I. Ten Principles: How Our Health Care System Works
II. A Pro-Patient, Pro-Doctor, Pro-Free Enterprise Agenda for Reform
Controlling Health Care Costs With Medical Savings Accounts
Insuring the Uninsured Through Tax Subsidies
Insuring the Uninsurable Through Risk Pools
Achieving Universal Coverage Without Mandates
Creating Personal and Portable Health Insurance
Creating a Workable Market for Health Insurance
III. National Health Care Reform Brief Analyses:
Competing Visions
Patient Power vs. Bureaucracy Power
Managed Competition
Is the Federal Employee Program a Model for Reform?
Is Hawaii's Health Care System a Model for Reform?
Price Controls and Global Budgets in Canada
Insurance Reform
What's Wrong With Community Rating?
Risk Pools: A Better Solution for Preexisting Conditions
Universal Coverage
Why Universal Coverage Through Mandates Is Impossible
How to Achieve Universal Coverage Without Mandates
Is Universal Coverage Necessary to Control Costs?
Are the Uninsured Freeloaders?
Medical Savings Accounts
MSAs in the Private Sector
Answering the Critics, Part I
Answering the Critics, Part II
Other Issues
Why Employer Mandates Hurt Workers
Do Higher Cigarette Taxes Make Sense?
IV. Definitions of Key Terms
V.Other NCPA Publications on Health Policy
VI. About the NCPA
VII. Acknowledgments