Healthcare In The 21st Century: Essay

PAGES
2
WORDS
757
Cite

One such barrier is the pattern of supply-driven care that has proven extremely costly on the average consumer and patient. Essentially, this method of healthcare has created a multi-billion dollar industry, where patients' needs are put to the side in order for healthcare organizations to make the largest profit margin possible through a system that resembles a production line more so than a hospital facility. Unfortunately, "producers control demand" (O'Toole, 2009, p 48). With so many major companies profiting from this style of healthcare, they will undoubtedly put up a fight for reform initiatives like the Triple Aim Initiative, which is hoping to rework the system in order to save consumers the burden of costs, without reducing the quality of the care they receive. Moreover, the physician-centric model of most of today's healthcare systems also proves a barrier to the aims of the Triple Aim Initiative. Essentially, under this model, physicians work against reform methods that would help reduce costs, because it would essentially be taking money out of their pockets as well. As such, many physicians tend to fight reform efforts, and thus they do not initiate elements of reform that might be beneficial to their patients...

...

Even when reform is forced upon them, in many cases, the quality of care also falls with associated costs.
It is clear that the United States still has a lot of work to do. Unfortunately, "The United States is the only country that does not offer healthcare to all its citizens and the number of uninsured grows daily" (O'Toole, 2009, p 46). When compared to other industrialized countries, the United States has one of the worst healthcare systems to date. Take for example, the United kingdom. Under the Beveridge Healthcare Model, the government finances citizens' healthcare through tax subsidies. Thus, no citizens ever have to pay a doctor's bill; and yet the quality of the healthcare provided is still stellar. As such, England is just one example of a fellow industrialized nation that is reaching these aims much better than the case of the United States.

Sources Used in Documents:

References

O'Toole. Eileen. (2009) Healthcare in the 21st century. The Nurse Practitioner, 34(7), 46-50.

World Health Organization. (2013).World Health Statistics 2013: Indicator Compendium. Web. http://www.who.int/gho/publications/world_health_statistics/WHS2013_IndicatorCompendium.pdf


Cite this Document:

"Healthcare In The 21st Century " (2013, June 22) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/healthcare-in-the-21st-century-92356

"Healthcare In The 21st Century " 22 June 2013. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/healthcare-in-the-21st-century-92356>

"Healthcare In The 21st Century ", 22 June 2013, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/healthcare-in-the-21st-century-92356

Related Documents

Health Care In the wake on new and very contentious health care reform, many firms have undergone extensive transformations. These transformations have been predicated on both cost control and quality management. In particular quality management has had a profound impact on the underlying business operations of many health care firms. For one, firms are now finding methods in which to enhance the overall patient experience while also mitigating potential loses due

Health Care Law Unconstitutional Is the Health Care Law Unconstitutional? Take a position on whether the Healthcare Law is constitutional or unconstitutional and why? What are your arguments for feeling the way you do? On March 23, 2010 President Barrack Obama signed into law the Affordable Care Act. At the heart of this law, are series of regulations that are designed to reduce the most common challenges when utilizing different health care solutions.

Healthcare Strategy
PAGES 2 WORDS 689

Healthcare Challenges Technology is one of the main drivers of change in healthcare, and it is up to healthcare organizations to join the rest of the world in adopting new technologies to run their industry better. In most industries, something like electronic record keeping has been done for decades and nobody was wringing their hands about it. It is absurd that this is even an issue for healthcare companies. The best

Healthcare Policy Western Philosophical Thought and the Delivery of the Public Health System Improving healthcare behaviors and access to public healthcare has been a key issue of debate among politicians and officials on all levels of the government for quite some time. The ability to improve individual behaviors that result in improved health have an impact on society. The healthcare system is already overwhelmed and there is an urgent need to convince

As the sole owners of a license to practice medicine on which industries and other business entities build profits, they need to take solid steps to assert their rights. They listed strategies to put their situation and demands across to the current government. These strategies include a letter writing campaign, civil disobedience, a website for physician consensus, petitioning elected officials to take action on their concerns, email campaigns sent

Healthcare Policy
PAGES 4 WORDS 1223

Healthcare Policy Analysis The objective of this study is to conduct a healthcare policy analysis and recommend changes. Presently, there is not an across-the-board implementation of Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) or prescriptions and this can be critical in reducing adverse drug events. This study argues that the use of the Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) should be implemented and utilized across the entire health care system. Review of Studies on the Use