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Health Affairs, 23, no. 2 (2004): 29-42
doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.23.2.29
© 2004 by Project HOPE
 
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Related Collections
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* Managed Care - Regulatory Issues

Managed Care

A Quiet Revolution: Law As An Agent Of Health System Change

M. Gregg Bloche and David M. Studdert

This paper considers law’s impact on health system change. Federal courts and state regulators have remade the rules of the medical marketplace, restricting the methods available to managed care organizations to control costs. Legal conflict, however, has had a larger effect through its influence on market actors’ perceptions and expectations. In anticipation of adverse legal outcomes and in response to consumers’ and investors’ anxiety, health plans changed business strategies, backing away from aggressive cost management. We conclude with four lessons about law’s role in the health sphere—lessons that stress the power of legal conflict to shape perceptions and to thereby change behavior before legal change occurs.


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Comments:

Read all Comments

What about state regulation?
Alan Bloom
Health Affairs, 9 Mar 2004 [Full text]
Effect of Regulation on HMOs' Competitive Advantages
Lawrence J Rose
Health Affairs, 15 Mar 2004 [Full text]
Re: Effect of Regulation on HMOs' Competitive Advantages
Alan Bloom
Health Affairs, 22 Mar 2004 [Full text]


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