Event: The Emergent Logic of Health Reform
December 15, 2008
University of Minnesota
Deinard Memorial Lecture on Law & Medicine
The Emergent Logic of Health Reform
Prof. M. Gregg Bloche, JD, MD
Georgetown University
Thursday, January 29, 2009
11:30 am-1:00 pm
Theater, Coffman Memorial Union, University of Minnesota
In his lecture, Dr Bloche will argue that the American health care system is on a path to ruin. Â Health spending has become exorbitant and the number os uninsured Americans is approaching 50 million. Â Can law help to divert our country from this path? Â There are reasons for deep skepticism. Â Law governs the provision and financing of medical care in a fragmented and incoherent fashion. Â Commentators bemoan this chaos. Â Prof. Bloche will argue that pessimism about health law’s prospects is unjustified. Â The law of health care provision is best understood as an emergent system. Â Its contradictions and dysfunctions are not the fault of some failed master designer. Â By quitting the quest for a single, master design, we can better focus our efforts on emergent possibilities for legal and policy change. Â Prof. Bloche will suggest emergent approaches to the most urgent challenges in health care policy and law – the crises of access, value, and cost.
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