National health insurance and the problems of American medicine

Fam Med. 1991 Feb;23(2):137-40.

Abstract

The problems of inequitable access to care, health care inflation, and reduced physician autonomy confront physicians and health care reformers with a dilemma. Piecemeal measures attempting to alleviate one problem in isolation simply exacerbate the others. A logical approach to addressing these problems together is a national health program based on a single payer of health services. By reducing administrative waste and emphasizing global budgetary strategies, the single-payer system could promote more efficient health care spending. While single-payer systems create more explicit political conflict over resource allocation, they also have demonstrated an ability to maintain quality of care and reduce bureaucratic intrusions into clinical practice.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Cost Control / trends
  • Economics, Medical / trends*
  • Health Priorities / economics
  • Inflation, Economic / trends
  • National Health Insurance, United States / trends*
  • United States