new book
Why Not Better and Cheaper?
by James Rebitzer and Robert Rebitzer
An engaging account of innovation in healthcare and why it matters for patients and society.
The evolution of the cell phones we carry in our pockets demonstrates that quality can increase while prices fall. Why doesn't healthcare also get better and cheaper?
In Why Not Better and Cheaper?, James B. Rebitzer and Robert S. Rebitzer offer an answer to this question. Bringing together research on incentives, social norms, and market competition, they argue that the healthcare system generates the wrong kinds of innovation. It is too easy to profit from low-value innovations and too hard to profit from innovations that reduce the costs of care. The result is a healthcare system that is profusely innovative yet remarkably ineffective in discovering ways to deliver increased value at lower cost.
Why Not Better and Cheaper? sheds new light on the trajectory of innovation in healthcare, and how to point innovation in a better direction.
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“In Why Not Better and Cheaper? James and Robert Rebitzer elegantly explain the misaligned incentives in American healthcare and how to fix them. This is a must-read for anyone looking to make healthcare better and cheaper.”
“The book does not disappoint—it is a masterclass in medicine, law, economics, strategy, and psychology— infused with clever facts and written with a steadfast determination to make the reader smarter about taking health care, which is so doggedly frustrating and expensive, and innovating to make it Better and Cheaper.”
“At last, a book that explains why a country with extraordinary innovative capacity has a wildly expensive and underperforming healthcare sector – and it’s not just the prices! The Brothers Rebitzer use fascinating examples to pinpoint the perverse incentives driving low-value innovation in the U.S. healthcare sector and to show what can be done to can set them right.”