With this book, Zeke Emanuel has done the country an immense service. He does the impossibleexplain the dysfunctional American health care systemand then takes it one better. For here he also makes the hard-eyed case for understanding that the passage of health reformof Obamacarehas set us on a path for a health system that works. Our system has left millions without needed care, bankrupt, or both, and tied the fate of their health to where they work. This book explains how we got in this fix, how we will get out of itand even more boldly, when. If you wanted to read one book to understand health care, this is the one you want.” Atul Gawande, surgeon, staff writer for The New Yorker, and author of The Checklist Manifesto
“There are thoughtful doctors, savvy policy makers and profound scholars of morality. Zeke Emanuel is the only person in America who is all three. That makes him the right person to write the definitive primer on health care in America. It should be read by anyone who wants to understand what may be the most important set of domestic issues facing America.” Lawrence H. Summers, former Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, & President Emeritus and Charles W. Eliot University Professor of Harvard University
“For Americans poisoned by nefarious medical insurance companies and a G.O.P. dying to gut Obamacare, I prescribe Ezekiel Emanuel's Reinventing American Health Care (PublicAffairs) to clarify how the Affordable Care Act can rehabilitate our nauseatingly unjust, grossly expensive, and senselessly complicated health-care system. My personal recommendation? Lay off the toxic propaganda.”Vanity Fair
“Whether you agree with his conclusions or not, they're well argued, and he has marshaled an impressive amount of information.”Washington Post
“Zeke Emanuel has written a book that tells people interested health care policy what they need to know but all too often do not. He brings together a staggering variety of information, never before available in one place, on economics, medicine, legislative history, governmental operations, politics, and the gory, boring, and surpassingly important issue of implementation. No single book can tell one all one needs to know about the most complex health care system in the world, but this one comes very close indeed.” Henry J. Aaron, the Bruce and Virginia MacLaury Senior Fellow in the Economic Studies program at the Brookings Institution
“The author, who serves as a special White House adviser on health care reform, is optimistic that its glitches will be resolved within the year and that it will transform how patients are cared for over the coming decades
He offers an insider's account of some of the infighting that occurred within the Obama administration
The author takes a long view of the reforms beginning with incentives and penalties for the adoption of uniform electronic health records in the 2009 Recovery Act
An important challenge to the naysayers on both sides of the political divide.”Kirkus Reviews
“Infused with diagrams, charts, and tables, this book is informative, thought-provoking, and immensely important. Given his role in the program, and as is reflected in the subtitle of the book, Emanuel clearly wants to persuade, but he also wants to explain. And because he was an insider and proves himself a gifted writer he makes an able guide to the complexities of the landmark legislation
Clearly, if Obamacare is to fulfill its promise there will need to be significant changes and that will require collaboration among citizens, health care professionals, scholars, and lawmakers from across the political spectrum. And the only way this can happen is if people understand what exactly is at stake. ‘Reinventing American Health Care' spells this out clearly, and by doing so, lays the foundation for this kind of collaboration to occur.”Dennis Rosen, Boston Globe
“The facts and history that Emanuel lays out would be useful to anyone involved in the debate over health care, no matter what their point of view is.”250Words.com
“Prominent bioethicist Emanuel makes a convincing, albeit onesided, case for overhauling what he sees as an unfair health system in the U.S. Deftly using numbers to make his arguments, Emanuel organizes his book into three parts: the current system (largely its financing), health-care reform (the nearly 1,000-page Affordable Care Act [ACA] and legal challenges to it), and the future (lots of hospital closings)
He also touches on important history (the creation of Medicare in 1965) and clearly explains complicated issues
A plain-English explanation of a tricky topic.”Booklist
“Few people have had a more favorable influence on the shaping of the current processes of health care reform than Zeke Emanuel has. And no one is a better, clearer, or wiser interpreter of the insanely complex non-system that we are trying to fix. This book is an instant classicmandatory reading for anyone who wants to know how we got where we are in American health care and where we need to go.” Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP, president emeritus and senior fellow
at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and former administrator
of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
★ 04/15/2014
New York Times columnist Emanuel (medical ethics, health policy, Univ. of Pennsylvania), a White House special adviser on health care reform, ably assesses the impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA; commonly called Obamacare) on the American health care system in this timely volume. Emanuel carefully explains and illustrates serious problems with the current set up, the history of failed attempts at improvement, and the details of the ACA itself. In his estimation, controlling health care costs is good economics and will accelerate the economy rather than slow it down. Although the author acknowledges that the ACA is politically divisive, he makes a convincing case for its potential. Emanuel concedes that he is an optimist, but nevertheless admits that no piece of legislation is perfect and devotes a chapter of the book to possible implementation problems. He also points out that the health care system is dynamic and will require ongoing amendments and maintenance. VERDICT Readers with an interest in current political and social issues will appreciate Emanuel's frank policy discussions. Because all Americans are affected by the ACA the chapters detailing the content and personal implications of the act will be of value and interest to everyone.—Linda F. Petty, Wimberley, TX
2014-02-12
Emanuel (Medical Ethics and Health Policy/Univ. of Pennsylvania; Brothers Emanuel: A Memoir of an American Family, 2013, etc.) views the Affordable Care Act as a success story. The author, who serves as a special White House adviser on health care reform, is optimistic that its glitches will be resolved within the year and that it will transform how patients are cared for over the coming decades. He reprises the complex history of American health care policy beginning in 1942, when the National War Labor Board ruled that health insurance could be treated as a nontaxable fringe benefit despite the wage freeze. The later inclusion of Medicare and Medicaid increased the complexity of the system. Emanuel details the many inequities that developed—most notably, the exclusion of people with pre-existing health conditions from the system and the financial vulnerability of the uninsured, who also frequently receive substandard treatment—e.g.,"Being uninsured means your chance of dying in a car accident is 40% higher than that of a privately insured person." The author asserts that the passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010 "was a historic event," especially in the context of the ongoing recession and political restraints, coupled with the need to deal with opposition from "physicians, insurers, and pharmaceutical manufacturers" and others. He offers an insider's account of some of the infighting that occurred within the Obama administration, including his own altercations with his brother, Rahm, then chief of staff to the president. The author takes a long view of the reforms beginning with incentives and penalties for the adoption of uniform electronic health records in the 2009 Recovery Act. The ACA, he writes, "will increasingly be seen as a world historic achievement," and "Barack Obama will be viewed more like Harry Truman—judged with increasing respect over time." An important challenge to the naysayers on both sides of the political divide.