In comparison to the European healthcare system, the U.S. healthcare system has lower quality care, higher costs, and covers a smaller percentage of the population (Thomas et al., 2016). The United States spends annually approximately $9,523 per person on healthcare, which is more than 2.5 times the average paid by the other Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries (Abbott, Sutton, & Edwards, 2014; Martin et al., 2016). The general business problem is that the high cost of limited and modest healthcare services jeopardizes the standard of living and the economic security of U.S. citizens. The specific business problem is that some healthcare managers have limited strategies to improve efficiency while ...
To date, three generic types of policy responses to the problem of rising health expenditures have b...
Billing inefficiencies represent 80% of wasteful healthcare administrative costs that are projected ...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
In comparison to the European healthcare system, the U.S. healthcare system has lower quality care, ...
The United States healthcare system is known as expensive but not effective. This paper aims to find...
There is a mounting crisis in delivering affordable healthcare in the US. For decades, key decision ...
Summarizes an analysis of Medicare spending to assess the relative efficiency of healthcare provider...
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
Healthcare spending in the United States has continued to rise with annual healthcare cost of $3.8 t...
The United States, while home to some of the best medical procedures and doctors in the world, is cu...
American healthcare consumers pay the highest cost for healthcare out of any other country in the in...
Outlines options for slowing the growth of healthcare spending, including improving the Medicare fee...
A Thesis submitted to The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Phoenix in partial fulfillment...
This paper examines the issue of healthcare spending in the United States and analyzes different hea...
The United States has a health care spending problem. Accounting for over 17% of our Gross Domestic ...
To date, three generic types of policy responses to the problem of rising health expenditures have b...
Billing inefficiencies represent 80% of wasteful healthcare administrative costs that are projected ...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
In comparison to the European healthcare system, the U.S. healthcare system has lower quality care, ...
The United States healthcare system is known as expensive but not effective. This paper aims to find...
There is a mounting crisis in delivering affordable healthcare in the US. For decades, key decision ...
Summarizes an analysis of Medicare spending to assess the relative efficiency of healthcare provider...
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
Healthcare spending in the United States has continued to rise with annual healthcare cost of $3.8 t...
The United States, while home to some of the best medical procedures and doctors in the world, is cu...
American healthcare consumers pay the highest cost for healthcare out of any other country in the in...
Outlines options for slowing the growth of healthcare spending, including improving the Medicare fee...
A Thesis submitted to The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Phoenix in partial fulfillment...
This paper examines the issue of healthcare spending in the United States and analyzes different hea...
The United States has a health care spending problem. Accounting for over 17% of our Gross Domestic ...
To date, three generic types of policy responses to the problem of rising health expenditures have b...
Billing inefficiencies represent 80% of wasteful healthcare administrative costs that are projected ...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...