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UNIVERSITY PRESS
  
Cover of Still Broken by Stephen M. Davidson
Still Broken
Understanding the U.S. Health Care System
Stephen M. Davidson


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2010
304 pages.
$40.00

Hardcover ISBN: 9780804761963
Ebook ISBN: 9780804771344

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The debate over health care policy in the U. S. did not end when President Obama signed the landmark Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) on March 23, 2010. Since then, half the states have sued and federal judges have issued conflicting rulings about the law's constitutionality. In addition, the new Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted to repeal it, and Republicans have pledged to bring it up again during negotiations over the 2012 federal budget.

The continuing controversies over PPACA are only one reason that Still Broken: Understanding the U.S. Health Care System is a must-read for engaged citizens, policymakers, students, and scholars alike. The book takes a close look at our problems, proposes solutions to them, and explains how to navigate our political system to effect positive change. It will help readers:

* Assess the arguments made by partisans on both sides of the continuing debate.

* Understand why President Obama was able to get Congress to pass a comprehensive reform bill even though most of his predecessors tried and failed.

* Understand why so many Americans are either confused about its value or actually oppose it.

In the book's first part, Stephen M. Davidson paints a lucid picture of the way that the health system works and the forces that produced the monumental problems that we face today. Then, he makes a compelling case for overhauling our system, offering six elements for inclusion in any plan for change. Davidson devotes the last three chapters to a detailed examination of the politics of reform. This assessment will help readers to appreciate both the political achievement represented by passage of the new law and the reasons that opposition to the law remains so widespread, despite all the good it does for the public. Whatever compromises, if any, are accepted by negotiators in the end, the book makes clear why, to fully solve the system's problems, the underlying goal must be to change incentives for all players who participate in the system and, finally, why this goal cannot be achieved by relying solely on market-based solutions. Davidson's captivating and persuasive book demonstrates that only a solution with a large public-sector role can lead us to real reform.

About the author

Stephen M. Davidson is Professor of Strategy and Policy at Boston University's School of Management. A blogger for The Huffington Post, he is the author of A New Era in U.S. Health Care: Critical Next Steps Under the Affordable Care Act.

"A thorough, detailed and clear explication of the convoluted workings of the US health care system, it is helpful and timely. . . Readers will find this book a useful guide to a health care system on the brink of change and to reform debates that are far from over."

—Beatrix Hoffman, Social History of Medicine

"Although many books have been written about the U.S. health care system, in Still Broken Stephen Davidson does an excellent job summarizing the many and complex difficulties of that system. Beyond simply a thorough summary, however, Davidson also translates the information into a strategy for solving the health care system's problems. . . [A]n indispensable reference work. . . [A] must-have."

—Rochelle R. Henderson, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law

"Davidson's Still Broken provides an important, rich understanding of how enduring and persistent problems in the American health care system have evolved over time. Admirably, he also offers a way out of this vicious cycle by changing the incentives in the delivery system and proposing how Congress might agree to a transformative shift."

—Colleen M. Grogan, Associate Professor, School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago

"In this extraordinarily timely book, Steve Davidson proposed a comprehensive revamping of our health care system based on a small set of eminently reasonable tenets. The critique of the current system is on target, and his proposed solution is fashioned with an acute awareness of the political realities."

—Thomas Rice, Professor, UCLA School of Public Health