Robert D. Reischauer
Urban Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Robert D. Reischauer.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008
Glenn M. Hackbarth; Robert D. Reischauer; Anne Mutti
In their June report, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) made 3 recommendations intended to create collective accountability across providers for selected hospital episodes. Glenn Hackbarth, Robert Reischauer, and Anne Mutti hope that this set of policies will create an environment that encourages and enables providers to accept bundled payments while also testing the feasibility of this payment design.
Forum for Health Economics & Policy | 2015
Henry J. Aaron; Robert D. Reischauer
Abstract Medicare today is a better program on almost every dimension than it was just after July 30, 1965 when Lyndon Johnson signed public law 89–97. Nonetheless, short-comings, limitations, and inadequacies remain. What should be done to make Medicare a better program? What should Medicare look like in 2030? In this paper we try to answer these questions. Three perspectives are relevant: that of beneficiaries, current and future; that of policymakers and administrators, the program’s stewards; and that of society at large. We posit certain objectives and goals that we believe – and that we think a broad swath of Americans would agree – should be pursued to improve the Medicare program. Those goals include (a) affordability for Medicare beneficiaries, (b) affordability for the working population that is paying and should continue to pay for much of the current cost of the program, (c) reduction in what we regard as needless complexity, and (d) stability and continuity in several different senses. We restrict ourselves to changes that we judge to be affordable and feasible – politically, technically, and administratively – if not today, then over the next decade or two. We believe that changes in Medicare will remain incremental, as they have been for the last 50 years. We shall assume that the ACA takes root and that the exchanges, whether managed by states or by the federal government on behalf of the states, continue to operate. We shall assume that federal and state officials eventually surmount the administrative challenges they still confront. In particular, we assume that the exchanges come to serve a growing share of the American population and that they increasingly exercise the rather considerable regulatory powers over insurance offerings that the ACA grants to them. We divide Medicare reforms into four categories: payment reform, benefit reform, quality reform and management, and the role of private insurance plans (Medicare Advantage [MA]).
Health Affairs | 2003
Donald M. Berwick; Nancy Ann DeParle; David M. Eddy; Paul M. Ellwood; Alain C. Enthoven; George C. Halvorson; Kenneth W. Kizer; Elizabeth A. McGlynn; Uwe E. Reinhardt; Robert D. Reischauer; William L. Roper; John W. Rowe; Leonard D. Schaeffer; John E. Wennberg; Gail R. Wilensky
Health Affairs | 1995
Henry J. Aaron; Robert D. Reischauer
Archive | 1998
Henry J. Aaron; Robert D. Reischauer
Annals of Internal Medicine | 2009
Kenneth J. Arrow; Alan J. Auerbach; John Bertko; Shannon Brownlee; Lawrence P. Casalino; Jim Cooper; Francis J. Crosson; Alain C. Enthoven; Elizabeth Falcone; Robert C. Feldman; Victor R. Fuchs; Alan M. Garber; Marthe R. Gold; Dana P. Goldman; Gillian K. Hadfield; Mark A. Hall; Ralph I. Horwitz; Michael Hooven; Peter D. Jacobson; Timothy Stoltzfus Jost; Lawrence Kotlikoff; Jonathan Levin; Sharon Levine; Richard M. Levy; Karen Linscott; Harold S. Luft; Robert Mashal; Daniel McFadden; David Mechanic; David O. Meltzer
Health Affairs | 2000
Len M. Nichols; Robert D. Reischauer
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010
Henry J. Aaron; Robert D. Reischauer
Health Affairs | 1995
Linda T. Bilheimer; Robert D. Reischauer
Health Affairs | 1999
Stuart M. Butler; Bill Gradison; Robert Helms; Marilyn Moon; Joseph P. Newhouse; Mark V. Pauly; Martha Phillips; Uwe E. Reinhardt; Robert D. Reischauer; William L. Roper; John Rother; Leonard D. Schaeffer; Gail R. Wilensky