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   <subfield code="a">Govindarajan, Vijay</subfield>
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   <subfield code="a">Reverse innovation in health care :</subfield>
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   <subfield code="b">How to make value-based delivery work</subfield>
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   <subfield code="c">Vijay Govindarajan, Ravi Ramamurti</subfield>
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   <subfield code="b">Harvard Business Review Press</subfield>
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   <subfield code="c">2018</subfield>
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   <subfield code="a">Health care in the United States and other nations is on a collision course with patient needs and economic reality. For more than a decade, leading thinkers including Michael Porter and Clayton Christensen have argued passionately for value-based health care reform: replacing delivery based on volume and fee-for-service with competition based on value, as measured by patient outcomes per dollar spent. Though still a pipe dream here in the United States, this kind of value-based competition is already a reality--in India. Facing a giant population of poor, underserved people and a severe shortage of skills and capacity, some risk-taking private enterprises have found a way to deliver high-quality health care, at ultra-low prices, to all patients who need it. Govindarajan and Ramamurti studied these Indian value-based models in depth. After investigating forty health care organizations and conducting field research on sixteen, they identified seven &quot;exemplar&quot; providers that consistently delivered high-quality health care at ultra-low cost, while being profitable, financially sustainable, and able to scale up their operations. Their secret sauce consists of five principles that work together to produce value-based care. Arguing that now is the time for the United States and other &quot;rich&quot; nations to learn from the &quot;poor,&quot; this book shows how the innovations developed by these Indian exemplars are already being practiced by some far-sighted US providers--reversing the typical flow of innovation in the world. The authors describe four different pathways being used by these organizations to apply Indian-style principles to attack the exorbitant costs, uneven quality, and incomplete access to health care in the United States.</subfield>
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   <subfield code="a">Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Cần Thơ</subfield>
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