See, e.g.,
Chernichovsky, D. Leibowitz, A. A.,
“Integrating Public Health and Personal Care in a Reformed U.S. Health Care System,” American Journal of Public Health 100,
no. 2 (
2010):
205–
211 (“This inefficiency [in the American health care system] - spending more with poorer results - stems partly from failure to provide effective access to medical care to a substantial share of the population.”);
Fowler, R. A. Noyahr, L.-A. Thornton, J. D. et al., “An Official American Thoracic Society Systemic Review: The Association Between Health Insurance Status and Access, Care Delivery, and Outcomes for Patients Who Are Critically Ill,”
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 181, no. 9 (2010): 1003–1011 (finding that lack of health insurance was associated with both impaired access to intensive care and higher risk of adverse outcomes);
Majette, G. R., “From Concierge Medicine to Patient-Centered Medical Homes: International Lessons and the Search for a Better Way to Deliver Primary Health Care in the U.S.,”
American Journal of Law & Medicine 35, no. 4 (2009): 585–619, at 587–88 (urging the importance of primary care physician services for good public health);
Wilper, A. P. Woolhandler, S. Lasser, K. E. et al., “Health Insurance and Mortality in U.S. Adults,”
American Journal of Public Health 99, no. 12 (2009): 2289–2295, at 2292 (claiming that lack of health insurance is associated with as many as 44,789 deaths per year in the United States). But see Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice,
Regional and Racial Variation in Primary Care and the Quality of Care among Medicare Beneficiaries, September 9, 2010,
available at <
www.dartmouthatlas.org/downloads/reports/primary_care_report_090910.pdf> (last visited May 25, 2011) (contending that making primary care more widely accessible will not necessarily improve the nation's health);
Alter, D. A. Stukel, T. Chong, A. et al., “Lesson from Canada's Universal Care: Socially Disadvantaged Patients Use More Health Services, Still Have Poorer Health,”
Health Affairs 30, no. 2 (2011): 274–283 (dismissing poor access to health care as the only explanation for worse health among populations with lower socioeconomic status).
CrossRefGoogle Scholar