This book is written with an acute awareness of the need for new insight to ensure (1) universal protection in basic healthcare; (2) providing choice; (3) efficient production and consumption of healthcare services; (4) financial sustainability of the healthcare system. Defining the public interest as the welfare of the representative individual with no vested interest who imagines himself to have equal chance of being anyone in society, this book explores alternative ways of finance and delivery, the optimal interface between the public healthcare sector and the private healthcare sector, and that between public insurance and private insurance. The book includes a theoretical but non-technical section that distinguishes between the stock...
This paper discusses the differences between public and private health care and the outcomes each wo...
This paper discusses the differences between public and private health care and the outcomes each wo...
Many of the assumptions underlying health care issues appear to be taken for granted by policy maker...
This article describes the anatomy of health insurance. It begins by considering the optimal design ...
Essay One: Genetic Health Risks: The Case for Universal Public Health Insurance. This paper examines...
In this paper we investigate the economic rationales for the design of health care financing arrange...
A collection of comparative case studies analysing the history, politics and performance of private ...
The particular nature of healthcare protection and healthcare insurance requires government interven...
In the 40 years since the introduction of universal public health insurance in Australia, there has ...
The focus of this thesis is health economics and the interface between the public and private hospit...
Expenditures for health care and health insurance have increased rapidly over the last several deca...
Rising costs of health care provision throughout the world have provoked a vigorous debate about the...
Adverse selection and moral hazard are two effects of incomplete information in the market for healt...
© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of European Economic Associatio...
Economics has become a dominant framework for analysing problems in public health and health care an...
This paper discusses the differences between public and private health care and the outcomes each wo...
This paper discusses the differences between public and private health care and the outcomes each wo...
Many of the assumptions underlying health care issues appear to be taken for granted by policy maker...
This article describes the anatomy of health insurance. It begins by considering the optimal design ...
Essay One: Genetic Health Risks: The Case for Universal Public Health Insurance. This paper examines...
In this paper we investigate the economic rationales for the design of health care financing arrange...
A collection of comparative case studies analysing the history, politics and performance of private ...
The particular nature of healthcare protection and healthcare insurance requires government interven...
In the 40 years since the introduction of universal public health insurance in Australia, there has ...
The focus of this thesis is health economics and the interface between the public and private hospit...
Expenditures for health care and health insurance have increased rapidly over the last several deca...
Rising costs of health care provision throughout the world have provoked a vigorous debate about the...
Adverse selection and moral hazard are two effects of incomplete information in the market for healt...
© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of European Economic Associatio...
Economics has become a dominant framework for analysing problems in public health and health care an...
This paper discusses the differences between public and private health care and the outcomes each wo...
This paper discusses the differences between public and private health care and the outcomes each wo...
Many of the assumptions underlying health care issues appear to be taken for granted by policy maker...