The United States healthcare system is known as expensive but not effective. This paper aims to find a possible solution for the current health care affordability difficulties in different areas. The paper examines four existing issues with the current healthcare system including unnecessary usage of technology, non-uniform pricing system, lack of preventive measures, and insufficient insurance coverage. It proposes the following solutions: entrepreneurial innovations, standardized pricing systems, selected preventative measures and regulated insurance coverage, respectively.The next stage of the research is to quantify the research through financial modeling and find the most optimized public funding allocation
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
What are the ethical considerations regarding the price that pharmaceutical companies charge for med...
The United States is often described as the only developed nation without a public commitment to uni...
In comparison to the European healthcare system, the U.S. healthcare system has lower quality care, ...
Healthcare expenditure in the United States has grown and will continue to increase. The increasing ...
The purpose of this research is to explore on a deeper level the healthcare system of the United Sta...
In 1995, total US spending on healthcare was about $2.9 trillion, representing around 17% of 2013 GD...
The United States has the most expensive health care system in the world, yet its system produces in...
This paper investigates the question of whether competitive markets in health insurance and in medic...
Provides an overview of healthcare spending and funding sources, levels of subsidy and compulsion re...
American healthcare consumers pay the highest cost for healthcare out of any other country in the in...
Comparative analysis of healthcare spending in the United States is compared with other high-income ...
America\u27s health care system is struggling on many fronts. We are paying more and getting less co...
The affordability of healthcare is a major, recurring topic in the media. One of President Obama’s c...
The healthcare system in the United States is the most prevalent and underemphasized issue in the co...
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
What are the ethical considerations regarding the price that pharmaceutical companies charge for med...
The United States is often described as the only developed nation without a public commitment to uni...
In comparison to the European healthcare system, the U.S. healthcare system has lower quality care, ...
Healthcare expenditure in the United States has grown and will continue to increase. The increasing ...
The purpose of this research is to explore on a deeper level the healthcare system of the United Sta...
In 1995, total US spending on healthcare was about $2.9 trillion, representing around 17% of 2013 GD...
The United States has the most expensive health care system in the world, yet its system produces in...
This paper investigates the question of whether competitive markets in health insurance and in medic...
Provides an overview of healthcare spending and funding sources, levels of subsidy and compulsion re...
American healthcare consumers pay the highest cost for healthcare out of any other country in the in...
Comparative analysis of healthcare spending in the United States is compared with other high-income ...
America\u27s health care system is struggling on many fronts. We are paying more and getting less co...
The affordability of healthcare is a major, recurring topic in the media. One of President Obama’s c...
The healthcare system in the United States is the most prevalent and underemphasized issue in the co...
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
What are the ethical considerations regarding the price that pharmaceutical companies charge for med...
The United States is often described as the only developed nation without a public commitment to uni...