Siegel Bruce, Mead Holly, Burke Robert
George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services, Department of Health Services Management, USA.
J Law Med Ethics. 2008 Winter;36(4):644-51, 607. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-720X.2008.00318.x.
Health care spending comprises about 16% of the total United States gross domestic product and continues to rise. This article examines patterns of health care spending and the factors underlying their proportional growth. We examine the "usual suspects" most frequently cited as drivers of health care costs and explain why these may not be as important as they seem. We suggest that the drive for technological advancement, coupled with the entrepreneurial nature of the health care industry, has produced inherently inequitable and unsustainable health care expenditure and growth patterns. Successful health reform will need to address these factors and their consequences.