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  Vol. 293 No. 19, May 18, 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Holes in the Swiss Health Care System

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

To the Editor: Drs Herzlinger and Parsa-Parsi1 attribute the success of the Swiss system to its resemblance to a consumer-driven system. However, Dr Reinhardt2 points out that the resemblance is distant, at best. He notes that the Swiss system is more like "managed competition" than consumer-driven care and that there are many other plausible reasons why Switzerland seems to be doing much better with health care than the United States.

I agree with Reinhardt that the argument of Herzlinger and Parsa-Parsi is unconvincing. The fact is that consumer-driven health care, as recently advocated by Herzlinger3 and others, is just a theory that has not yet been tested on anything like a national scale. To proponents of market-based health care, a consumer-driven system looks like just what we need. However, in health care, it usually turns out that "empowering consumers" is just another way of shifting the cost burden to . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Arnold Relman, MD
arelman@rics.bwh.harvard.edu
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Mass



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