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Health Care Turning Point: Why Single Payer Won't Work
 
 
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Health Care Turning Point: Why Single Payer Won't Work [Hardcover]

Roger M. Battistella (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 5, 2010 0262014076 978-0262014076 1

An expert debunks popular misconceptions about health policy, including the merits of single-payer plans, and offers an alternative.


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Health Care Turning Point: Why Single Payer Won't Work + Code Red: An Economist Explains How to Revive the Healthcare System without Destroying It


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Battistella advocates practicality and pragmatism as an alternative to ideological panaceas -- a timely reminder and important reading as the country struggles through its latest attempts at health care reform."--Gail Wilensky, Project Hope

About the Author

In the battle over health care reform we can try to fashion new policies based on old ideas--or we can acknowledge today's demographic and economic realities. In Health Care Turning Point, health policy expert Roger Battistella argues that the conventional wisdom that dominates health policy debates is out of date. Battistella takes on popular misconceptions about the advantages of single-payer plans, the role of the market, and other health policy issues and outlines a pragmatic new approach. Few would disagree that the current system is broken. But, Battistella asserts provocatively, a government takeover of health insurance patterned after Medicare and Medicaid won't work either. Battistella argues that contrary to popular belief, single-payer coverage will not lower health spending but would encourage overconsumption and drive costs up. If consumers were responsible for buying their own health insurance (as they are for buying their own car and home insurance), he argues, they'd look for value and demand greater price and quality transparency from providers.

The economic shibboleth that the principles of market competition don't apply to health care is nonsense, Battistella says. We won't achieve real health care reform until policy makers adjust to this reality and adopt a more pragmatic view.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press; 1 edition (February 5, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262014076
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262014076
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #981,229 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quality Information, February 28, 2010
This review is from: Health Care Turning Point: Why Single Payer Won't Work (Hardcover)
Before moving ahead any further on a health care overhaul, the president and members of Congress should stop and read Roger Battistella's new book. It won't take long; the text of the book is a slim 134 pages. But those pages are packed with facts and analysis that have the potential to change the way readers think about health care. I learned a lot from it, and I thought I already knew a lot about health care.

I was left impressed that Mr. Obama's plan has managed to get as far along as it has, given the budget constraints. Mr. Battistella essentially makes the case that America can barely afford the existing entitlements, let alone set up new ones.

The existing federal health care programs have their problems. A Harvard professor, Malcolm Sparrow, estimates that as much as 20% to 30% of federal health spending is consumed by fraud, the book says.

More generous federal health benefits, Mr. Battistella suggests, would only invite more fraud. He offers the example of Sweden: "During recent World Cup soccer finals sick leave among Swedish men rose by 55 percent." In Italy, in 2005, state employees took an average of 18 days sick leave, while workers in America average five sick days a year. The definition of "sick," in other words, is readily expandable along with government benefits.

Not that the current American system is perfect, by any stretch. Our health care system can be downright dangerous; medical errors are either the third or the eighth leading cause of death in America, some of them related to problems as simple as the continued use of hard-to-read handwriting on prescriptions and medical orders. Even the low-range estimate of medical errors places them ahead of car accidents, breast cancer, or AIDS as a cause of death, the book says.

Think the banks are the biggest lobbyists in Washington? Nope. According to Mr. Battistella, since 2006 the health industry has spent more on lobbying than any other sector of the economy.

So how to improve upon this mess? Not with central planning or control, Mr. Battistella advises: "The sheer complexity of real world conditions surpasses the capacity of experts and their analytical models, no matter how brilliant or sophisticated they are."

When dealing with obstinate interest group opposition, "improvements occur faster and with less acrimony when left to market competition than if the same objectives are sought through legislative edict or planning regulations," he writes.

Among Mr. Battistella's predictions: "employers will seek to follow the precedent established with pension benefit programs and transform health care from a defined benefit to a defined contribution plan in which vouchers are an important component." The Federal Employee Health Benefit Plan already functions somewhat like a voucher; the author explains that, "when individuals select a plan with a premium less than the government's contribution, they keep the difference. Conversely, if they chose a more expensive plan, they pay the difference out of their own pocket."

Runaway health care spending will finally be curbed, he writes, only when consumers start being "intimately involved in paying for the cost of their care rather than relegating payment to a third party." Those consumers "need access to user-friendly reliable price and quality information on specific providers to enable knowledgeable comparisons."

In the area of quality information that will help enable knowledgeable comparisons, Mr. Battistella has, with this book, made a formidable contribution of his own.

Disclosure: My father had Professor Battistella as a teacher at Cornell and they have kept up over the years.

A final note: the prose in this book is accessible enough, but a reader can tell it's by a an academic rather than someone whose primary expertise is in writing for a wide, general audience. Don't be deterred; it's only 134 pages.
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