The major strength of this book is its use of concrete examples that
show how process redesign and the integration of enabling technologies
have led to performance improvement and cost reduction in the largest
healthcare system in the world and how these approaches transfer
effectively to the private healthcare sector.
This book focuses on current federal sector efforts to shape healthcare,
i.e., to improve performance while containing costs. The solutions offered
include redesigning processes and, where appropriate, the use of enabling
technologies to do so. Since historically, innovations in the federal sector
have often migrated to and profoundly changed practices in the private
sector, many of the initiatives described involve some degree of partnering
between the public and private sector. Others represent work in the federal
sector that address the same problems confronted in the private sector
and offer valuable and transferable solutions and approaches. The major
strength of this book is its use of concrete examples that show how process
redesign and the integration of enabling technologies have led to performance
improvement and cost reduction in the largest healthcare system in the
world. The contributors--all acknowledged experts in their fields--draw
upon their knowledge of the healthcare industry and their expertise in
working within and with the federal sector health system. They focus on
exciting changes and improvements, and they elaborate on strategies for
the future that will reshape federal sector healthcare. The book does not
intend to give "correct answers," but to demonstrate mature thinking in
shaping healthcare in general. In the years ahead, engineering healthcare
to meet the demands of newly knowledgeable consumers will be critical.
In addition to giving insights into what the federal sector leadership
is doing to address the challenges of population health, each chapter will
highlight the perspective of employers, payers, and deliverers of health
services.