Health Care Finance: Economic Incentives and Productivity Enhancement

Health Care Finance: Economic Incentives and Productivity Enhancement

by Steven R. Eastaugh
ISBN-10:
0865690448
ISBN-13:
9780865690448
Pub. Date:
06/30/1992
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
0865690448
ISBN-13:
9780865690448
Pub. Date:
06/30/1992
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
Health Care Finance: Economic Incentives and Productivity Enhancement

Health Care Finance: Economic Incentives and Productivity Enhancement

by Steven R. Eastaugh

Hardcover

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Overview

This book is a thorough, balanced, and insightful study of what is happening and what should be happening in health care financing. Americans want unlimited access to the best care at affordable prices. Fiscal pressures in American health care point in all different directions, like a pile of jackstraws. This important book analyzes how new payment incentives stimulate planned competition or reregulation; and the far-reaching impact these changes have on hospitals, physicians, long-term care facilities, HMOs, public health clinics, and multihospital systems. Tools for survival include better financial planning, productivity improvement, better scheduling systems, and total quality management.

Steven R. Eastaugh begins his book with a general overview of cost management, accounting, product-line selection, and new payment incentives. Part II provides an in-depth survey of fiscal trends in long-term care, managed care, HMOs, and PPOs. Part III analyzes five basic strategies that a provider may consider; with special focus on market analysis, diversification, and pricing. The next part reviews physician payment options, the new Medicare 1992 payment systems for hospitals and physicians, and cost analysis of hospital patient care, research, and education. Part V considers productivity enhancement methods, incentives to assist productivity programs, and the Deming method of total quality management. Part VI focuses on investment, financing, and capital structure decisions in health care institutions and also in large multifacility systems. The last part summarizes major strategies for success in the 1990s, future policy alternatives, and suggests a number of alternative roads to universal entitlement and national health care reform. As Eastaugh suggests in this book, Our health system faces . . . immense opportunity and danger in a reformation on four fronts: access, efficiency, effectiveness, and quality of life. The challenge for providers and managers during this period of unparalleled opportunity is to win a clear victory on all four fronts, and not erode either access or quality in the name of efficiency. The range of coverage in Health Care Finance is extremely wide and detailed—making it essential and useful reading for health care professionals and students alike.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780865690448
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/30/1992
Pages: 560
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.38(d)

About the Author

STEVEN R. EASTAUGH is Professor of Health Economics and Finance at George Washington University. The winner of numerous awards, including the American College of Healthcare Executives Edgar Hayhow Award, Eastaugh has published widely in the areas of health care finance and economics. His companion volume, Health Economics: Efficiency, Quality, and Equity, will also be issued by Auburban House in 1992.

Table of Contents

Preface
Managerial Concerns for Payers and Providers
Payment Incentives, Provider behavior, and the Need for Better Cost Management
Hospital Accounting, Purchasing, and Product Specialization
Access to Long-Term Care and Prepaid Managed Care
HMOs, PPOs, and Competition Health Plans
Long-Term Care: Issues and Options
Strategy Selection, Market Analysis, Diversification, and Pricing
Diversification for the Single Hospital
Marketing, Pricing, and Specialization
Managing Physicians, Medical Schools, and Teaching Hospitals
Paying the Doctor
Graduate Medical Education and the Teaching Hospital
Quality Assurance and Productivity Control
Hospital Productivity: Managing Cost Reductions Without Harm to Quality of Access
Incentives for Productivity Improvement
Quality Measurement, Value Shopping, and the Deming Method
Investment, Financing, and Capital-Structure Decisions
Tax-exempt and For-Profit Multihospital Systems
Evaluation of Financing Alternatives
Access to Capital and Debt Financing
The Bumpy Road Ahead
Future Policy Options: What Form Could Universal Entitlement Take?
Author Index
Subject Index

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