Health Care in World Cities
New York, Paris, and London
Michael K Gusmano author Victor G Rodwin author Daniel Weisz author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Johns Hopkins University Press
Published:11th Jun '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
New York. London. Paris. Although these cities have similar sociodemographic characteristics, including income inequalities and ethnic diversity, they have vastly different health systems and services. This book compares the three and considers lessons that can be applied to current and future debates about urban health care. Highlighting the importance of a national policy for city health systems, the authors use well-established indicators and comparable data sources to shed light on urban health policy and practice. Their detailed comparison of the three city health systems and the national policy regimes in which they function provides information about access to health care in the developed world's largest cities. The authors first review the current literature on comparative analysis of health systems and offer a brief overview of the public health infrastructure in each city. Later chapters illustrate how timely and appropriate disease prevention, primary care, and specialty health care services can help cities control such problems as premature mortality and heart disease. In providing empirical comparisons of access to care in these three health systems, the authors refute inaccurate claims about health care outside of the United States.
A very helpful volume for those concerned with health care policy and health care delivery systems. Choice 2010 In Health Care in World Cities, Michael Gusmano, Victor Rodwin, and Daniel Weisz have boldly undertaken an innovative level of comparative health systems analysis in this well-written, creative and rigorous book. -- David Chinitz JAMA 2011
ISBN: 9780801894442
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
Weight: 408g
200 pages