Siegel B
Tampa General Healthcare, Florida 33601, USA.
Bull N Y Acad Med. 1996 Winter;73(2):357-69.
Cities across America are grappling with the problem of how to provide care for the indigent and those on Medicaid. All levels of government are reducing their public funding for health care of indigent persons, and the rapid growth of managed care is making traditional cost-shifting more difficult as it transforms the practice of medicine itself. These issues are most acute in cities like Los Angeles and New York, which traditionally have relied on public hospital systems to serve as a safety net. This article focuses on the changes being wrought at the largest health-care system in the country for indigents, the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation (HHC), on the progress it made during the first 18 months of a major re-engineering process, and on potential options for its future reform.
美国各地的城市都在努力解决如何为贫困人口和医疗补助计划覆盖人群提供医疗服务的问题。各级政府都在削减对贫困人口医疗保健的公共资金投入,而管理式医疗的迅速发展使得传统的成本转嫁变得更加困难,因为它改变了医疗行业本身的运作方式。这些问题在洛杉矶和纽约等城市最为尖锐,这些城市传统上依靠公立医院系统作为安全网。本文重点关注美国最大的贫困人口医疗保健系统——纽约市卫生与医院公司(HHC)所发生的变化、在重大重新设计过程的头18个月里取得的进展以及其未来改革的潜在选择。