Health care spending comprises about 16% of the total United States gross domestic product and continues to rise. This article examines patterns of health care spending and the factors underlying their proportional growth. We examine the usual suspects most frequently cited as drivers of health care costs and explain why these may not be as important as they seem. We suggest that the drive for technological advancement, coupled with the entrepreneurial nature of the health care industry, has produced inherently inequitable and unsustainable health care expenditure and growth patterns. Successful health reform will need to address these factors and their consequence
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
Summarizes available data on healthcare costs and the impact of spending growth on society, and expl...
Both private and public payers have experienced a persistent rise in health care spending that has e...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
Health care spending has grown almost twice as fast as has the gross national product since 1965. Va...
his chapter discusses reasons for the rapid increases in health care costs. Even though hospital ser...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
This annual article presents information on health care costs by business, households, and governmen...
The dual problems of high and rising medical care expenditures and substantial differences in spendi...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...
After a brief reprieve, healthcare spending in the United States is expected to once again rise rapi...
After a brief reprieve, healthcare spending in the United States is expected to once again rise rapi...
U.S. health care expenditures as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) reached 17.9 percent in 201...
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
Summarizes available data on healthcare costs and the impact of spending growth on society, and expl...
Both private and public payers have experienced a persistent rise in health care spending that has e...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
Health care spending has grown almost twice as fast as has the gross national product since 1965. Va...
his chapter discusses reasons for the rapid increases in health care costs. Even though hospital ser...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
This annual article presents information on health care costs by business, households, and governmen...
The dual problems of high and rising medical care expenditures and substantial differences in spendi...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...
After a brief reprieve, healthcare spending in the United States is expected to once again rise rapi...
After a brief reprieve, healthcare spending in the United States is expected to once again rise rapi...
U.S. health care expenditures as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) reached 17.9 percent in 201...
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
Summarizes available data on healthcare costs and the impact of spending growth on society, and expl...