A health system for the twenty-first century

Ron J. Anderson, Pickens Sue, Enriqueta C. Bond, Peter O. Kohler, Galvin Robert

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Health care spending in the United States is massive and on the rise. We do not, however, spend our health care dollars wisely. Despite the importance of health and health care to individual, community, and national productivity, we have not designed a health system that assiduously leverages its resources to maximize health. Rather, we continue to support a health care system that does not provide access to basic care for all citizens and does not fully exploit either established knowledge or technologies proven to improve health. Our health care spending and policy is heavily skewed towards treating rather than preventing illness (leading to higher treatment costs). We overemphasize the care of individuals to the detriment of the health of populations. We do not organize our practice systems to manage chronic illnesses as well as we could. Quality and safety of care are highly variable; both over-treatment and under-treatment are commonplace. Such practices waste dollars and patient time and expose patients to unnecessary risk. Typically, incentives are not aligned with desired behaviors of patients and health professionals. Further, administrative costs are high and regulations are often beside the mark. In short, we must make substantial reforms. The Blue Ridge Academic Health Group (Blue Ridge Group) believes that it is both possible and essential for the United States to spend its health care dollars much more rationally and effectively. We can build a true <italic>health system</italic> that is capable of maximizing the health of individuals and populations.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationThe Academic Health Center Leadership and Performance
PublisherCambridge University Press
Pages26-72
Number of pages47
ISBN (Electronic)9780511543487
ISBN (Print)0521827183, 9780521827188
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2005

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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