This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital industry since mid-century. The transformation of American health care policymaking reflects the federal government\u27s growing fiscal obligations as the single largest purchaser of health care. As John Kenneth Galbraith [1956,113] notes, Power on one side of a market creates both the need for, and the prospect of reward to, the exercise of countervailing power from the other side. The federal government\u27s effort to exercise countervailing power over health care providers shows no sign of abating in the future, for Medicare and Medicaid costs threaten the stability of the balanced budget agreement negotiated by the Clinton administration and ...
This article explores the ways in which health care has evolved over the past few years for patients...
This Article will explore the power struggle that Medicaid invites and its potential elevation due t...
Although the traditional means for affording access to goods and services in a capitalistic economy ...
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
Full text of this article is not available in SOAR.Although pronouncements of the ¿health care crisi...
The next steps in health reform, like all such efforts before it, will have to engage the issue of A...
A decade ago policy makers and the public expressed a desire for order amid the chaos of United Stat...
This article applies economic theory to the financing of health ctire. The authors point out that re...
The pessimism about the possibilities for health care reform in America, as reflected in Steinmo and...
The politics of health care are undergoing a quiet transformation. Relentless inflation in medical c...
This article examines the medical care sector in New York City in the wake of that city’s fiscal cri...
This article addresses two components of the new governing architecture (NGA) that help to reform th...
Medicaid plays key roles in supporting our nation’s health. Under the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid ...
Health care reform dominates the domestic agenda of the Clinton Administration. Policy analysts, med...
This article explores the ways in which health care has evolved over the past few years for patients...
This Article will explore the power struggle that Medicaid invites and its potential elevation due t...
Although the traditional means for affording access to goods and services in a capitalistic economy ...
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
Full text of this article is not available in SOAR.Although pronouncements of the ¿health care crisi...
The next steps in health reform, like all such efforts before it, will have to engage the issue of A...
A decade ago policy makers and the public expressed a desire for order amid the chaos of United Stat...
This article applies economic theory to the financing of health ctire. The authors point out that re...
The pessimism about the possibilities for health care reform in America, as reflected in Steinmo and...
The politics of health care are undergoing a quiet transformation. Relentless inflation in medical c...
This article examines the medical care sector in New York City in the wake of that city’s fiscal cri...
This article addresses two components of the new governing architecture (NGA) that help to reform th...
Medicaid plays key roles in supporting our nation’s health. Under the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid ...
Health care reform dominates the domestic agenda of the Clinton Administration. Policy analysts, med...
This article explores the ways in which health care has evolved over the past few years for patients...
This Article will explore the power struggle that Medicaid invites and its potential elevation due t...
Although the traditional means for affording access to goods and services in a capitalistic economy ...