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Home | Education | Medical Education | BPJ400
Business, Professionalism & Justice (BPJ400)
Course Directors: Mark Kuczewski, PhD & Patricia Cassidy, MBA


This is a required course. Credit: 1.0
 

Dates & Times: July 2 - 3, 2007, 8:00am
 

Rooms: All lectures are in Tobin Hall (SSOM 190).  Small group room assignments are attached with the course schedule and will be distributed on Monday.
 

Registration Information: You will be automatically registered for the course as there is only one offering and each student must take it.

 

Course Description: This innovative course is the capstone of the Bioethics & Professionalism Curriculum at SSOM. The course provides an overview of the U.S. health-care system and then considers a variety of macro and microeconomic pressures on health-care providers and institutions. The goal of the course is for students to analyze the choices that patients, providers, and policy makers must make and the justice implications of those choices. The responsibility of the medical profession to advocate for systemic remedies to inequities in the financing and delivery of care is the guiding ideal that guides inquiry throughout the course. The unique feature of the course is that faculty are drawn from high-level LUHS/SSOM administrators and clinicians. This combination of executive and clinical expertise provides frontline perspectives on ethical and policy problems.

 

2007 Topics/Schedule:
July 2- Health Care in the United States: Running a Practice and a Health System
July 3- The Uninsured and the Underserved
 

Course requirements and grading: The course has two components, i.e., class attendance & participation and online post-test. You will receive a score for each item.

 

Attendance at each class: 25 points for each of the two dates (total of 50 pts)
 

Online Post-test: (50 points (maximum)
Total: 100 points

Failure to complete any element results in the forfeiture of those points.  No absences from class are excused; points from missed classes are simply forgone.

 

Grade Scale: Grading is tallied on a straight scale. Results are not curved.
Honors: 85 – 100 points
High Pass: 60 – 85 points
Pass: 40 – 59 points


Click here for detailed daily schedule of lectures and small groups

 

View the following presentation before day 1 (July 2nd).  Overview of the U.S. Health Care System video is linked in four parts as a video stream and video podcast download and the power point (with no audio) is linked as a compressed Java run file.
 

Video and audio will play on your iTunes menu template. You can view on your computer or "take it with you" on your iPod or MP3 player. Go to apple.com for a free download of iTunes. Click here for additional information on downloading podcasts.

 

Overview of the U.S. Health Care System, G. Petruzzelli, MD, MBA

 

Presentation Power Points (compressed java files for viewing):

 

 

Day 1 required readings (Monday, July 2, 2007): 

  • Familiarize yourself with the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation by going here: http://www.idfpr.com/dpr/WHO/med.asp

  • Ian Urbina, "In the Treatment of Diabetes, Success Often Does Not Pay," NY Times, January 11, 2006.

 

 

Day 2 required readings (Tuesday, July 3, 2007):

  • Uwe E. Reinhardt, Peter S. Hussey and Gerard F. Anderson, U.S. Health Care Spending In An International Context, Health Affairs, 23 (3): 10-25, 2004.

  • Jonathan Oberlander, “The Politics of Health Reform: Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good Plans?” Health Affairs Web Exclusive
    http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/reprint/hlthaff.w3.391v1.pdf

  • Overview and Executive Summary of S. R. Collins, K. Davis, M. M. Doty, J. L. Kriss, and A. L. Holmgren, Gaps in Health Insurance: An All-American Problem, The Commonwealth Fund, April 2006 http://www.cmwf.org/publications/publications_show.htm?doc_id=367876

  • Peter A. Clark, "Prejudice and the Medical Profession: Racism, Sometimes Overt, Sometimes Subtle, Continues to Plague U.S. Health Care," Health Progress, 84(5): September-October, 2003 http://www.chausa.org/Pub/MainNav/News/HP/Archive/2003/09SeptOct/articles/HP0309f.htm

  • Expanding Insurance Coverage Through Tax Credits, Consumer Choice, and Market Enhancements: AMA proposal for health insurance reform. 
    http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/291/18/2237

 

 

Suggested Further Reading (not required):

  • David U. Himmelstein, Elizabeth Warren, Deborah Thorne, and Steffie Woolhandler, "Illness and Injury as Contributors to Bankruptcy," Health Affairs (web exclusive) February 2005, W5 – 63 to W5 – 73. http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/hlthaff.w5.63/DC1

  • Richard Birrer, “Becoming a Physician Executive: To Be Effective Leaders, Clinicians Must First Adopt a New Mind-Set, Health Progress, January-February, 2003
    http://www.chausa.org/Pub/MainNav/News/HP/Archive/2003/01JanFeb/articles/hp0301l.htm

  • Institute of Medicine (IOM) Report, 2002-3, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, (Brian D. Smedley, Adrienne Y. Stith, and Alan R. Nelson, Editors, Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care), Free executive summary available at
    http://books.nap.edu/execsumm_pdf/10260.pdf

  • What Americans Say about the Nation's Medical Schools and Teaching Hospitals-Key Findings AAMC 2004

  • Public and Congressional Staff Opinion Research Project. November 2004.  Click here

 


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