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Full-Text Articles in Law
Regulating Through Information: Disclosure Laws And American Health Care, William M. Sage
Regulating Through Information: Disclosure Laws And American Health Care, William M. Sage
Faculty Scholarship
Efforts to reform the American health care system through direct government action have failed repeatedly. Nonetheless, an alternative strategy has emerged from these experiences: requiring insurance organizations and health care providers to disclose information to the public. In this Article, Professor Sage assesses the justifications for this type of regulation and its prospects. In particular, he identifies and analyzes four distinct rationales for disclosure. He finds that the most commonly articulated goal of mandatory disclosure laws-improving the efficiency of private purchasing decisions by giving purchasers complete information about price and quality- is the most complicated operationally. The other justifications-which he …
Competing On Quality Of Care: The Need To Develop A Competition Policy For Health Care Markets, William M. Sage, Peter J. Hammer
Competing On Quality Of Care: The Need To Develop A Competition Policy For Health Care Markets, William M. Sage, Peter J. Hammer
Faculty Scholarship
As American health care moves from a professionally dominated to a marketdominated model, concerns have been voiced that competition, once unleashed, will focus on price to the detriment of quality. Although quality has been extensively analyzed in health services research, the role of quality in competition policy has not been elucidated. While economists may theorize about non-price competition, courts in antitrust cases often follow simpler models of competition based on price and output, either ignoring quality as a competitive dimension or assuming that it will occur in tandem with price competition. This unsystematic approach is inadequate for the formulation of …
Physicians As Advocates, William M. Sage
Physicians As Advocates, William M. Sage
Faculty Scholarship
The principal theme of this Article is that many dimensions of physicians' advocacy in managed care remain to be established, and those dimensions may turn out to be inconsistent with one another or with normative goals for the health care system. Specifically, attempting to map physician behavior onto an advocacy template created for lawyers raises three difficult questions. First, given the undisputed importance of clinical expertise to an efficient health care system, should physicians' primary role be to advocate for causes or to direct the provision of care? Second, would the medical professions' reputation for independent competence withstand the adversarial …