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It is a pleasure to introduce this special volume of the Industry
and Health Care Series. It is special for the best of reasons: it
is primarily written by industry representatives. Using the Washing
ton Business Group on Health 1978 Annual Meeting as its starting
point, this volume captures the feelings, concerns, and experience
of many who are leading industry's increasingly significant
presence in health policy and economics. While many of the largest
companies achieve more sophisticated levels of involvement, the
fact remains that most companies of all sizes and especially the
smaller businesses either will not or cannot devote the time or
resources to become active participants. We hope this volume will
help demonstrate the value of even one person's commit ment.
Although our organizational focus is Washington, the WBGH rec
ognizes that, in the long run, the quality and cost of the health
care most Americans receive will be-and should be-determined at the
local level. To let this happen without industry involvement would
represent an abdication of both responsibility and opportunity.
Fortunately, we see a growth of industry involvement, growth not
just in terms of numbers but also in terms of the scope of
activities. * Recognizing that the key to changing provider
behavior is to change the economic incentives, emanating from the
major payers, em- vi Preface ployers are subjecting their employee
benefit plans to the most com plete scrutiny in many years.
This fifth issue in the Industry and Health Care series takes a
quick turn through unpredictable and only partially charted waters.
The series as a whole has set out to explore the role of industry
as a potential agent of change in the health care system, and to
map the courses that may lead toward control of costs. One that
looks possible is the effort now being made to infuse some
competition into the health care industry through organized systems
of care, known as HMOs. Health maintenance organizations,
especially the fee-for-service variety known as IPAs (individual
practice associations), have been a particular inter est of the
Center for Industry and Health Care, where a national data base 'on
IP A performance is being established with the aid of the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation. The Center's identity with HMOs, combined
with its focus on industry and health care, has afforded us unusual
access to nascent corporate thinking on the pros and cons of HMO
sponsorship. We are grateful for these opportunities, and for the
insights industry people have shared with us. This series draws
heavily on that experience."
Close followers of the evolution of the Series on Industry and
Health Care will recognize in this fourth volume some continuity
and some change. The essential concept behind the series remains:
here, as before, we are looking to private industry as a potential
agent of change in the American health care delivery system. We
have made some structural accommodations, however, to comments
received from readers in industry and in health services. The
original concept of a topical monograph supplemented by a separate
hardbound volume of background papers has yielded to the present
formula in which each volume is complete in itself. The series
continues to draw much of its material from interdisciplinary
working conferences convened by the Bos ton University Center for
Industry and Health Care. Rather than publish confer ence
proceedings, we have again undertaken to analyze the discussions
and to integrate with them some timely background materials.
Readers have found this format a major improvement over traditional
conference reports and sum maries."
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