In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries
In health policy, magic bullet answers tend to have more appeal than incremental adjustments. Politicians faced with the daunting issues in healthcare are eager to embrace new ideas promoted by academics and think tanks. However, in implementation, intrinsic flaws in design, such as the difficulty o...
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Kerman University of Medical Sciences
2015-09-01
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doaj-546b7dab9f614c66ace08b0080df5cfe2020-11-24T22:22:56ZengKerman University of Medical SciencesInternational Journal of Health Policy and Management2322-59392322-59392015-09-014963563610.15171/ijhpm.2015.131In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent CommentariesNaoki Ikegami 0Keio University, Tokyo, JapanIn health policy, magic bullet answers tend to have more appeal than incremental adjustments. Politicians faced with the daunting issues in healthcare are eager to embrace new ideas promoted by academics and think tanks. However, in implementation, intrinsic flaws in design, such as the difficulty of finding physicians willing to be at risk for the costs of care, tend to be ignored. Once launched, inconvenient data about cost savings and quality tend to be downplayed or ignored until intrinsic flaws become manifest,1 which would be the signal to embrace a new idea. Such is likely to be the fate of the latest fix-all from the United States: the Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).http://www.ijhpm.com/pdf_3055_27b628b57ccb6f97de9ea1d58ba8c80e.htmlFee-for-Service (FFS)Electronic Medical Records (EMR)Japan |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Naoki Ikegami |
spellingShingle |
Naoki Ikegami In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries International Journal of Health Policy and Management Fee-for-Service (FFS) Electronic Medical Records (EMR) Japan |
author_facet |
Naoki Ikegami |
author_sort |
Naoki Ikegami |
title |
In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries |
title_short |
In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries |
title_full |
In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries |
title_fullStr |
In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries |
title_full_unstemmed |
In Defense of Regulated Fee-for-Service Payment: A Response to Recent Commentaries |
title_sort |
in defense of regulated fee-for-service payment: a response to recent commentaries |
publisher |
Kerman University of Medical Sciences |
series |
International Journal of Health Policy and Management |
issn |
2322-5939 2322-5939 |
publishDate |
2015-09-01 |
description |
In health policy, magic bullet answers tend to have more appeal than incremental adjustments. Politicians faced with the daunting issues in healthcare are eager to embrace new ideas promoted by academics and think tanks. However, in implementation, intrinsic flaws in design, such as the difficulty of finding physicians willing to be at risk for the costs of care, tend to be ignored. Once launched, inconvenient data about cost savings and quality tend to be downplayed or ignored until intrinsic flaws become manifest,1 which would be the signal to embrace a new idea. Such is likely to be the fate of the latest fix-all from the United States: the Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). |
topic |
Fee-for-Service (FFS) Electronic Medical Records (EMR) Japan |
url |
http://www.ijhpm.com/pdf_3055_27b628b57ccb6f97de9ea1d58ba8c80e.html |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT naokiikegami indefenseofregulatedfeeforservicepaymentaresponsetorecentcommentaries |
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