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Handbook of Health Economics
A J. Culyer (Edited by), J.P. Newhouse (Edited by)
9780444504708, Elsevier Science
Hardback, published 19 July 2000
1000 pages
24 x 16.5 x 4.7 cm, 1.719 kg
The Handbook of Health Economics provide an up-to-date survey of the burgeoning literature in health economics. As a relatively recent subdiscipline of economics, health economics has been remarkably successful. It has made or stimulated numerous contributions to various areas of the main discipline: the theory of human capital; the economics of insurance; principal-agent theory; asymmetric information; econometrics; the theory of incomplete markets; and the foundations of welfare economics, among others. Perhaps it has had an even greater effect outside the field of economics, introducing terms such as opportunity cost, elasticity, the margin, and the production function into medical parlance. Indeed, health economists are likely to be as heavily cited in the clinical as in the economics literature. Partly because of the large share of public resources that health care commands in almost every developed country, health policy is often a contentious and visible issue; elections have sometimes turned on issues of health policy. Showing the versatility of economic theory, health economics and health economists have usually been part of policy debates, despite the vast differences in medical care institutions across countries. The publication of the first Handbook of Health Economics marks another step in the evolution of health economics.
Introduction (A.J. Culyer and J.P. Newhouse). Part 1: Overviews and Paradigms. Health care systems internationally compared (B. Jonsson and U.-G. Gerdtham). An overview of the normative economics of the health sector (J. Hurley). Medical care prices and output (E.R. Berndt et al.). Recent developments in CBA/CEA (A. Garber). Information diffusion and best practice adoption (C.E. Phelps). Health econometrics (A.M. Jones). Part 2: Demand and Reimbursement for Medical Services. The human capital model (M. Grossman). Moral hazard and consumer incentives in health care (P. Zweifel and W.G. Manning). Physician agency (T.G. McGuire). Insurance reimbursement (M.V. Pauly). Part 3: Insurance Markets, Managed Care and Contracting. Insurance markets and adverse selection (D. Cutler and R. Zeckhauser). Health insurance and the labor market (J. Gruber). Managed care (S. Glied). Risk adjustment in competitive health plan markets(W.P.M.M. van de Ven and R.P. Ellis). Government purchasing of health services (M. Chalkley and J.M. Malcomson).
Subject Areas: Health systems & services [MBP], Public health & preventive medicine [MBN], Service industries [KNS], Health economics [KCQ], Economic theory & philosophy [KCA], Economics [KC]