ABSTRACT

The evolution of the healthcare system in the U.S. has seen numerous changes in the last 30 years where fee-for-service was the mainstay of reimbursement models and hospitals were managed by physicians and patient care was key. The early 1990’s saw the emergence of HMOs and other managed care models with physicians handing over leadership roles to corporate entities whose main concern was the bottom line and profitability while patient care and satisfaction suffered.

The Healthcare Collapse: Where We’ve been and Where We Need to Go explores the low morale of physicians in this corporate healthcare culture as well as the expansion of hospitals owned by corporations. The author focuses on recovering healthcare morals and return value to the individuals who provide active care and not just business. This book also examines the possible repercussions of Medicare and Medicaid while address the question of single payer healthcare.

This book looks at where healthcare has been, what has worked and what hasn’t, and recommends solutions to create a system that focuses on the patient and providing quality care in this age of reimbursement cuts, demands for better technology and providing a safer environment for both the patient and clinicians who work in hospitals. The author also advocates for a shift in management and recommends hospitals leaders engage physicians and other clinicians in process improvement and other initiatives which can result in a more efficient system – one where quality patient care dominant. The book also outlines programs which can be championed by hospitals such as patient engagement activities, community health and other outreach and education programs.

part I|1 pages

The Evolution of Healthcare

chapter Chapter 1|6 pages

From HMO to ACA to Value: Transforming Healthcare

chapter Chapter 3|4 pages

Negotiating Managed Care Contracts

chapter Chapter 4|4 pages

Hospital Supply Chain and Cost Containment

chapter Chapter 5|6 pages

Quality Crisis

chapter Chapter 6|6 pages

Ethics and Deontology

part II|1 pages

Physician Struggles

chapter Chapter 7|6 pages

The Economics of Being a Doctor in the US

chapter Chapter 8|6 pages

The Fear: Financial Report

chapter Chapter 9|8 pages

Stark Law and Its Impact on Physicians

chapter Chapter 11|8 pages

Healthcare Impact on Physicians: Not Healthy!

part III|1 pages

Broken System

chapter Chapter 12|6 pages

Health Insurance: Maximum Reimbursement, At What Cost?

chapter Chapter 13|6 pages

Healthcare: Who Is in Charge? Impossible Victory

chapter Chapter 15|8 pages

Who is Controlling Healthcare?

chapter Chapter 16|8 pages

Healthcare Reform: The Never-Ending Story

part IV|1 pages

Corporate Healthcare

chapter Chapter 17|8 pages

Corporation Interferences and Compliance

chapter Chapter 18|6 pages

Corporation and Physician Dissociation

chapter Chapter 19|4 pages

Moving Out of Healthcare

chapter Chapter 21|8 pages

Big Pharma

part V|1 pages

Medicare and Medicaid

chapter Chapter 22|4 pages

The Future of the Entitlement Program

chapter Chapter 23|4 pages

Disproportionate Medicaid Funding

chapter Chapter 25|4 pages

MACRA and the Merit Incentive Payment System

chapter Chapter 26|6 pages

Will Any Healthcare Ever Work? Single Payer?

part VI|1 pages

Toward the Perfect System – what Needs to be Done and where We Needto Go

chapter Chapter 28|6 pages

Population Health Initiatives: Teen Obesity Crisis

chapter Chapter 29|6 pages

Clinician Involvement in Improvement Initiatives

chapter Chapter 30|8 pages

Physician Involvement in Management and Team Building

chapter Chapter 31|6 pages

The Perfect System