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Health Care Policy: A Clinical Approach
JAMA. 1995;274(1):85-90. doi: 10.1001/jama.1995.03530010099050

The Reconfiguration of US Medicine

  1. Thomas Bodenheimer, MD, MPH;
  2. Kevin Grumbach, MD
  1. From the Department of Family and Community Medicine (Drs Bodenheimer and Grumbach) and the Institute for Health Policy Studies (Dr Grumbach), University of California, San Francisco.

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

Excerpt

When one of us opened a private medical practice in 1980, the world of medicine was a simpler place. We could send our patients to any specialist and could admit to any hospital we chose. We referred our patients for diagnostic tests and specialty consultations without asking permission. We were paid a fee for each service we provided. No hospital employee pressured us to discharge our patients, and no insurance company sent us computer printouts of the costs we incurred per patient per month. But underneath this freedom of action, a time bomb was ticking: the costs of medical care were relentlessly rising.

In the same private practice of 1995, choice of specialists is determined by lists provided by various health maintenance organizations (HMOs). The HMOs tell us to which hospital their (not our) patients must be admitted. We obtain prior authorization before referring patients to specialists or for expensive

Footnotes

  • Edited by Drummond Rennie, MD, Deputy Editor (West).

  • Corresponding author: Kevin Grumbach, MD, University of California, San Francisco, Box 1364, San Francisco, CA 94143-1364.

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