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2006 Annual Meeting San Antonio, Texas
Leading health experts and analysts, as well as academic health center leaders and key opinion-makers examined and debated the dimensions of academic health center leadership involvement in health care reform.
Len M. Nichols, PhD, shared his insights on where political parties and players stand on health reform
Health leaders representing consumer, corporate, provider, and government interests raised problems with the health care system from these particular perspectives and suggested ways to improve and reform healthcare quality.
Political analyst Mark Schmitt presented his vision of American politics in the near future, and provided an idea of how health reform might proceed in that context.
“Academic health centers should set clearly defined boundaries with industry.”
Speakers focused on questions related to how health reform might include education reform, and concluded that education must be part of any sustainable health reform initiative.
Major concerns about the uninsured, primary care, and evidence based care continue to generate debate when completing reform. Will such issues remain barriers to change?
Should the federal government lead in health reform? If the federal government should not or cannot will states be able to create sustainable reform?