What patients really want from health care.
暂无分享,去创建一个
IN 2012, PERHAPS THE MOST WIDELY SCRUTINIZED SECtor of the economy in North America will be the health care industry. Politicians, policy analysts, academics, and the public share concerns about the state of health care in both the United States and Canada. However, each of these constituencies has a different perspective. Most sectors of the economy are characterized by a supply side that focuses on minimizing costs, expanding sales, and maximizing profits and a demand side that considers consumer preferences, incomes, and alternative purchases. Markets use prices to link supply to demand. Health care is very different. In the mid-20th century, patients’ aversion to the risk of large health care expenses gave rise to a market for insurance, thereby separating patients from the true costs of care at the point of service delivery. This in turn greatly expanded demand for health care, resulting in cost escalation, which gave rise to government involvement in many ways (eg, tax subsidies, US Medicare, the Canada Health Care Act, and, most recently, the US Affordable Care Act). Decades after this evolution began, the United States and Canada are struggling to contain the “beast” of health care costs by setting priorities, an important step in policy formation. Politicians, the media, and academics often focus on important issues like cost increases, waste, inefficiency, access, cost-effectiveness, evidence-based medicine, and conflicts of interest. This Commentary focuses specifically on what people want from health care services and rates these preferences from highest to lowest. The opinions are based on my 30 years of experience, both in performing research in health economics and as a practicing general internist who cares for inpatients, many of whom are elderly and very ill. Because preferences vary in health care, like preferences in every sector, the characterizations described may not apply to all.
[1] A. Detsky,et al. What is different about the market for health care? , 2007, JAMA.
[2] Edward Etchells,et al. Single-patient rooms for safe patient-centered hospitals. , 2008, JAMA.
[3] Irfan Dhalla,et al. Canada's health care system and the sustainability paradox , 2007, Canadian Medical Association Journal.
[4] J. Maa. The waits that matter. , 2011, The New England journal of medicine.