Abstract
The claim of this Article is that the concept of "managed care," like many concepts now prominent in commentary about medical care finance and delivery in the United States, is incoherent and thus a barrier to useful analysis. To demonstrate this conclusion, we first discuss the managerial context in which managed care claims have arisen and outline the diverse trends to which the category is regularly and confusingly applied. We then suggest an alternative approach to characterizing recent changes in medical care and show how this approach alters and deepens our understanding of recent economic and political developments. We conclude by arguing for more neutral categories to make sense of past and projected developments in methods of reimbursement, techniques of management, and organizational structures.
Recommended Citation
Jacob S. Hacker & Theodore R. Marmor,
How Not to Think About "Managed Care",
32
U. Mich. J. L. Reform
661
(1999).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjlr/vol32/iss4/4