"Overcharged is just what the doctor ordered." --Jeffrey S. Flier, MD,
former dean, Harvard Medical SchoolWhy is the American health care
system so dysfunctional and expensive? Why does the EpiPen, containing
$1 worth of medicine, cost $600? Why do hospitalized patients receive
bills laden with inflated and surprise charges that come out of the blue
from out-of-network providers, or that demand payment for services that
weren't delivered? Why is more than $1 trillion--one out of every three
dollars that passes through the system--lost to fraud, wasted on
services that don't help patients, or misspent? What are the causes of
spiraling costs, mediocre quality, and limited access?Overcharged
details how the answers to these questions are connected and reveals a
system that performs as if it had been designed to spend as much money
as it can, and to be as confusing and unfriendly as possible, with no
accountability. Overcharged then exhaustively details real
reforms--showing how health care can become more efficient and
pro-consumer when it is subjected to the competitive forces that apply
to the rest of the economy, and will only get better and cheaper when
consumers exert pressure from below.