Managed Care in the Inner City: The Uncertain Promise for Providers, Plans, and CommunitiesISBN: 978-0-7879-4623-4
Hardcover
224 pages
May 1999, Jossey-Bass
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"Managed care is a two-edged sword for vulnerable residents of theinner city and the providers that serve them. Managed Care in theInner City provides a balanced and scholarly analysis of thepotential of managed care concepts for Medicaid patients and theuninsured. This book should be read by policymakers at the local,state, and national levels and by providers in public hospitals andcommunity health centers." (Ron J. Anderson, president and CEO,Parkland Health & Hospital System)
"If we think of managed care as representing a kind of globalwarming for indigent-care eco-systems, then our urban healthsystems are indeed among the most Andangered. This timely bookprovides us with valuable information and insight with which tounderstand the nature and extent of jeopardy urban health careproviders are facing. In addition to providing a candid andthoughtful diagnosis, the authors go much further by identifyingsome of the concrete strategies and tactics being employed forsurvival in this environment and posing some critical policyquestions that simply cannot be avoided." (Robert Hurley, associateprofessor, Medical College of Virginia)
"In this book Dennis Andrulis and Betsy Carrier examine the claimsmade on behalf of managed care and pose unsettling questions as towhether this new cure will really work or only make matters worsefor inner-city residents. The authors, who come from thepublic-hospital sector, are measured and fair in the treatment oftheir subject." (Health Affairs)
"If we think of managed care as representing a kind of globalwarming for indigent-care eco-systems, then our urban healthsystems are indeed among the most Andangered. This timely bookprovides us with valuable information and insight with which tounderstand the nature and extent of jeopardy urban health careproviders are facing. In addition to providing a candid andthoughtful diagnosis, the authors go much further by identifyingsome of the concrete strategies and tactics being employed forsurvival in this environment and posing some critical policyquestions that simply cannot be avoided." (Robert Hurley, associateprofessor, Medical College of Virginia)
"In this book Dennis Andrulis and Betsy Carrier examine the claimsmade on behalf of managed care and pose unsettling questions as towhether this new cure will really work or only make matters worsefor inner-city residents. The authors, who come from thepublic-hospital sector, are measured and fair in the treatment oftheir subject." (Health Affairs)