Managed care: practice, pitfalls, and potential.

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Dynamic List Data
Title
Managed care: practice, pitfalls, and potential.
First Author
Wallack, Stanley S
Date of Pub
1991 Supp.
Pages
27-34
Abstract
The results of coordinating and changing patterns of health care using managed care activities and organizations are reviewed in this article. Although utilization review and high-cost case management programs reduce the use of expensive services, incentives for providers of care, placing them at risk, are important for managing the intensity of health care. Managed care appears capable of reducing health care costs substantially. However, this increased efficiency has not translated to lower insurance premiums or modulated total health care expenditures because either purchasers are not aware or are not concerned about securing care at the least cost. To correct these deficiencies and deliver the potential of managed care, the author suggests the need to separate insurance into its three components parts (financing, risk spreading, and program management) and developed policies for each.
Other Authors
N/A
MeSH
Cost Control/methods : Efficiency : Evaluation Studies : Fees and Charges : Health Care Costs : Health Maintenance Organizations : Health Services/utilization : Insurance Selection Bias : Managed Care Programs/economics/organization & administration : Preferred Provider Organizations : Reimbursement, Incentive : Risk Management : United States : Utilization Review
NTIS Number
PB99-106478
Volume
Supp.

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