A look at some of the reasons behind the ascent in health care costs over the last few decades and an analysis of how government policy has both contributed to and tried to rein in these costs.Insurance, Health ; Medical care, Cost of
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
During the past 50 years, spending on health care services—by households, private businesses, and st...
This paper explores the changing role of government involvement in health care financing policy outs...
All across the country there is a sense of urgency, and even of crisis over what is happening in the...
Soaring health care expenditures and the large number of uninsured Americans-now estimated at 35 mil...
Summarizes the debate over the potential impact of reform on the role of the federal government in h...
Throughout the 1970s, the two major political parties espoused some form of national health insuranc...
A decade ago policy makers and the public expressed a desire for order amid the chaos of United Stat...
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
Health care is what economists call a superior good, one that claims an increasing part of the con...
The essay in the 2005 annual report summarizes the themes and consensus-based prescriptions for acti...
The politics of health care are undergoing a quiet transformation. Relentless inflation in medical c...
The author notes that the composition of the \u27fundamental problem of rising health care costs is...
Health care costs in the United States have risen drastically in the last thirty years. In the 1960s...
Provides an overview of healthcare spending and funding sources, levels of subsidy and compulsion re...
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
During the past 50 years, spending on health care services—by households, private businesses, and st...
This paper explores the changing role of government involvement in health care financing policy outs...
All across the country there is a sense of urgency, and even of crisis over what is happening in the...
Soaring health care expenditures and the large number of uninsured Americans-now estimated at 35 mil...
Summarizes the debate over the potential impact of reform on the role of the federal government in h...
Throughout the 1970s, the two major political parties espoused some form of national health insuranc...
A decade ago policy makers and the public expressed a desire for order amid the chaos of United Stat...
In 1991, total U.S. health expenditures reached $750 billion or over 11 percent of the Gross Nationa...
Health care is what economists call a superior good, one that claims an increasing part of the con...
The essay in the 2005 annual report summarizes the themes and consensus-based prescriptions for acti...
The politics of health care are undergoing a quiet transformation. Relentless inflation in medical c...
The author notes that the composition of the \u27fundamental problem of rising health care costs is...
Health care costs in the United States have risen drastically in the last thirty years. In the 1960s...
Provides an overview of healthcare spending and funding sources, levels of subsidy and compulsion re...
This article chronicles the slow but steady emergence of countervailing power in the hospital indust...
During the past 50 years, spending on health care services—by households, private businesses, and st...
This paper explores the changing role of government involvement in health care financing policy outs...