Understand how the healthcare system works – and how you can succeed in it Covers the 2010 Affordable Care Act A Doody's Core Title for 2015! The most trusted and comprehensive guide to healthcare available, Understanding Health Policy provides everything students and professionals need to build a solid foundation on the field’s most critical issues. Expert practitioners in both the public and private healthcare sectors, the authors cover the entire scope of our healthcare system―from the concepts behind policy decisions to concrete examples of how they affect patients and professionals alike. Understanding Health Policy, 6e makes otherwise difficult concepts easy to understand―so you can make better decisions, improve outcomes, and enact positive change on a daily basis. Understanding Health Policy, 6e will help you develop a clearer, more systematic way of thinking about health care in the United States, its problems, and the alternatives for managing and solving these problems.
Excellent primer on health care policy in the U.S., namely, structure, economics/financing, history, legislation/reforms, comparisons to other nations, and current challenges. I had read "Healing of America" by TR Reid. While that book was an interesting read, I felt too much of it was anecdotal and either assumed and/or ignored the details of health care economics and policy that are necessary to understand where the US has gone wrong. Bodenheimer's book cites numerous studies and statistics to back up any facts or assertions he makes.
The heart of the book is really Chapters 13-17, which all the previous chapters help build a foundation to properly understand. Here, medical ethics (and its relationship with economics) are discussed, legislative history (including Obama's) and its consequences analyzed, competing interests broken down (providers/suppliers/purchasers, which can vary from HMOs, the gov't, citizens, physicians, hospitals), and the inherent and often difficult to resolve conflicts between these various players.
Necessary read for anyone interested in having a comprehensive foundation for understanding and discussing health care policy.
On a side note, this was the first Kindle book I (reluctantly) purchased from the Amazon store. I must say the ability to read anywhere on my smartphone and annotate/highlight to my heart's desire makes me more inclined to purchase e-books in the future.
well, for a textbook, it was good, i suppose :/ In all seriousness, it was comprehensive and easy to understand and I didn't want to kill myself reading it, which is the major textbook benchmark.
Read this book as supplemental resding for a graduate level course in Public Policy regarding topics in health care. I generally despise textbooks, but this one is not bad--short and easily digestible, serving as a solid reference.
An excellent way to understand the broken, fragmented US healthcare market. Recommend to anyone looking to better understand where we are and why. Something I will go back to as great reference.
Great basic overview of the health care system in the U.S. and its development over time. Good cross-national comparisons with Western European systems and Japan. This is a quick read, best suited for people without a ton of background in the structure of the U.S. health care delivery system. Would definitely recommend use in an undergraduate or masters level course, or for the interested citizen!