Institute For The Future

  • What We Do
    • Who We Are
    • IFTF Vantage Partnership
    • IFTF Foresight Essentials
    • Forecasts
    • Workshops
    • Maps
    • Artifacts from the Future
    • Events
    • In the News
    • Media Center
    • Gallery
    • History of the Future
  • Our Work
    • Featured Projects
    • Global Landscape
    • People + Technology
    • Health + Self
  • Partner with IFTF
    • IFTF Vantage
    • IFTF Foresight Essentials
    • Research Labs
    • Partners
    • Jobs
    • Donate
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Future Now
  • Donate
Medium Facebook Twitter RSS
  • Global Landscape
  • People + Technology
  • Health + Self

Engaged Consumers in Health and Health Care

  • Featured Projects
  • Global Landscape

    • Ten-Year Forecast

    • Food Futures

    • Work + Learn Futures

    • Workable Futures

    • Cities Futures

    • Governance Futures

    • Inclusive Futures

    • Socialstructing

    • Sustainability

  • People + Technology

    • Tech Futures

    • Work + Learn Futures

    • Workable Futures

    • Games

  • Health + Self

    • After the Pandemic

    • Centering Health

    • Health Futures

    • Health Care

    • Health Games

    • Aging

INTERESTED IN LEARNING MORE ABOUT IFTF?

Contact us today »

Future NOW Blog

News from the Future #52

Feb 01, 2021

The Social Work Health Futures Lab: Exploring the Future of Well-Being and Justice

Jan 29, 2021

Feb 10-11: You're Invited! Building Climate-Positive Organizations

Jan 27, 2021

News from the Future #51

Dec 28, 2020

Bentoism: A Map to Liberate Ourselves from the “Now Me”

Dec 22, 2020

Browse all blog posts »

Engaged Consumers in Health and Health Care

In these days of rapidly rising health care costs and retreat from tightly managed systems of care, many health care theorists and business leaders believe that greater consumer involvement in health care decisions and financing is the answer to controlling health care costs and, to a lesser extent, to improving quality. They advocate more consumer responsibility by asking consumers to pay more for the health goods and services they use. Some believe that paying more will give consumers the incentive they need to make rational and value-based decisions, which will bring about better products and services at better prices by setting true market forces in play. Are consumers the answer? Can they fix health care, and what do consumers think about assuming more responsibility in health and health care decisions and financing?

 

Publication Date

March 2003

Download

  • SR-783_Engaged_Consumers.pdf

    Engaged Consumers in Health and Health Care [SR-783]

  • Institute for the Future

  • 201 Hamilton Avenue
  • Palo Alto, CA 94301
  • 650.854.6322
  • info@iftf.org

  • © 2021 Institute for the Future

    What We Do

  • Who We Are
  • IFTF Vantage Partnership
  • IFTF Foresight Essentials
  • Forecasts
  • Workshops
  • Maps
  • Artifacts from the Future
  • Events
  • In the News
  • Media Center
  • Gallery
  • History of the Future

    Our Work

  • Featured Projects
  • Global Landscape
  • People + Technology
  • Health + Self

    Partner with IFTF

  • IFTF Vantage
  • IFTF Foresight Essentials
  • Research Labs
  • Partners
  • Jobs
  • Donate
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

    Future Now

    Donate