The author examines public economics rationales for public intervention in health insurance markets, draws on the literature of organizational design to examine alternative intervention strategies, and considers health insurance reforms in four Latin American countries -- Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Colombia -- in light of the theoretical literature. Equity has been the main reason for large-scale public intervention in the health insurance sector, despite the well-known failures of insurance and health care markets associated with imperfect information. Recent reforms have sought less to make private markets more efficient than to make public provision more efficient, sometimes by altering the focus and function of existing institutions ...
Objectives: This article analyzes the content and outcome of ongoing health reforms in Latin America...
The authors focus on health policy issues associated with health reform needed to meet the health ne...
It is now 15 years since the publication of Investing in Health (World Bank, 1993), a report which s...
This article examines rationales for public intervention in health insurance markets from the perspe...
This article examines rationales for public intervention in health insurance markets from the perspe...
The possibility of designing and implementing a reform proposal will depend on previously existing c...
Recent literature on Latin American countries shows that private expenses as a share of the total ex...
Includes bibliographyFollowing a conceptual analysis of the term "quasi-market", this article will l...
In the 1990s, international financial multilateral agencies promoted changes in the way health syst...
Unexpected medical care spending imposes considerable financial risk on developing country household...
Artículo de publicación ISIStarting in the late 1980s, many Latin American countries began social se...
Unexpected medical care spending imposes considerable financial risk on developing country household...
Artículo de publicación ISIStarting in the late 1980s, many Latin American countries began social se...
Unexpected medical care spending imposes considerable financial risk on developing country household...
Health insurance is proposed by several Latin American governments to reach universal health coverag...
Objectives: This article analyzes the content and outcome of ongoing health reforms in Latin America...
The authors focus on health policy issues associated with health reform needed to meet the health ne...
It is now 15 years since the publication of Investing in Health (World Bank, 1993), a report which s...
This article examines rationales for public intervention in health insurance markets from the perspe...
This article examines rationales for public intervention in health insurance markets from the perspe...
The possibility of designing and implementing a reform proposal will depend on previously existing c...
Recent literature on Latin American countries shows that private expenses as a share of the total ex...
Includes bibliographyFollowing a conceptual analysis of the term "quasi-market", this article will l...
In the 1990s, international financial multilateral agencies promoted changes in the way health syst...
Unexpected medical care spending imposes considerable financial risk on developing country household...
Artículo de publicación ISIStarting in the late 1980s, many Latin American countries began social se...
Unexpected medical care spending imposes considerable financial risk on developing country household...
Artículo de publicación ISIStarting in the late 1980s, many Latin American countries began social se...
Unexpected medical care spending imposes considerable financial risk on developing country household...
Health insurance is proposed by several Latin American governments to reach universal health coverag...
Objectives: This article analyzes the content and outcome of ongoing health reforms in Latin America...
The authors focus on health policy issues associated with health reform needed to meet the health ne...
It is now 15 years since the publication of Investing in Health (World Bank, 1993), a report which s...