Market-Based Health Care: All Myth, No Reality
By (Author) Grace Budrys
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
24th July 2019
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Popular medicine and health
Health systems and services
338.473621
Paperback
254
Width 154mm, Height 230mm, Spine 18mm
372g
Market-Based Health Care defines for students the challenges, arguments and politics behind the concept of consumer-driven health care including what it would look like if the business sector would do a better job of organizing our health care arrangements and remove any governmental components built into the system. As a sociologist interested in health care, Budrys focuses on the impact our health care arrangements have on not just an economic level but how they affect people as well. This is an overwhelmingly complex topic and debate and one that is discussed widely in the classroom. This will be the first text to clearly present the market-based health care model and how doctors, medical insurance and big pharma play a role in its development.
In her well-argued book Budrys (emer., DePaul Univ.) reviews the market-based theory of health care, contrasting myth with reality to make the case that for a health care industry to be completely market-driven is an unrealistic goal. She observes that while the consumers of health care are essentially patients, fulfilling such a role is fundamentally different than purchasing a good or service in a free-market economy, where lowest price trumps all. In actuality, federal and state governments are the crucial purchasers of health care, and without this source of demand, private-sector organizations would have minimal interest in addressing a competitive market. In other words, the market would diminish. The text first reviews the market-based model, then looks at each of the major industry sectors, from doctors and insurance companies to hospitals, pharmaceuticals, and occupations, examining how the drive toward "consumer-driven" health care influences their actions relative to the patients they are supposed to serve. By showing how critical government support is to the health care organizations that operate in the private sector, Budrys ably challenges the idea that a market-based approach will solve the problems that plague the industry. This book is well worth the read.
Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.
Grace Budrys is professor emerita at DePaul University. She chaired the committee that created the Master of Public Health program, and served as director of the Public Services Master Program. She is actively engaged in research and writing focused on health sector occupations, organizations, and policy. She has consulted with government and nonprofit organizations throughout her academic career. Her books include Unequal Health: How Inequality Contributes to Health or Illness and How Nonprofits Work: Case Studies in Nonprofit Organizations.