Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / National Center Policy Analysis
Pages: 272
Trim: 6¾ x 9¼
978-0-7425-4151-1 • Hardback • August 2004 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-0-7425-4152-8 • Paperback • August 2004 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
John C. Goodman is the founder and president of the National Center for Policy Analysis. The Wall Street Journal called Dr. Goodman 'the father of Medical Savings Accounts,' and National Journal declared him 'winner of the devolution derby' because his ideas on ways to transfer power from government to the people have had a significant impact on Capitol Hill. He is the author of seven books. Gerald L. Musgrave is president of Economics America, Inc., a senior fellow at the National Center for Policy Analysis, and a fellow at the National Association of Business Economists and chairman of its Health Economics Roundtable. Dr. Musgrave has written widely on health care and other issues and is the author or co-author of more than 60 publications. Devon M. Herrick is senior fellow at the National Center for Policy Analysis.
Part 1 I Twenty Myths
Chapter 2 Rights
Chapter 3 Equality
Chapter 4 Needs
Chapter 5 Outcomes
Chapter 6 Technology
Chapter 7 Quality
Chapter 8 Costs
Chapter 9 Efficiency
Chapter 10 Unnecessary Care
Chapter 11 Administrative Costs
Chapter 12 Priorities
Chapter 13 Prevention
Chapter 14 Managed Care
Chapter 15 International Competitiveness
Chapter 16 The Elderly
Chapter 17 Minorities
Chapter 18 Rural Areas
Chapter 19 Prescription Drugs
Chapter 20 Public Opinion
Chapter 21 Reform
Part 22 II The Politics and Economics of Health Care Systems
Chapter 23 The Politics of Medicine
Chapter 24 Is Managed Competition the Answer?
Part 25 III Reforming the U.S. Health Care System
Chapter 26 Designing an Ideal Health Care System
Chapter 27 Designing Ideal Health Insurance
Thoroughly examines the systemic failures of national health insurance programs around the world. It identifies problems inherent in government-run health care and explains why these problems inevitably emerge. And, it demolishes one by one the prevailing myths put forward by advocates of national health insurance as the solution to issues confronting American health care.
— Coverings
The American Medical Association strongly opposes single-payer national health insurance. Lives at Risk provides a wealth of evidence that confirms the AMA's position.
— Donald J. Palmisano, M.D., J.D., president, American Medical Association, 2003-2004
This book will be an eye-opener for anyone who thinks a government-run system is the solution for our health care problem.
— Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
With the alarming escalation in the cost of health care, drastic changes are critically needed. Lives at Risk not only presents the magnitude of this problem, but explores possible solutions, including national insurance, to correct it. This is the best book I have read on this subject.
— Kenneth H. Cooper, M.D., M.P.H., author of Aerobics
A single-payer system has great political appeal. It promises to provide quality health care to all, regardless of income, religion, race, or initial state of health. But does it live up to that promise? In this important book, Goodman, Musgrave, and Herrick set out to find the answer.
— from the Foreword by Milton Friedman, Nobel laureate and senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution
Anybody who is tempted by the Canada [single-payer health insurance] model should read Lives at Risk.
— National Review
Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
If you're looking for intellectual ammunition to refute the perennial myths about the triumph of socialized medicine in the rest of the developed world, this book is essential.
— JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association
Goodman, Musgrave and Herrick do not just make a hard-boiled assessment of single-payer systems, then run for cover. Instead of the usual worn-out generalities and obsolete assumptions, they point to specific ways to harness the intelligence of consumers and the power of the free market to improve health care in the U.S.. Regardless of whether the reader agrees with the authors' conclusions, Lives at Risk helps us to understand how different policy approaches might lead to two very different outcomes for the U.S. health care system: complete meltdown under single-payer health care or transformation into a system driven by consumer demand instead of health care bureaucrats and political expediency.
— Health Insurance Underwriter
Goodman and company's book does an especially good job of casting doubt on the common belief that more governmental control of health care will prove more rational, productive, and fair than our current market-state mix.
— Reason