
Regulation shapes all aspects of America's fragmented health care industry, from the flow of dollars to the communication between physicians and patients. It is the engine that translates public policy into action. While the health and lives of patients, as well as almost one-sixth of the national economy depend on its effectiveness, health care regulation in America is bewilderingly complex. Government agencies at the federal, state, and local levels direct portions of the industry, but hundreds of private organizations do so as well. Some of these overseers compete with one another, some conflict, and others collaborate. Their interaction is as important to the provision of health care as are the laws and rules they implement.Health Care Regulation in America is a guide to this regulatory maze. It succinctly recaps the past and present conflicts that have guided the oversight of each industry segment over the past hundred years and explains the structure of regulation today. To make the system comprehensible, this book also presents the sweep of regulatory policy in the context of the interests, values, goals, and issues that guide it. Chapters cover the process of regulation and each key area of regulatory focus - professionals, institutions, financing arrangements, drugs and devices, public health, business relationships, and research.In a uniquely American way, the system thrives on confrontation between competing interests but survives by engendering compromise. Robert Field shows that health care regulation is an inexorable force that nurtures as well as restricts the enterprise of American health care. For the student, practitioner, executive, policy analyst, or concerned citizen, this book is an invaluable guide to the policy, politics, and practice of an industry that directly touches us all.
How does the fragmented and multifaceted regulatory landscape of the American health care industry function to translate public policy into operational reality? Robert I. Field, a professor of law and public health, examines the historical and structural evolution of health care oversight in the United States. By analyzing the interplay between federal, state, and private regulatory bodies, the author argues that the system operates through a persistent cycle of confrontation and compromise. The text provides a framework for understanding how these competing interests shape the delivery of care and the economic structure of the industry.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and policy analysts recognize this work as a foundational text for navigating the complexities of the American health care system. Readers frequently note the clarity with which the author organizes a notoriously dense and fragmented regulatory environment.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2006-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190289414
ISBN-13:
9780190289416
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