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1.
JAMA Health Forum ; 4(2): e225404, 2023 02 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36763367

ABSTRACT

This Viewpoint discusses evaluating and perhaps extending the record of successful innovation arising from the COVID-19 pandemic.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Pandemics , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities
14.
J Healthc Qual ; 30(4): 17-9, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18680922

ABSTRACT

Regina E. Herzlinger is the Nancy R. McPherson Professor of Business Administration Chair at the Harvard Business School, Cambridge, MA. She received her bachelor's degree from MIT and her doctorate from the Harvard Business School The first woman to be tenured and made a chair at Harvard Business School, she is widely recognized for her innovative research in healthcare, including her early predictions of the unraveling of managed care and the rise of consumer-driven healthcare and healthcare-focusedfactories, two terms that she coined. Money magazine has dubbed her the "godmother of consumer-driven healthcare." Herzlinger's research has been reported in numerous journals and business publications as well as in such recent books as Who Killed Health Care? and Consumer-Driven Health Care: Implications for Providers, Payers, and Policymakers. She has also won the American College of Healthcare Executives' Hamilton Book of the Year award (twice), the Healthcare Financial Management Association's Board of Directors award, and Management Accounting's research prize. Modem Healthcare readers have named her among the "100 Most Powerful People in Healthcare" each year since 2003, and the magazine also named her one of healthcare's top 10 thinkers. In recognition of her work in nonprofit accounting and control, she was named the first Chartered Institute of Management Accountants Visiting Professor at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. She has served on the Scientific Advisory Group to the U.S. Secretary of the Air Force and on the boards of many private and publicly traded firms.


Subject(s)
Community Participation , Delivery of Health Care/trends , Health Policy , Patient-Centered Care , Total Quality Management , Attitude to Health , Culture , Health Education , Humans , Politics , Social Responsibility , United States
15.
Am Heart Hosp J ; 6(1): 9-11, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18256552

ABSTRACT

Winter issues of The American Heart Hospital Journal traditionally focus on health care policy issues. As health care reform in the United States is a topic of major importance in the upcoming presidential election, we invited Dr Regina E. Herzlinger, the Nancy R. McPherson Professor of Business Administration at Harvard University and a noted expert in the field, to provide an analysis of the major proposals currently under debate by the candidates. We invite your comments in the coming months as the field of candidates narrows and the focus on reform sharpens.-Sylvan Lee Weinberg, Editor in Chief.


Subject(s)
Consumer Behavior , Delivery of Health Care , Health Care Reform , Physicians , Politics , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Humans , United States
17.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 26(5): w552-9, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17650520

ABSTRACT

Regina Herzlinger catalyzed a national dialogue with the publication of her book Market-Driven Health Care in 1997. Her core argument is that health care should resemble other retail markets, where unleashing consumer choice results in competition and innovations that improve value. In an often pitched debate, critics contend that health care is far too complicated for this model to work. Here Bob Galvin engages Herzlinger on these and other topics. Articulate, passionate, and sometimes controversial, Herzlinger is the Nancy R. McPherson Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, where she was the first woman in the school's history to be tenured.


Subject(s)
Consumer Behavior/economics , Health Care Sector/organization & administration , Models, Economic , Economic Competition , Government , Humans , Internet , Leadership , Politics , United States
18.
Harv Bus Rev ; 84(5): 58-66, 156, 2006 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16649698

ABSTRACT

Health care in the United States--and in most other developed countries--is ailing. Medical treatment has made astonishing advances, but the packaging and delivery of health care are often inefficient, ineffective, and user unfriendly. Problems ranging from costs to medical errors beg for ingenious solutions-and indeed, enormous investments have been made in innovation. But too many efforts fail. To find out why, it's necessary to break down the problem, look at the different types of innovation, and examine the forces that affect them. Three kinds of innovation can make health care better and cheaper: One changes the ways consumers buy and use health care, another taps into technology, and the third generates new business models. The health care system erects an array of barriers to each type of innovation. More often than not, organizations can overcome the barriers by managing the six forces that have an impact on health care innovation: players, the friends and foes who can bolster or destroy;funding, the revenue-generation and capital-acquisition processes, which differ from those in other industries; policy, the regulations that pervade the industry; technology, the foundation for innovations that can make health care delivery more efficient and convenient; customers, the empowered and engaged consumers of health care; and accountability, the demand from consumers, payers, and regulators that innovations be safe, effective, and cost-effective. Companies can often turn these six forces to their advantage. The analytical framework the author describes can also be used to examine other industries. Cataloging the innovation types and identifying the forces that aid or undermine them can reveal insights on how to treat chronic innovation ills- prescriptions that will make any industry healthier.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Diffusion of Innovation , United States
20.
JAMA ; 292(10): 1213-20, 2004 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15353534

ABSTRACT

Switzerland's consumer-driven health care system achieves universal insurance and high quality of care at significantly lower costs than the employer-based US system and without the constrained resources that can characterize government-controlled systems. Unlike other systems in which the choice and most of the funding for health insurance is provided by third parties, such as employers and governments, in the Swiss system, individuals are required to purchase their own health insurance. The positive results achieved by the Swiss system may be attributed to its consumer control, price transparency of the insurance plans, risk adjustment of insurers, and solidarity. However, the constraints the Swiss system places on hospitals and physicians and the paucity of provider quality information may unduly limit its impact. The Swiss health care system holds important lessons, including evidence about its feasibility and equity, for the United States, which is now embarking on its own consumer-driven health care system.


Subject(s)
Consumer Behavior , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Health Services Research , National Health Programs/organization & administration , Universal Health Insurance , Financing, Organized , Health Care Sector , Humans , National Health Programs/economics , Quality of Health Care , Switzerland , United States
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