This course delves into the complex forces driving the high cost of US healthcare, offering a deep dive into why the system is both costly on a macro level and burdensome for individuals. You’ll explore how factors such as high prices, intensive service use, and system inefficiencies contribute to soaring expenditures. By comparing the US system with those in England and Germany, the course highlights how governance, financing, and resource allocation strategies can help contain costs while still providing high-quality care.
Throughout the course, you will gain a nuanced understanding of the interplay between healthcare prices and utilization. You’ll learn how differences in system design—such as clear boundaries, integrated care models, and regulatory frameworks—shape outcomes and impact overall spending. By examining real-world data and case studies, you’ll be equipped to critically assess policy interventions and consider reforms that might offer a “least worst” solution for controlling costs. Join us to unravel the intricacies of healthcare economics and discover practical insights for navigating and potentially reforming the US healthcare landscape.
Module 1 introduces the challenge of understanding why US healthcare is expensive. It explains that “expensive” means both high overall spending and a heavy financial burden on patients. The module compares US costs and outcomes with other high-income countries, showing that while high prices and complex billing systems play a role, factors like population aging don't fully explain the disparity. This sets the stage for exploring the internal, system-based drivers of these high costs.
涵盖的内容
10个视频3个讨论话题
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10个视频•总计55分钟
Introduction and Welcome•6分钟
New Video•6分钟
Using Systems Analysis•5分钟
System Dynamics: Understanding Health System Architecture•7分钟
Is U.S. Healthcare Costly?•4分钟
The Personal Financial Burden in Healthcare•5分钟
Out of Pocket Expenditure by Individuals•4分钟
Consequences of High Costs: Medical Debt and Catastrophic Spending•6分钟
Linking System and Personal Costs: A Synthesis of Healthcare Expenditure•6分钟
Explanation for High Levels of Spending•6分钟
3个讨论话题•总计90分钟
Costly vs. Excessive•30分钟
The Varying Effects of Out-of-Pocket Costs•30分钟
Possible Solutions?•30分钟
The Price-Utilization Puzzle
第 2 单元•小时 后完成
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Module 2 explores how high prices and intensive service use drive the cost of US healthcare. It examines differences in pricing for inpatient, outpatient, and pharmaceutical services, highlighting variations between private and public insurers. The module also explains that, even with fewer visits, each episode of care in the US is more service intensive—incorporating more complex and expensive treatments—compared to other countries.
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10个视频3个讨论话题
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10个视频•总计51分钟
Analyzing Healthcare Prices: An Overview•4分钟
Private Health Insurers Pay Higher Prices•5分钟
Pharmaceuticals and Spending: A Breakdown of Costs•6分钟
Public Insurance vs. Private: How Prices Differ•5分钟
Utilization Patterns: Volume of Healthcare Services•6分钟
Service Intensity: Beyond the Number of Care Episodes•4分钟
U.S. Rates of Utilization of Service Intensive Care•6分钟
Intensive Care Utilization: Adult and Neonatal Perspectives•6分钟
High Prices & Rates of Utilization of ICU Services in the U.S.•6分钟
Module 2 Conclusion•5分钟
3个讨论话题•总计90分钟
Price Variations in Inpatient and Outpatient Services•30分钟
Service Intensity•30分钟
Addressing Cost Challenges•30分钟
System Dynamics for Cost Control
第 3 单元•小时 后完成
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Module 3 examines how the health systems in England and Germany are designed to control healthcare costs by influencing patterns of price and utilization. It explains how these countries use system dynamics—through governance, financing, resource generation, and service delivery—to set up defenses that contain high prices and excessive service use. The module explores the trade-offs and goals behind these designs, such as achieving universal coverage and the triple aim in England and using corporate self-governance to balance cost and access in Germany
涵盖的内容
10个视频3个讨论话题
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10个视频•总计53分钟
Introduction to System Dynamics in Health Systems•7分钟
Defensive System Design: Governance and Financing in Action•5分钟
A Brief Review of the Health Systems in England and Germany•5分钟
The NHS Unpacked: Funding and Governance Structures in England•5分钟
Defining Boundaries: The NHS Constitution and Legal Framework•5分钟
Integrated Care Systems: Governance Strategies in NHS England•6分钟
The German Health System: Social Insurance and Corporate Self-Governance•5分钟
Governing Statutory Health Insurance in Germany•5分钟
The System Dynamics Influencing Patterns of Price and Utilization•6分钟
Lessons for the US Health System•4分钟
3个讨论话题•总计90分钟
Defensive System Design•30分钟
Integrated Care Systems•30分钟
Lessons Learned?•30分钟
Uncontained Forces in U.S. Healthcare
第 4 单元•小时 后完成
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Module 4 revisits the question of why US healthcare is so costly by examining the design features and systemic forces that limit cost containment. This module contrasts the US system’s open and fragmented boundaries with the more regulated frameworks of Germany and England. It analyzes how employer-sponsored insurance and Medicare employ market-based strategies, managed care, and cost sharing to control utilization—yet these approaches fall short of curbing high prices and the intensity of care within each episode. By focusing on the special protection of the doctor–patient relationship, the complexity of multiple financing streams, and the regulatory strategies in Medicare, the module demonstrates that despite efforts to limit care episodes, the US health system remains vulnerable to strong cost-driving forces. Ultimately, it challenges learners to consider whether the current high expenditure is the “least worst” outcome given these systemic constraints.
涵盖的内容
10个视频1个作业
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10个视频•总计57分钟
Revisiting US Healthcare Costs: An Overview of Expenditure Patterns•6分钟
Design Challenges: The Open Boundaries of the US Health System•6分钟
Financing and the Doctor–Patient Relationship in US Healthcare•5分钟
Employer-Sponsored Insurance and Managed Care Strategies•6分钟
Market-Based Strategies: Managed Care’s Role in Cost Containment•7分钟
Cost Sharing and Consumer-Directed Healthcare: Controlling Utilization•6分钟
The Role of Cost Sharing in Limiting Access to Care•6分钟
Medicare’s Regulatory Approach: Price Benchmarking and Cost Control•4分钟
Comparing Medicare and Private Insurance Outcomes•5分钟
Implications and Policy Challenges in the High Cost of US Healthcare•7分钟
The University of Pennsylvania (commonly referred to as Penn) is a private university, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. A member of the Ivy League, Penn is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, and considers itself to be the first university in the United States with both undergraduate and graduate studies.
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