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Virtually everyone agrees that our health care system needs reform.
But what kind of reform? Some want a return to the system that
prevailed in the 1950s. Others would like to see the adaptation of
the government-run systems prevalent in other countries. The
latter, national health insurance or single-payer health insurance,
appears to be gaining ground in the United States. Before Americans
find themselves participating in a health care system that has
failed in every country it was adopted, we should be asking
ourselves whether such a system is effective and efficient. In
Lives at Risk, the authors examine the critical failures of
national health insurance systems without focusing on minor
blemishes or easily correctable problems. In doing so, the purpose
is to identify the problems common to all countries with national
health insurance and to explain why these problems emerge. Most
national health care systems are in a state of sustained internal
crisis as costs rise and the stated goals of universal access and
quality care are not met. In almost all cases, the reason is the
same: the politics of medicine. The problems of government-run
health care systems flow inexorably from the fact that they are
government-run rather than market driven.
Virtually everyone agrees that our health care system needs reform.
But what kind of reform? Some want a return to the system that
prevailed in the 1950s. Others would like to see the adaptation of
the government-run systems prevalent in other countries. The
latter, national health insurance or single-payer health insurance,
appears to be gaining ground in the United States. Before Americans
find themselves participating in a health care system that has
failed in every country it was adopted, we should be asking
ourselves whether such a system is effective and efficient. In
Lives at Risk, the authors examine the critical failures of
national health insurance systems without focusing on minor
blemishes or easily correctable problems. In doing so, the purpose
is to identify the problems common to all countries with national
health insurance and to explain why these problems emerge. Most
national health care systems are in a state of sustained internal
crisis as costs rise and the stated goals of universal access and
quality care are not met. In almost all cases, the reason is the
same: the politics of medicine. The problems of government-run
health care systems flow inexorably from the fact that they are
government-run rather than market driven.
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