Improving Healthcare: A Dose of Competition systematically examines the
American health care system from a competition-oriented perspective. The
volume surveys the performance of each major sector of the health care
system, and identifies impediments to more effective competition.
Improving Healthcare examines such issues as competition v. regulation,
public and private sector approaches to health care financing,
cross-subsidies, licensure, provider market concentration, financial and
clinical integration, payment for performance, quality, pharmacy benefit
managers, direct-to-consumer advertising of pharmaceuticals,
certificates of need, mandates, unionization, the significance of
organizational status (nonprofit v. for-profit), and the role of
antitrust and consumer protection in health care. It offers concrete
recommendations to improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of the
American health care marketplace.