Why Are Some People Healthy and Others Not? 2017
DOI: 10.4324/9781315135755-3
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Producing Health, Consuming Health Care

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Cited by 172 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…The somewhat paradoxical finding that preventive care utilization was not associated with lower outpatient and inpatient health‐care expenses might suggest that older adults who used preventive care services reported better health‐related measurements in China, given that they accessed more health‐care services than their peers who did not access preventive care services. This is based on Evans and Stoddart's observation that healthier individuals have more opportunities for health‐care seeking . Further, it has been noted that Chinese older adults rate increasing accessibility of health care as a top priority .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The somewhat paradoxical finding that preventive care utilization was not associated with lower outpatient and inpatient health‐care expenses might suggest that older adults who used preventive care services reported better health‐related measurements in China, given that they accessed more health‐care services than their peers who did not access preventive care services. This is based on Evans and Stoddart's observation that healthier individuals have more opportunities for health‐care seeking . Further, it has been noted that Chinese older adults rate increasing accessibility of health care as a top priority .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In most of cases, the supply side of the health care system shows several shortcomings-ranging from diseconomies of scale to disintegration in the provision of health services-which impoverish the effectiveness of health services' provision and do not allow to meet the evolving needs of the population served [42]. In addition, policy decisions about the allocation of available financial resources may prioritize current basic levels of care, overlooking the need for investing in innovative technologies, organizational change, and advanced infrastructures; however, missing innovation and change are expected to generate in the future increased costs for health services' provision [43]. What is even more relevant is that the recent financial crisis impaired the ability of National Health Services to afford the historical health expenditure and to meet the growing health needs of the community.…”
Section: The Conventional Shade: Financial and Economic Sustainabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…. Rather, we are trying to construct an analytic framework within which such evidence can be fitted” (1,16). Likewise, our goal for this essay is not to present a comprehensive framework for well-being as an end point of policy but rather to present a compelling enough argument that, if well-being is the end point, additional progress toward population health and well-being might occur.…”
Section: The Words We Use Influence Our Thinkingmentioning
confidence: 99%