赞题库-背景图
单项选择题

The health-care economy is filled with unusual and even unique economic relationships. One of the least understood involves the peculiar roles of producer or "provider" and purchaser or "consumer" in the typical doctor-patient relationship. In most areas of the economy, it is the seller who attempts to attract a potential buyer with various inducements (引诱物) of price, quality, and utility, and it is the buyer who makes the decision. Such condition, however, does not exist in most of the health-care industry.
In the health-care industry, the doctor-patient relationship is the mirror image of the ordinary relationship between producer and consumer. Once an individual has chosen to see a physician—and even then there may be no real choice—it is the physician who usually makes all significant purchasing decisions: whether the patient should return "next Wednesday", whether X-rays are needed, whether drugs should be prescribed, etc. It is a rare and sophisticated patient who will challenge such professional decisions or raise in advance questions about price, especially when the disease is regarded as serious.
This is particularly significant in relation to hospital care. The physician must certify (证明) the need for hospitalization, determine what procedures will be performed, and announce when the patient may be discharged. The patient may be consulted about some of these decisions, but in the main it is the doctor"s judgments that are final. No wonder that in the eye of the hospital it is the physician who is the real "consumer." As a consequence, the medical staff represents the "power center" in hospital policy and decision-making, not the administration.
Although usually there are in this situation four identifiable (可以确认的) participants—the hospital, the physician, the patient, and the payer (generally an insurance carrier or government)—the physician makes the essential for all of them, The hospital becomes an extension of the physician; the payer generally meets most of the bills generated by the physician/hospital, and for the most part the patient plays a passive role. We estimate that about 75-80 percent of health-care expenditures are determined by physicians, not patients. For this reason, economy directed at patients or the general is relatively ineffective. In what respect is the health-care economy different from other areas of economy

A.It is the doctor who makes important buying decisions in health-care economy.
B.Patients have no rights to choose what they need to buy in health-care economy.
C.Most of the bills generated by patients are paid by insurance carriers in health-care economy.
D.Patients are usually induced by the quality and well-known doctors of a hospital.