Part 3 of a panel series on health care price regulation honoring Uwe E. Reinhardt (1937-2017)
In light of the major financial burden that health care places on many households and the limited competition in many health care markets, some policymakers and experts have called for governments to play a larger role in determining the prices of health care services, such as by regulating those prices or introducing a public option. The late Uwe Reinhardt wrote and spoke for many years in support of a larger role for the public sector in determining health care prices.
On October 7, USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy and the Center on Regulation and Markets at Brookings will, in honor of Uwe’s work, host the final webinar in a series examining whether a larger public role is appropriate.
This panel will examine the systems used to determine the prices of health care services in other developed countries. The panel will provide a typology of the approaches commonly in use in other countries and examine a few specific systems in greater detail, with a particular focus on determining what lessons these other countries’ systems may have for policymakers in the United States.Event Date
Wednesday, October 7, 2020 11:00 AM - 12:20 PM Pacific
Panel
- Paul B. Ginsburg (Moderator) | Director, USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy | Director of Health Policy, USC Schaeffer Center
- Adam Elshaug | Visiting Fellow, USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy
- Miriam Laugesen | Associate Professor, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University
- Chris Pope | Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute
- Reginald Williams II | Vice President, International Health Policy and Practice Innovations, The Commonwealth Fund