ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø

Faculty Director

Amitabh Chandra Photo

Amitabh Chandra

Appointment
Ethel Zimmerman Wiener Professor of Public Policy, ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø; Henry and Allison McCance Professor of Business Administration, HBS
617-496-7356

Discovering solutions and providing leadership for unprecedented problems in healthcare is the mission of the ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø Healthcare Policy Program.

 

Prof. Chandra's research focuses on productivity and cost-growth in health care, medical malpractice, and racial disparities in health care.

 

Prof. Chandra's research in the news.

See what's being offered at ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø this semester.

About the ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø Healthcare Policy Program

The program has three aims:

  1. Research, on access, innovation, and value in healthcare;
  2. Establishing conversations between researchers, government, and industry; and
  3. Preparing future generations of leaders through educational programs.

A combination of factors - from the growing number of elderly Americans, expanding government spending on healthcare, increasing market power, and a new wave of innovations - portends that healthcare could become the defining issue for the United States. Innovation in immunotherapy for cancer, gene therapy, and Alzheimer's breakthroughs offer hope for millions. Access to innovations and providers has been shown to improve outcomes and reduce financial uncertainty. But the nation's ability to ensure access for the poor, the sick, and the elderly will be compromised if we do not devise the appropriate regulatory and reimbursement policies to grapple with this challenge. Indeed, the long-term fiscal health of the United States depends on our ability to find the balance between paying for innovation in healthcare with continued access to these innovations.

Innovation in new medicines and devices depends on regulation and pricing, while access depends on the generosity of public programs, tax policy, and the cost of delivering care. More generous access is valuable and creates incentives for even greater innovation. But this poses a challenge for public payers who now constitute the largest payers. Sustainable answers to this dilemma require balancing innovation and access with solutions that emphasize competition, value-based pricing, improvements in the productivity of the delivery system, premium-support in Medicare, tax-reform, and redesigning plans to offer value-based insurance. Learn more.

The Harvard Kennedy School is uniquely positioned to be the home of this multi-disciplinary undertaking. It is ranked as the #1 health policy program in the nation. The program’s faculty affiliates and alumni are immersed in actual policy design and not simply the study of it; they have led the Food and Drug Administration, Congressional Budget Office, Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, and served in the White House. The student interest group on health policy at the Kennedy School is now the largest student group at the School and demonstrates the extent to which future leaders and generations care about health policy. Finally, Harvard is in Boston, which is an unparalleled location to study US healthcare and the opportunities and challenges that it presents for the future. Boston has emerged as a center of innovation for biotechnology and devices, as well as for hospital care and public policy in healthcare. Massachusetts insured the uninsured before the rest of the nation in 2006; it experimented with alternative payment systems for physicians; it is where novel treatments for disease are discovered; and it is the largest training location for physicians in the world.

The Program is directed by Professor Amitabh Chandra, Ethel Zimmerman Wiener Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and Henry and Allison McCance  Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. The program is anchored by faculty and clinical affiliates from Harvard Kennedy School, Medical School, School of Public Health, Business School, the Department of Economics, as well as the Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital.

The  ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø Healthcare Policy Program is sustained through the numerous organizations and individuals who invest in the Program. These include support from: