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Caring for the Uninsured and Underinsured
JAMA. 1991;265(22):2998-3002. doi: 10.1001/jama.1991.03460220086038

Health, Health Insurance, and the Uninsured

  1. Robert H. Brook, MD, ScD
  1. From the Departments of Medicine and Health Services, UCLA Center for the Health Sciences, Los Angeles, Calif; and the Health Sciences Program, The RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, Calif.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.

Excerpt

THE PURPOSE of this article is to express a personal viewpoint that might be useful in designing policies to improve the health of the American population. Emphasis will be placed on the uninsured. The viewpoint is based on my experience and research findings from a series of studies that had the following objectives: (1) to improve measures of quality and health status1-4; (2) to determine how a person's health status or quality was altered by economic incentives or disincentives such as the lack of any health insurance, the level of out-of-pocket payment in the fee-for-service system, or membership in a capitated health maintenance organization plan as opposed to the fee-for-service system5-19; (3) to develop explicit measures of medical appropriateness and to use those measures to determine how much care may not be necessary20-27; (4) to study how physicians' behavior was affected by both economic incentives and the

Footnotes

  • Reprint requests to The RAND Corporation, 1700 Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90406 (Dr Brook).

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