Abstract The United States falls far short of its potential for delivering care that is effective, efficient, safe, timely, patient-centered, and equitable. We put forward the Better Care Plan, an overarching blueprint to address the flaws in our current system. The plan calls for continuously improving care, moving all payers to risk-adjusted prospective payment, and creating national entities for collecting, analyzing, and reporting patient safety and quality-of-care outcomes data. A number of recommendations are made to achieve these goals.
Kenneth J. Arrow, Alan J. Auerbach, John Bertko, Shannon Brownlee, Lawrence P. Casalino, Jim Cooper, Francis J. Crosson, Alain C. Enthoven, Elizabeth Falcone, Robert C. Feldman, Victor R. Fuchs, Alan M. Garber, Marthe R. Gold, Dana P. Goldman, Gillian K. Hadfield, Mark A. Hall, Ralph I. Horwitz, Michael Hooven, Peter Jacobson, Timothy Stoltzfus Jost, Lawrence J. Kotlikoff, Jonathan Levin, Sharon Levine, Richard Levy, Karen Linscott, Harold S. Luft, Robert Mashal, Daniel McFadden, David Mechanic, David O. Meltzer, Joseph P. Newhouse, Roger G. Noll, Jan B. Pietzsch, Philip A. Pizzo, Robert D. Reischauer, Sara Rosenbaum, William M. Sage, Leonard D. Schaeffer, Edward Sheen, B. Michael Silber, Jonathan Skinner, Stephen M Shortell, Samuel O. Thier, Sean Tunis, Lucien Wulsin, Paul G. Yock, Gabi Bin Nun, Stirling Bryan, Osnat Luxenburg, Wynand P.M.M. van de Ven
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