CAROLYN CLANCY, MD: Consumers have a very important role. A very famous health care researcher once said that the most underused resource in health care is the American consumer.
REED TUCKSON, MD: But, at the end of the day, you are sitting at your kitchen table on Sunday night and you've got to make a choice. I need to have a shoulder surgery done. Where do I go to get that care? How much money is it going to cost me and my family and how do I plan for the economics of that? And what control do I have over that expenditure? And so I'm going to look at the quality of care that's delivered, I'm going to look at the rates of complications, I'm going to look at the negotiated rate for in-network or out-of-network benefits. I'm going to look at a variety of things and, ultimately, as a health care consumer, I'm going to demand the same level of information and certainty -- of predictive certainty -- as I am expecting when I go to the store to buy a refrigerator or a stove.
ANNOUNCER: Experts agree Americans face many challenges in improving the quality and value of their health care. There are many solutions, and these include: expanding the use of electronic records, making available information about how well doctors and other health care providers deliver care, and changing how insurance companies, employers, and individuals pay for care.