| Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books
|
American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | RA 410.53 .I582 2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5008500 |
| RA 410 .M396 2003 Financial management in health care organizations / | RA 410.5 .A672 2011 Applied methods of cost-effectiveness analysis in health care / | RA 410.5 .B37 2012 Health economics : an industrial organization perspective / | RA 410.53 .I582 2010 Value in health care : accounting for cost, quality, safety, outcomes, and innovation : workshop summary / | RA 410.56 .F675 2010 Health care marketing : tools and techniques / | RA 410.56 .K68 1987 Marketing for health care organizations / | RA 412.2 .U55 2010 Universal health care / |
Includes bibliographical references.
The United States has the highest per capita spending on health care of any industrialized nation. Yet despite the unprecedented levels of spending, harmful medical errors abound, uncoordinated care continues to frustrate patients and providers, and U.S. healthcare costs continue to increase. The growing ranks of the uninsured, an aging population with a higher prevalence of chronic diseases, and many patients with multiple conditions together constitute more complicating factors in the trend to higher costs of care. A variety of strategies are beginning to be employed throughout the health system to address the central issue of value, with the goal of improving the net ration of benefits obtained per dollar spent on health care. However, despite the obvious need, no single agreed-upon measure of value or comprehensive, coordinated systemwide approach to assess and improve the value of health care exists. Without this definition and approach, the path to achieving greater value will be characterized by encumbrance rather than progress. To address the issues central to defining, measuring, and improving value in health care, the Institute of Medicine convened a workshop to assemble prominent authorities on healthcare value and leaders of patient, payer, provider, employer, manufacturer, government, health policy, economics, technology assessment, informatics, health services research, and health professions communities. The workshop, summarized in this volume, facilitated a discussion of stakeholder perspectives on measuring and improving value in health care, identifying the key barriers and outlining the opportunities for next steps."--Publisher's description.
Also available in Open Book format via the National Academies Press home page.
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