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"Bradley, faculty director of Yale University's Global Health Leadership
Institute, and Taylor, the institute's former program manager, contrast
American healthcare models with the much more successful models in
Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. The Scandinavian model, a dramatically more
holistic approach envisioning citizen health as inextricably linked to
national welfare, views greater spending on housing, education,
employment, and nutrition as necessary components of healthcare
outcomes, resulting in less overall spending with far greater results.
The authors assemble an expansive study of representatives from the
health-care and social sectors, including hospital administrators,
social workers, physicians, police, emergency service personnel, nurses,
educators, and pharmacists to demonstrate the need for integration
between medicine and social welfare in the U.S. The disconnect between
social services and health care, and the deeper historical schism
between public and private interests, emerges as the reason why the
U.S., which ranks first in healthcare spending, is mired in
disappointing health outcomes. Admirably presented as an apolitical
examination of an urgent situation, Bradley and Taylor's carefully
researched and lucidly reported findings, including innovative
approaches in Connecticut, Oregon, and California, offer what appears to
be an easily rendered fix, but their equally striking depiction of
uniquely American hostility to government involvement in private
matters, exposes a daunting uphill battle." (Publishers Weekly)
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