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and politicians, including lessons from Europe, Canada, and Australia, and underlines the need for leadership to establish the conditions for change.
Much evidence suggests that the U.S. does not achieve good value for its health care spending. Analytic tools such as cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) can help determine which health care services will provide the most health improvement for the dollars we spend, but American health policy makers have largely avoided using CEA. This book provides a unique perspective on this problem by considering the economic, social, political, and ethical…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
and politicians, including lessons from Europe, Canada, and Australia, and underlines the need for leadership to establish the conditions for change.
Much evidence suggests that the U.S. does not achieve good value for its health care spending. Analytic tools such as cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) can help determine which health care services will provide the most health improvement for the dollars we spend, but American health policy makers have largely avoided using CEA. This book provides a unique perspective on this problem by considering the economic, social, political, and ethical factors that contribute to it, and by seeking to show how experience can guide better policy making in the future.
Autorenporträt
Peter J. Neumann, Associate Professor of Policy and Decision Sciences in the Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health, USA