|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
The chaotic state of today's health care is the result of an
explosion of effective medical technologies. Rising costs will
continue to trouble U.S. health care in the coming decades, but new
molecular strategies may eventually contain costs. As life
expectancy is dramatically extended by molecular medicine, a
growing population of the aged will bring new problems. In the next
fifty years genetic intervention will shift the focus of medicine
in the United States from repairing the ravages of disease to
preventing the onset of disease. Understanding the role of genes in
human health, says Dr. William B. Schwartz, is the driving force
that will change the direction of medical care, and the age-old
dream of life without disease may come close to realization by the
middle of the next century. Medical care in 2050 will be vastly
more effective, Schwartz maintains, and it may also be less
expensive than the resource-intensive procedures such as coronary
bypass surgery that medicine relies on today. Schwartz's alluring
prospect of a medical utopia raises urgent questions, however. What
are the scientific and public policy obstacles that must be
overcome if such a goal is to become a reality? Restrictions on
access imposed by managed care plans, the corporatization of
charitable health care institutions, the increasing numbers of
citizens without health insurance, the problems with malpractice
insurance, and the threatened Medicare bankruptcy-all are the
legacy of medicine's great progress in mastering the human body and
society's inability to assimilate that mastery into existing
economic, ethical, and legal structures. And if the average
American life span is 130 years, a genuine possibility by 2050,
what social and economic problems will result? Schwartz examines
the forces that have brought us to the current health care state
and shows how those same forces will exert themselves in the
decades ahead. Focusing on the inextricable link between scientific
progress and health policy, he encourages a careful examination of
these two forces in order to determine the kind of medical utopia
that awaits us. The decisions we make will affect not only our own
care, but also the system of care we bequeath to our children. This
title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1998.
The chaotic state of today's health care is the result of an
explosion of effective medical technologies. Rising costs will
continue to trouble U.S. health care in the coming decades, but new
molecular strategies may eventually contain costs. As life
expectancy is dramatically extended by molecular medicine, a
growing population of the aged will bring new problems. In the next
fifty years genetic intervention will shift the focus of medicine
in the United States from repairing the ravages of disease to
preventing the onset of disease. Understanding the role of genes in
human health, says Dr. William B. Schwartz, is the driving force
that will change the direction of medical care, and the age-old
dream of life without disease may come close to realization by the
middle of the next century. Medical care in 2050 will be vastly
more effective, Schwartz maintains, and it may also be less
expensive than the resource-intensive procedures such as coronary
bypass surgery that medicine relies on today. Schwartz's alluring
prospect of a medical utopia raises urgent questions, however. What
are the scientific and public policy obstacles that must be
overcome if such a goal is to become a reality? Restrictions on
access imposed by managed care plans, the corporatization of
charitable health care institutions, the increasing numbers of
citizens without health insurance, the problems with malpractice
insurance, and the threatened Medicare bankruptcy-all are the
legacy of medicine's great progress in mastering the human body and
society's inability to assimilate that mastery into existing
economic, ethical, and legal structures. And if the average
American life span is 130 years, a genuine possibility by 2050,
what social and economic problems will result? Schwartz examines
the forces that have brought us to the current health care state
and shows how those same forces will exert themselves in the
decades ahead. Focusing on the inextricable link between scientific
progress and health policy, he encourages a careful examination of
these two forces in order to determine the kind of medical utopia
that awaits us. The decisions we make will affect not only our own
care, but also the system of care we bequeath to our children. This
title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1998.
Over the past four decades, the share of income devoted to health
care nearly tripled. If policy is unchanged, this trend is likely
to continue. Should Americans decide to rein in the growth of
health care spending, they will be forced to consider whether to
ration care for the well-insured, a prospect that is odious and
unthinkable to many. This book argues that sensible health care
rationing can not only save money but improve general welfare and
public health. It reviews the experience with health care rationing
in Great Britain. The choices the British have made point up the
nature of the options Americans will face if they wish to keep
public health care budgets from driving taxes ever higher and
private health care spending from crowding out increases in other
forms of worker compensation and consumption. This book explains
why serious consideration of health care rationing is inescapable.
It also provides the information policymakers and concerned
citizens need to think clearly about these difficult issues and
engage in an informed debate.
Many medical authorities predict that average life expectancy could
well exceed 100 years by mid century and rise even higher soon
thereafter. This astonishing prospect, brought on by the revolution
in molecular biology and information technology, confronts
policymakers and public health officials with a host of new
questions. How will increased longevity affect local and global
demographic trends, government taxation and spending, health care,
the workplace, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid? What
ethical and quality-of-life issues are raised by these new
breakthroughs? In Coping with Methuselah, a group of practicing
scientists and public policy experts come together to address the
problems, challenges, and opportunities posed by a longer life
span. This book will generate discussion in political, social, and
medical circles and help prepare us for the extraordinary
possibilities that the future may hold.
|
|