This Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on the patchwork health care system to be published in the Houston Journal of Health Law & Policy considers whether current reactions to fragmentation in health care represent minor variations on a longstanding theme in US health policy or offer a more substantial counterpoint to that theme. The theme is this: that perfect physicians should be allowed to control health care even if safeguards are needed in practice because real physicians are not perfect. The Foreword previews four scholarly articles featured in the published symposium. It concludes that, while all the articles present original and valuable insights, the future health care system they describe is more variation than counterpoint on...
This Article concerns the effect of current legal rules upon the possibility of developing non-profi...
This article examines the tension between the medical profession\u27s control of medical decisionmak...
The recent wave of public concern about health care has precipitated a trend toward public scrutiny ...
This Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on the patchwork health care system to be published in th...
Thanks to technology, innovation, and creative entrepreneurs, Americans in the twenty-first century ...
My purpose in this commentary is twofold. First, I want to offer a few thoughts on why the American ...
In response to a prominent editorial by Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen, Professor Sage explains how a relatio...
Although scholars and policymakers increasingly accept the need to ration health care, physicians do...
Physicians have long enjoyed prestige, power, and autonomy, but the rise of managed care organizatio...
This Article contends that market failures and the inherent limitation of an economic model to regul...
Physician behavior is a key target of government regulation intended to improve the efficiency, qual...
Abstract Until recently, physicians were viewed as the dominant player in health policy. Now, howeve...
Fragmentation has aptly described the United States\u27 historically decentralized, disjointed, and ...
The American health care system is on a glide path toward ruin. Health spending has become the fisca...
The article discusses the inefficiencies in U.S. health care provision that is not addressed by the ...
This Article concerns the effect of current legal rules upon the possibility of developing non-profi...
This article examines the tension between the medical profession\u27s control of medical decisionmak...
The recent wave of public concern about health care has precipitated a trend toward public scrutiny ...
This Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on the patchwork health care system to be published in th...
Thanks to technology, innovation, and creative entrepreneurs, Americans in the twenty-first century ...
My purpose in this commentary is twofold. First, I want to offer a few thoughts on why the American ...
In response to a prominent editorial by Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen, Professor Sage explains how a relatio...
Although scholars and policymakers increasingly accept the need to ration health care, physicians do...
Physicians have long enjoyed prestige, power, and autonomy, but the rise of managed care organizatio...
This Article contends that market failures and the inherent limitation of an economic model to regul...
Physician behavior is a key target of government regulation intended to improve the efficiency, qual...
Abstract Until recently, physicians were viewed as the dominant player in health policy. Now, howeve...
Fragmentation has aptly described the United States\u27 historically decentralized, disjointed, and ...
The American health care system is on a glide path toward ruin. Health spending has become the fisca...
The article discusses the inefficiencies in U.S. health care provision that is not addressed by the ...
This Article concerns the effect of current legal rules upon the possibility of developing non-profi...
This article examines the tension between the medical profession\u27s control of medical decisionmak...
The recent wave of public concern about health care has precipitated a trend toward public scrutiny ...