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a The Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, Massachusetts
b Physicians for a National Health Program, Chicago, Illinois
c National Center for Policy Analysis, Dallas, Texas
d Department of Surgery and the Institute of Human Values in Health Care, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina
* Address correspondence to Dr Sade at Department of Surgery, 96 Jonathan Lucas St, Ste 409, PO Box 250612, Charleston, SC 29425. (Email: sader@musc.edu).
Presented at the Forty-second Annual Meeting of The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, Chicago, IL, Jan 30–Feb 1, 2006.
| The first 300 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
| Introduction |
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Many believe that the piecemeal legislation of the last 60 years is doomed to failure, and that lasting improvements in the health care system can be achieved only through radical change. Two fundamentally different approaches to health care reform have dominated policy discussions in recent years: creation of a centrally organized system designed to ensure that every American has health insurance versus devolution of our heavily regulated health care financing system toward a minimally regulated free market in health care.
Politically, the last major attempt to create a centrally organized system at the national level was the Health Security Act of President Bill Clintons administration in 1993–1994. The first important modern step toward a free market approach to health care was embodied in the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003, which created Health Savings Accounts. Further movement toward market reforms, such as refinements of Health Savings
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