Media Reviews
The American Health Care Paradox has enough intellectual heft to bring an opera house to its feet. Drawing on data from dozens of international and domestic site visits, wide-ranging scholarly studies and in-depth interviews with patients, practitioners, health care administrators and social service staff from all over the world, the authors tackle the unenviable task of explaining why we think of health care the way we do--to the near total exclusion of social services. And they manage to do it with astonishing clarity, conciseness and narrative ease. --Pauline Chen, the New York Times An important attempt to shift the discussion on health in the United States --Kirkus Their argument has intuitive appeal...[and] is made more attractive by their clear prose and by their many helpful descriptions and historical explanations of US health care policy. --Arnold Relman, New York Review of Books Admirably presented as an apolitical examination of an urgent situation, Bradley and Taylor's carefully researched and lucidly reported findings...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 If we're so rich, why aren't we healthier? I'd wondered about that for years, always assuming it was a medical question with a medical answer. I now know the answer lies not in what happens in our hospitals but what happens (or fails to happen) in our social services. This compelling, groundbreaking, and utterly persuasive book has opened my eyes. --Anne Fadiman, author of The Spirit Catches You And You Fall Down This book provides new insight on why it is the United States' is spending so much on medicine without seeing commensurate health outcomes. Bradley and Taylor provide a clear account of life in the chasm between health and social services, where so much of our health care investment is lost, and put forth concrete ideas on how we can do better. --Dr. Paul Farmer, MD, PhD, Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Partners In Health, and author of To Repair the World and Haiti After the Earthquake Bradley and Taylor have identified social services as the unnamed culprit behind high health care costs and poor outcomes. Highlighting the non-medical determinants of patients' health may not only make physicians' jobs easier but also prove to be a prudent strategy for payers. This book offers an important reality check about what actually creates health in the United States. --William Gillespie, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Emblem Health, and president of AdvantageCare Physicians It seems like there are daily stories of skyrocketing medical costs here in the US coupled with our bad health outcomes compared with other developed countries. This book argues compellingly that we may have been looking for solutions in the wrong places. We won't find the answers by changing medical payments or improving quality of care as important, as those are. But rather that health begins, is nurtured, protected and preserved in our families and neighborhoods--where people live, learn, work and play. The authors find that supporting families and children in ways that make their houses, neighborhoods and schools secure and enjoyable pays off in health in concrete and measurable ways. It is time we started to get serious about building a culture of health and making it easier for people to live that kind of life than merely paying the costs to repair the damages from injury and disease. --James S. Marks, MD, MPH, president and director of Health Group at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation The challenge of addressing social as well as health needs is daunting. One could become paralyzed by the complexity inherent in the relationships among health, social services, and health outcomes, and...consider strategic action all but impossible. The book provides a counterweight to such pessimism. The authors examine four case studies of successful home grown innovations that provide evidence that it is, in fact, feasible to integrate social and medical services. -- Health Affairs These authors offer us a comprehensive view of our healthcare system. I enthusiastically recommend this book for all nurses. --American Holistic Nurses Association The U.S. has worse health outcomes than other wealthy countries not only because of a deeply flawed insurance system, but also because it spends less than other countries on the fundamentals of life that affect people's health, including education, housing, good jobs, nutrition, and environmental protection. --World Wide Work bulletin