A national health program for the United States. A physicians' proposal
- PMID: 2911282
- DOI: 10.1056/NEJM198901123200206
A national health program for the United States. A physicians' proposal
Abstract
Our health care system is failing. Tens of millions of people are uninsured, costs are skyrocketing, and the bureaucracy is expanding. Patchwork reforms succeed only in exchanging old problems for new ones. It is time for basic change in American medicine. We propose a national health program that would (1) fully cover everyone under a single, comprehensive public insurance program; (2) pay hospitals and nursing homes a total (global) annual amount to cover all operating expenses; (3) fund capital costs through separate appropriations; (4) pay for physicians' services and ambulatory services in any of three ways: through fee-for-service payments with a simplified fee schedule and mandatory acceptance of the national health program payment as the total payment for a service or procedure (assignment), through global budgets for hospitals and clinics employing salaried physicians, or on a per capita basis (capitation); (5) be funded, at least initially, from the same sources as at present, but with all payments disbursed from a single pool; and (6) contain costs through savings on billing and bureaucracy, improved health planning, and the ability of the national health program, as the single payer for services, to establish overall spending limits. Through this proposal, we hope to provide a pragmatic framework for public debate of fundamental health-policy reform.
Similar articles
-
Single-payer national health insurance. Physicians' views.Arch Intern Med. 2004 Feb 9;164(3):300-4. doi: 10.1001/archinte.164.3.300. Arch Intern Med. 2004. PMID: 14769625
-
New payment model for rural health services in Mongolia.Rural Remote Health. 2006 Jan-Mar;6(1):434. Epub 2006 Feb 7. Rural Remote Health. 2006. PMID: 16460229
-
National health care reform and a single-payer system: messiah or pariah?J Health Hum Serv Adm. 1997 Winter;19(3):341-56. J Health Hum Serv Adm. 1997. PMID: 10168172
-
Physician payment 2008 for interventionalists: current state of health care policy.Pain Physician. 2007 Sep;10(5):607-26. Pain Physician. 2007. PMID: 17876359 Review.
-
Issues in health care: interventional pain management at the crossroads.Pain Physician. 2007 Mar;10(2):261-84. Pain Physician. 2007. PMID: 17387349 Review.
Cited by
-
Is health care a luxury or necessity good? Evidence from Asian countries.Int J Health Econ Manag. 2019 Jun;19(2):213-233. doi: 10.1007/s10754-018-9253-0. Epub 2018 Sep 21. Int J Health Econ Manag. 2019. PMID: 30242582
-
HSOs, HMOs, and CHOs: The Continuing History of Capitation-Funded Health Care.Can Fam Physician. 1990 Aug;36:1402-6. Can Fam Physician. 1990. PMID: 21233896 Free PMC article.
-
National health insurance in America--can we practice with it? Can we continue to practice without it?West J Med. 1989 Aug;151(2):210-6. West J Med. 1989. PMID: 2672604 Free PMC article. Review.
-
Access to medical care for documented and undocumented Latinos in a southern California county.West J Med. 1991 Apr;154(4):414-7. West J Med. 1991. PMID: 1877182 Free PMC article.
-
Transitional funding: changing Ontario's global budgeting system.Health Care Financ Rev. 1992 Spring;13(3):77-84. Health Care Financ Rev. 1992. PMID: 10120184 Free PMC article.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources