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Rationing Health Care2/16/16
Please read the entire assignment before
starting
Background
There
are many critical issues to think
about this week. For example:
ASSIGNMENT
-
You are going to publish a
short editorial ( write it like you were writing for a newspaper ) to this week's discussion
link outlining an issue to your readers, regarding health care for older
adults. But you must first pick and then research your topic. How long
should this post be? What ever it takes to tell your readers about the
subject. Be brief, editorials are not supposed to be long papers. They are a
way to tell people about a complicated issue in a short format.
You must also include your
informed opinions. In other words first write about the
issue, then tell the reader your opinion on the subject based on your
readings. For example, if you say that Health Care is more costly for older
adults you must tell them how much more costly and why.
This is going to take some research
on your part to get the issues correct. As always, you must cite
your sources. Remember to use SWAGS and not WAGS. If you have
forgotten what those are check the orientation link.
Here are some other ideas. You can also look at your text and lecture
readings for ideas. Choose one or two to report on.
- The growth of Medicare, the history of the program,
quality of access issues.
- You might instead consider the role of
technology and the ethics involved.
- Or you
might focus on the idea of rationing health care and Callahan's argument ( you
must of course go beyond what the text tells you.
- You are free to explore other
topics related to health care and older adults. Factual material should
be invoked at all points.
You can chose
any perspective of this wide topic you like. Remember, although editorials are
opinions, those opinions have to be grounded in facts and cited..
Here is a link explaining what an editorial
is if you need help.
http://www.geneseo.edu/~bennett/EdWrite.htm
Resources:
- This site is a good overview of what happens to doctors around the
Medicare issue. Skim the list and
find one that interests you.
http://www.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=doctors+medicare
- There are a multitude of resources at
this link.
http://www.sagepub.com/moody5study/07HealthCareRation_WebLinks.pdf
- This is a must read -- more about Calahan here
http://www.scu.edu/ethics/publications/iie/v3n3/age.html
- Google this
topic -- and read some of the creditable sites. DOES AGING INCREASE HEALTH COSTS?
- "Does The Aging Of The Population
Really Drive The
Demand For Health Care?" by Uwe E. Reinhardt
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14649430
- ABSTRACT: In the debate on
health policy, it is widely believed that
the aging of the U.S. population is a major driver of the annual growth in
the demand for health care and in national health spending. This essay draws
on the research literature and on data from the Medical Expenditure Panel
Surveys (MEPS) to debunk that myth. Although in any year per capita health
spending for people age sixty-five or older tends to average three to five
times that for younger Americans, the aging of the population is too gradual
a process to rank as a major cost driver in health care.
- "Getting Serious About Excessive
Medicare
Spending: A Purchasing Model" by Robert A. Berenson
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/suppl/2003/12/10/hlthaff.w3.586v1.DC1
- ABSTRACT: It is now well
documented that Medicare spending varies
widely across the country and that higher spending does not produce
differences in quality, access, or even patient satisfaction. Yet for
various reasons, policy analysts have tended to minimize the importance of
the fact that as much as 30 percent of Medicare spending might be excessive
and unnecessary. There is an imperative to transform the traditional
Medicare program from that of a claims payer to that of a strategic
purchaser, able to adopt a broad array of approaches and to use a
comprehensive set of tools used by private plans, but in a more transparent
and accountable way.
Both articles appear in the Dec 2003
issue of The Journal HEALTH AFFAIRS (Vol 22, 2003).
Link to ARC Library- http://www.arc.losrios.edu/~library/
As usual be sure to respond to your classmates editorials.