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Medical Economics
 



 

Editor-in-Chief

Dr. Zuhair Abu Faris, MD, Ph.D


The concept of medical economics - economics of health and sickness – has been established in the past few years as an integrated pillar of the administrative plan of every successful health-providing establishment that aims at coping with the scientific and technological progress in various diagnostic and therapeutic fields.

Adopting the concept of medical economics will enable medical centers and clinics to provide comprehensive and up-to-date medical service as well as surviving a world full of fierce competition.

The medical and technological revolution that the 20th century witnessed, the wide acceptance and spread of cloning and stemcell transplantation, and the introduction and applications of gene therapy and genetic engineering have all positively impacted the nature of the medical practice to improve the patient’s quality of life by preventing and treating diseases once thought to be incurable.

The blessing of medical revolution is not without a price! In fact, the cost of medicines
and medical instruments is escalating day by day; needless to say that the cost of diagnostic tests, therapeutics and rehabilitation is also on the rise.

Containing medical costs and making them affordable to the community within limited health budgets requires serious economic and financial plans that follow contemporary
well-designed scientific schemes that are able to achieve continuous development and material results.

The issue open for discussion is how to balance offering the necessary medical services
that are affordable to the patient or the third party payors.
This issue is surfacing nowadays all over the world especially with the spread of globalization, privatization, and the gradual withdrawal
of the states from providing services to their citizens. Even the richest countries are feeling the heat of the health budget.

We recognize that the solution to the issue of cost-containment is not an easy one. However, finding a solution should start with a scientific dialogue that involves the
participation of all parties related to providing health care such as governments,
physicians, hospitals and insurance companies.

Such dialogue aims at finding appropriate health strategies specific to the country’s need especially in the developing countries and the Arab world to mobilize resources, prevent and limit medical service duplication and misuse, and to build an integrated cooperative system of all medical sectors.

In conclusion, medical service is eventually a “cost” and economics deals with pure numbers rather than emotions. Modern medical
establishments should follow economic laws in the involved countries and should abide by them accordingly.