The revolution in health care in the 1980s has generated the belief in some quarters that the nation\u27s long-simmering competition-versus-regulation debate has been resolved in favor of competition. Those predicting rapidly growing alternative delivery systems and diminishing professional sovereignty seem to assume that competition will inevitably generate sufficient momentum to overcome any residual regulatory or professional obstacles
The health care industry in the United States has been faced with increasing health care costs not o...
The last several decades of health law and policy have been built on a foundation of economic theory...
Are advanced industrialized countries converging on a market response to reform their systems of soc...
In health care, the increase in market concentration on both the insurer side and the provider side ...
This Article discusses these issues in considering the competitive approach to reforming medical c...
Proposals to restructure the health care industry by increasing market competition currently have mu...
This chapter, in the book Health Care and EU Law (TMC Asser Press 2011), explores how market competi...
This paper addresses three issues. First, why did market competition emerge in the U.S. health care ...
It is not the purpose of this Article to reject all features of procompetitive proposals. Competitiv...
As hospital, physician, and health insurance markets consolidate and change in response to health ca...
This Article is intended to put in context the many issues raised by this new interest in competitio...
Comments on the implication of individual health insurance market reform for policy making in the Un...
The time is ripe for taking a new look at health-care reform. Between a free market and a government...
How should we go about reconciling competition and consumer protection in health care, given the lon...
Journal ArticleAmong the economic and political challenges facing the United States today, none is m...
The health care industry in the United States has been faced with increasing health care costs not o...
The last several decades of health law and policy have been built on a foundation of economic theory...
Are advanced industrialized countries converging on a market response to reform their systems of soc...
In health care, the increase in market concentration on both the insurer side and the provider side ...
This Article discusses these issues in considering the competitive approach to reforming medical c...
Proposals to restructure the health care industry by increasing market competition currently have mu...
This chapter, in the book Health Care and EU Law (TMC Asser Press 2011), explores how market competi...
This paper addresses three issues. First, why did market competition emerge in the U.S. health care ...
It is not the purpose of this Article to reject all features of procompetitive proposals. Competitiv...
As hospital, physician, and health insurance markets consolidate and change in response to health ca...
This Article is intended to put in context the many issues raised by this new interest in competitio...
Comments on the implication of individual health insurance market reform for policy making in the Un...
The time is ripe for taking a new look at health-care reform. Between a free market and a government...
How should we go about reconciling competition and consumer protection in health care, given the lon...
Journal ArticleAmong the economic and political challenges facing the United States today, none is m...
The health care industry in the United States has been faced with increasing health care costs not o...
The last several decades of health law and policy have been built on a foundation of economic theory...
Are advanced industrialized countries converging on a market response to reform their systems of soc...