Abstract

Now that we as a nation have put the impeachment spectacle behind us, we have the opportunity to address issues that will truly affect our well-being during the early decades of the next century. The future of our health care system is certainly one of these issues. It has been five years since Congress considered and rejected the Clinton proposal for health care reform. Despite the enormous changes that have occurred during this brief period, we seem to be wrestling with many of the same health policy demons that occupied us in 1994 and, indeed, for 30 years before that: . . .

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