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Reorganizing the Military Health System : Should There be a Joint Command?

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Since the end of World War II, the question of whether to create a unified military health system has arisen repeatedly.

Despite a variety of answers to this question, the system has largely retained its traditional structure, with separate Army, Navy, and Air Force medical departments.

Now that a new managed-care program-called TRICARE-is operational, the military health system organization is once again in the spotlight.

This book documents research on the organization of the military health system.

It considers five alternative organizational structures for their likely impact on peacetime health care and wartime readiness.

It also examines organizational models in the civilian managed-care sector that might be applied to TRICARE.

The authors recommend modification of the current system organization to unify health-plan management in TRICARE and separate it from military treatment facility management.

The authors also find that there is insufficient evidence to predict the necessity or effectiveness of establishing a joint command to direct the restructured TRICARE organization and other military medical activities. The outcome of a regional test, now underway, can better inform this decision.

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Product Details
RAND
0833030132 / 9780833030139
Paperback
01/07/2001
United States
English
113 pages, Illustrations
152 x 229 mm
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More