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  • Living reference work
  • © 2020

Health Care Systems and Policies

  • First of its kind summation of the entire field of health services research Brings together current thinking from the many diverse disciplines and approaches which study how best to deliver health care: economics, public policy, government, healthcare administration, medicine, public health, epidemiology, statistics, information technology Authors, editors, and advisory board
  • are well known international leaders in the field of health services research

Part of the book series: Health Services Research (HEALTHSR)

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Table of contents (14 entries)

  1. Assessing Health Systems

    • Irene Papanicolas, Peter C. Smith
  2. Health System in Canada

    • Gregory Marchildon
  3. Health System in China

    • David Hipgrave, Yan Mu
  4. Health System in Egypt

    • Christian A. Gericke, Kaylee Britain, Mahmoud Elmahdawy, Gihan Elsisi
  5. Health System in France

    • Karine Chevreul, Karen Berg Brigham
  6. Health System in Japan

    • Ryozo Matsuda
  7. Health System in Mexico

    • Julio Frenk, Octavio Gómez-Dantés
  8. Health System in Singapore

    • William A. Haseltine, Chang Liu
  9. Health System in The Netherlands

    • Madelon Kroneman, Willemijn Schäfer
  10. Health System in the US

    • Andrew J. Barnes, Lynn Y. Unruh, Pauline Rosenau, Thomas Rice
  11. Provision of Health Services: Mental Health Care

    • Jon Cylus, Marya Saidi, Martin Knapp

About this book

The Handbook of Health Services Research is a reference for all aspects of the field of health services and outcomes research. It addresses the increasing need for comprehensive, yet balanced, information in a field that welcomes various disciplines: medicine, public health, statistics, economics, management, policy, and information technology. This well-organized reference is an indispensable source of information for everyone who seeks to develop understanding of health systems and to learn about historical, political, and socioeconomic factors that influence health policies at the global, national, regional and local level. Specifically, the Handbook helps readers: Recognize core concepts of health services and outcomes research, such as, need, access, equity, quality and safety; Become familiar with social, political, organizational, behavioral and economic theories that have influenced health systems designs; Learn about frameworks developed for evaluating the organization, financing, delivery, utilization and outcomes of health services; Get an introduction to methods of comparative effectiveness research, program evaluation, health technology assessment and health economics; Identify types and sources of data appropriate for generating valid and reliable information about the delivery of health services; Learn about strengths and weaknesses of various research designs used to study health services and policy issues. The online version of the Handbook of Health Services Research is in the format of a dynamically updated knowledge base, offering search tools, cross-referencing across chapters and linking to supplement data, other major reference works and external articles. The Handbook of Health Services Research is accessible at the level of graduate students even if it is not their focus area. This includes students with various backgrounds: medicine, public health, statistics, economics, management or information technology.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Berlin University of Technology, WHO Collaborating Ctr for Health Systems Berlin University of Technology, Berlin, Germany

    Ewout van Ginneken

  • Technische Universität Berlin, WHO Collaborating Ctr for Health Systems Technische Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany

    Reinhard Busse

About the editors

Professor Boris Sobolev is a Senior Scientist at the Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Evaluation and a faculty member at the UBC School of Public and Population Health. Since 2003, Prof. Sobolev is a Canada Research Chair in Statistics and Modeling for Health Care. In 2004/05 Boris was a Peter Wall Early Career Scholar and currently he is a Faculty Associate at the UBC Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies serving on its Adjudication Committee.

Bibliographic Information