Best health care administration books according to redditors

We found 3 Reddit comments discussing the best health care administration books. We ranked the 3 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Health Care Administration:

u/applextrent · 2 pointsr/Lyme

Ah you again.

Dr. Stoller uses the latest medical research in his medical practice. You can read all about it in his book (Incurable Me: Why the Best Medical Research Does Not Make It into Clinical Practice https://www.amazon.com/dp/1510707980/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_Pa4-Bb1YBW0QT). It’s because of him I am even functional enough to reply and write this. He’s arguably saved my life.

Are his methods conventional? Not at all. Do they work? Yes, many of them do because they’re backed by the latest clinical research.

When it comes to Lyme disease, he’s well researched and educated. He’s successfully treated people with Lyme disease for over 30+ years.

His opinions on vaccinations aren’t relevant to treating Lyme disease. With that said, I personally know people who have experienced health problems due to vaccines. One of my old clients son was disabled for many years by an HPV vaccine, and now requires blood pressure medications to function again. While I don’t know if vaccines can cause autism, I do know that there are sometimes negative side effects to vaccines.

In fact, a senator just died after receiving a flu vaccine that he himself was promoting. https://www.learntherisk.org/other/senator-dies-of-flu-shot/

Anyhow, I would much rather see a doctor who is suspicious of the current medical system and uses the latest medical research to treat patients then the dozens of doctors who misdiagnosed me and allowed my infections to become chronic and nearly killed me. Dr. Stoller saved my life, I can’t say that for any other doctor since childhood.

u/ed_merckx · 1 pointr/AdviceAnimals

The federal government pays for a little more than 60% of total healthcare expenditures per capita, to the tune of nearly 1.9trillion.

per capita federal expenditures are only higher in; :Luxembourg, Norway, and Switzerland. We are about 40% higher in tax payer funded healthcare per capita than the UK, and aroumd 47% higher than Canada. Both systems that people always cite the US could have if we just got rid of all those evil private insurers, and people paid the fair amount.....

Every wonder, that maybe, just maybe, the actual people that spending nearly 10% of our GDP annually on direct healthcare expenditures could be doing a better job at it? What about the nearly $100 billion in medicare/medicaid fraud, that's probably a low estimate since the ACA. well respecgted people have been righting about it for decades.

Tort reform is mostly a state issue, one that surely needs to be addressed, but it's very difficult given the complexities. Real change needs to come from at the federal level based on actual expenditures/subsudies and where they're going, and this isn't even talking about the mass amounts of inefficient regulations still on the books.

People need to fucking realize that there is basically one single payer that accounts for nearly two thirds of our entire healthcare spending, the biggest spending by wide margins over every other country on the face of the earth, and they've yet to prove they are anything other than totally incompetent since these programs came about in the 60's.