Health care reform: Difference between revisions

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'''Health care reform''' is "innovation and improvement of the health care system by reappraisal, amendment of services, and removal of faults and abuses in providing and distributing health services to patients. It includes a re-alignment of health services and health insurance to maximum demographic elements (the unemployed, indigent, uninsured, elderly, inner cities, rural areas) with reference to coverage, hospitalization, pricing and cost containment, insurers' and employers' costs, pre-existing medical conditions, prescribed drugs, equipment, and services."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
'''Health care reform''' is "innovation and improvement of the health care system by reappraisal, amendment of services, and removal of faults and abuses in providing and distributing health services to patients. It includes a re-alignment of health services and health insurance to maximum demographic elements (the unemployed, indigent, uninsured, elderly, inner cities, rural areas) with reference to coverage, hospitalization, pricing and cost containment, insurers' and employers' costs, pre-existing medical conditions, prescribed drugs, equipment, and services."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
Regarding the increases in cost of the [[health care sector]] in the [[United States]], one [[cost-benefit analysis]] concluded, "on average, the increases in medical spending since 1960 have provided reasonable value."<ref name="pmid16943404">{{cite journal |author=Cutler DM, Rosen AB, Vijan S |title=The value of medical spending in the United States, 1960-2000 |journal=N. Engl. J. Med. |volume=355 |issue=9 |pages=920–7 |year=2006 |month=August |pmid=16943404 |doi=10.1056/NEJMsa054744 |url=http://content.nejm.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=short&pmid=16943404&promo=ONFLNS19 |issn=}}</ref>


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Revision as of 05:00, 16 August 2009

Health care reform is "innovation and improvement of the health care system by reappraisal, amendment of services, and removal of faults and abuses in providing and distributing health services to patients. It includes a re-alignment of health services and health insurance to maximum demographic elements (the unemployed, indigent, uninsured, elderly, inner cities, rural areas) with reference to coverage, hospitalization, pricing and cost containment, insurers' and employers' costs, pre-existing medical conditions, prescribed drugs, equipment, and services."[1]

Regarding the increases in cost of the health care sector in the United States, one cost-benefit analysis concluded, "on average, the increases in medical spending since 1960 have provided reasonable value."[2]

References