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Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are
not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or
access to any online entitlements included with the product. The
navigator you need to find your way through the process and
operational complexities of the U.S. healthcare system From a
seasoned professor of healthcare management at The Wharton School,
The U.S. Healthcare Ecosystem provides a new perspective to the
subject-navigating readers through complicated environment where
healthcare customers, healthcare providers, and those who create
products used in healthcare all interact. Emphasizing processes and
operations, this thorough resource provides expert insight into
important themes, i.e., how the goals of healthcare relate to the
"the iron triangle" (cost, quality, and access) and "the triple
aim" (per capita cost, population health, and patient experience).
Chapters include brief but timely cases that inspire you to think
more critically about what you hear and read about the healthcare
industry and make your own informed assessments. Packed with 200
illustrations, The U.S. Healthcare Ecosystem Covers often-neglected
topics, such as employer-based health insurance, pharmacy benefits,
healthcare consolidation, and biotechnology. Features: *Contains
the most current statistics and industry developments *Every
chapter begins with a roadmap and ends with a summary and questions
to ponder *Includes insights to drug discovery and development,
biotechnology, and information technology, i.e., the marriage of
life sciences and business *Reflects the insights and feedback of
60+ professors
This book contains two Open Access chapters. The 21st volume of
Advances in Health Care Management presents informed commentaries
solicited from leaders across the field of health care management.
Each chapter tackles a specific health care challenge, describing
the state of the research on the challenge, identifying appropriate
organizational innovations to respond to the challenge, and setting
out a future research agenda. Expert authors consider what is
known, what is not known, and what is needed to fill the gaps and
advance knowledge. Responding to The Grand Challenges in Healthcare
Via Organizational Innovation explores in detail varied scenarios
and suggestions for dealing with unexpected crises, improving
diversity, equity and inclusion in health care, building strategic
alliances for inter-sector collaboration, as well as analyzing
organizational governance and physician financial risk models.
Consumers, public officials, and even managers of health care and
insurance are unhappy about care quality, access, and costs. This
book shows that is because efforts to do something about these
problems often rely on hope or conjecture, not rigorous evidence of
effectiveness. In this book, experts in the field separate the
speculative from the proven with regard to how care is rendered,
how patients can be in control, how providers should be paid, and
how disparities can be reduced - and they also identify the issues
for which evidence is currently missing. It provides an antidote to
frustration and a clear-eyed guide for forward progress, helping
health care and insurance innovators make better decisions on
deciding whether to go ahead now based on current evidence, to seek
and wait for additional evidence, or to move on to different ideas.
It will be useful to practitioners in hospital systems, medical
groups, and insurance organizations and can also be used in
executive and MBA teaching.
This volume analyzes group purchasing organizations (GPOs) and
pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) in order to better understand the
significant roles that these entities play in the healthcare supply
chain. It examines who they contract with, on what terms, and who
they represent and answer to while charting their historical
development. The analysis reveals that the current roles of both
players have historical roots that explain why they behave the way
they do. Finally, the book reviews the evidence base on the
performance results of these two players. This work fills a void in
our understanding about two important and controversial players in
the healthcare value chain. Both organizations are cloaked in
secrecy - partly by virtue of the private sector contracts they
negotiate, partly by virtue of the lack of academic attention. Both
play potentially important roles in controlling healthcare costs,
albeit using contracting strategies and reimbursement mechanisms
that arouse suspicion among stakeholders. This timely text
explicates how these organizations arose and evolved to shed more
light on how they really operate.
Consumers, public officials, and even managers of health care and
insurance are unhappy about care quality, access, and costs. This
book shows that is because efforts to do something about these
problems often rely on hope or conjecture, not rigorous evidence of
effectiveness. In this book, experts in the field separate the
speculative from the proven with regard to how care is rendered,
how patients can be in control, how providers should be paid, and
how disparities can be reduced - and they also identify the issues
for which evidence is currently missing. It provides an antidote to
frustration and a clear-eyed guide for forward progress, helping
health care and insurance innovators make better decisions on
deciding whether to go ahead now based on current evidence, to seek
and wait for additional evidence, or to move on to different ideas.
It will be useful to practitioners in hospital systems, medical
groups, and insurance organizations and can also be used in
executive and MBA teaching.
This volume provides a comprehensive review of China's healthcare
system and policy reforms in the context of the global economy.
Following a value-chain framework, the 16 chapters cover the
payers, the providers, and the producers (manufacturers) in China's
system. It also provides a detailed analysis of the historical
development of China's healthcare system, the current state of its
broad reforms, and the uneasy balance between China's market-driven
approach and governmental regulation. Most importantly, it devotes
considerable attention to the major problems confronting China,
including chronic illness, public health, and long-term care and
economic security for the elderly. Burns and Liu have assembled the
latest research from leading health economists and political
scientists, as well as senior public health officials and corporate
executives, making this book an essential read for industry
professionals, policymakers, researchers, and students studying
comparative health systems across the world.
This volume provides a comprehensive review of China's healthcare
system and policy reforms in the context of the global economy.
Following a value-chain framework, the 16 chapters cover the
payers, the providers, and the producers (manufacturers) in China's
system. It also provides a detailed analysis of the historical
development of China's healthcare system, the current state of its
broad reforms, and the uneasy balance between China's market-driven
approach and governmental regulation. Most importantly, it devotes
considerable attention to the major problems confronting China,
including chronic illness, public health, and long-term care and
economic security for the elderly. Burns and Liu have assembled the
latest research from leading health economists and political
scientists, as well as senior public health officials and corporate
executives, making this book an essential read for industry
professionals, policymakers, researchers, and students studying
comparative health systems across the world.
The tech sectors are the least understood portion of the healthcare
system, but the ones that supply most of the innovation in
healthcare services and generate most revenue. Fully updated for
this third edition, The Business of Healthcare Innovation is a
wide-ranging analysis of business models and trends in the tech
sectors of the healthcare industry. It provides a thorough overview
of and introduction to the innovative sectors that fuel
improvements in healthcare: pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, life
science startups, medical devices and information technology. For
each sector, the book examines the trends in scientific innovation,
the science behind that innovation, the business and revenue models
pursued to commercialize that innovation, the regulatory
constraints within which each sector must operate and the growing
issues posed by activist payers and consumers. From a combination
of academic and industry perspectives, the authors show why
healthcare sectors are such an important source of growth in any
nation's economy.
The tech sectors are the least understood portion of the healthcare
system, but the ones that supply most of the innovation in
healthcare services and generate most revenue. Fully updated for
this third edition, The Business of Healthcare Innovation is a
wide-ranging analysis of business models and trends in the tech
sectors of the healthcare industry. It provides a thorough overview
of and introduction to the innovative sectors that fuel
improvements in healthcare: pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, life
science startups, medical devices and information technology. For
each sector, the book examines the trends in scientific innovation,
the science behind that innovation, the business and revenue models
pursued to commercialize that innovation, the regulatory
constraints within which each sector must operate and the growing
issues posed by activist payers and consumers. From a combination
of academic and industry perspectives, the authors show why
healthcare sectors are such an important source of growth in any
nation's economy.
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