the complex US health care system. There are excellent chapters on such diverse topics as Policies to Extend ...Coverage (a brief history of health insurance), Measuring Health care Costs, Pharmaceutical Prices, Evaluating the Quality of Care, and Medicare Reform. ... The topics and chapters are so well conceived that the material remains highly informative and relevant despite [changes in the industry]. This outstanding, comprehensive resource on the U.S. health care system is sure to be of great value to students, educators, and scholars. " --  Eugene C. Rich, MD(Creighton University Medical Center), in Doody Enterprises Book Review Service.

Changing the U.S. Health Care System (3rd edition) is a readable and accessible introduction to the major problems facing the health care system. It also poses solutions to these problems. The book emphasizes how  problems come to be recognized and defined, their characteristics and magnitude, and plans and programs to alleviate them. Students and faculty using this book, upon completion, will be able to (1) understand central objectives of the health care system to increase  access, limit costs, and improve quality and the interactions and tradeoffs involved in striving to attain these objectives; (2) be able to define vulnerable subgroups or target groups for the health care system and their specific characteristics and the most pressing needs and demands; and (3) recognize some generic approaches to system reform and formulate their own framework for an "ideal health care system" that can be used to assess ongoing system, institutional, and professional reforms.

The book is organized in five parts, covering ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE, COSTS OF HEALTH CARE, QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE, SPECIAL POPULATIONS, and DIRECTIONS FOR CHANGE (such as Medicare Reform, the Growth of Competition, and Ethical Issues).     


Printer-ready version of this page E-mail a friend about this product