Case Study Analysis: Obamacare and Insurance Rating Rules
To complete this assignment review the following resources Web resource:
Haislmaier, E. (2011, January 20). Obamacare and insurance rating rules: Increasing costs and destabilizing markets. The Heritage Foundation.Retrieved fromhttp://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2011/01/obamacare-and-insurance-rating-rules-increasing-costs-and-destabilizing-markets
Complete a detailed case study analysis of the given case, using
the process described in Appendix A of your textbook Strategic
Management of Health Care Organizations.
Your completed Case Study Analysis Report will include the following sections:
- Executive summary
- Body of the case report
- Key issues
- Situational analysis
- Strategy formulation
- Recommendation
- Implementation strategies
- Benchmarks for success and contingency plans
Where not all pertinent information is given in the case itself, search for that information through the South University online library, or perform a Web search for the required information.Note: Do not search for information beyond the date of the case.
For the Situational Analysis you are encouraged to provide visual presentation of data in your situational analysis and use the analysis tools from your textbook and other analysis tools you have used in your program, such as trend analysis, stakeholder analysis, etc.
Present your Case Study Analysis report in a Word document, formatted in the headings and sub-headings given above.
Submit your report in two steps: First, a preliminary report with the key issues, situational analysis, and strategy formulation. Then the complete report with recommendation, implementation strategies, benchmarks, and the executive summary.
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Key Issues: Key issues are complete and clearly explained. |
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External environment analysis includes detailed service area competitive analysis. |
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Internal environment analysis includes strengths and weaknesses with respect to resources, competencies, an capabilities. The SWOT analysis must include all 4 elements Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats |
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Directional strategies are defined. |
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APPENDIX A ofStrategic
Management of Health Care Organizations.
Analyzing Strategic Health Care Cases
How do students of management gain experience in
strategic thinking and making strategic decisions in health care organizations?
One way is to work their way up the organization, holding a variety of
positions, experimenting as they develop their decision-making skills, and
observing other leaders as they deal with issues and develop strategies. Then,
when the opportunity presents itself, they combine what they have learned from
others and their own management philosophy, and do the best they can.
Unfortunately, learning by experimenting and observing others may be risky in
rapidly changing environments and in the often unique situations that health
care managers and leaders face.
Hospitals, HMOs, long-term care facilities,
public health organizations, and other health services prefer to trust important
decision making to experienced managers and leaders. Case studies have been
successfully used as a surrogate method to provide aspiring managers and
leaders with experience in strategic thinking, strategic planning, and making
decisions without undue risk. The best case studies, such as those in this
text, contain real situations actually faced by managers and leaders in health
care organizations and are documented in a way that makes them useful in
providing experience for future strategic decision makers. Because many future
health care decision makers are not familiar with how to analyze cases, this
appendix has been included, not to prescribe how cases should always be solved,
but to offer some initial direction on how to surface and address the real
issues presented in the cases.
An Overview of Case Analysis
Case analysis provides the student of health
care an exciting opportunity to act in the role of a key decision maker. From
hospitals to community blood centers to physicians' offices, students have the
chance to learn about a variety of health and medical organizations and to
practice decision-making skills through analyzing cases.
The decisions required to “solve” cases
represent a wide range of complexity, so that no two cases are addressed in
exactly the same manner. However, the strategic thinking maps presented in this
text provide frameworks to aid in strategically thinking about case issues. The
fundamental task of the case analyst is to make decisions that will serve as a
map to guide the organization into the future. Therefore, most case instructors
will expect a comprehensive plan for the organization that addresses relevant
current issues and provides a viable and reasonably complete strategy for the
future. In order to achieve this goal, the case analyst typically should:
•surface and summarize the key issues,
•analyze the situation,
•develop an organizational strategy,
•develop an implementation plan, and
•set some benchmarks to measure success.
These
categories represent the major elements of strategy development and make
appropriate section headings for a case analysis written report or
presentation. First, using the strategic thinking map presented in Chapter 1
(Exhibit 1–1), it is important to do some serious strategic thinking about the
external environment of the organization–the political/legal, economic,
social/cultural, technological, and competitive situations faced by the case
characters. After gaining knowledge of the issues in the general and industry
environments, the service area competitors should be assessed. Next, it is
important to relate the resources, competencies, and capabilities of the
organization to the external environment, which will require a thorough and
objective analysis of the competitively relevant strengths and weaknesses. The
value chain provides a useful tool for uncovering these strengths and
weaknesses. These strengths and weakness must be evaluated as to their
potential to create competitive advantages or disadvantages for the
organization. External issues and the organization's competitive advantages and
disadvantages provide the basis for strategy formulation. In addition, to
create the strategy for a health care organization it is necessary to
understand its unique mission, vision, values, and strategic goals (directional
strategies).
Once the situational analysis is complete,
strategic alternatives can be generated as possible solutions to the issues
identified in the case. Consideration must be given to the possible adaptive
strategies, market entry strategies, and competitive strategies that provide
the means for achieving the organization's mission and goals and lead to the
accomplishment of its vision. The effectiveness of the
chosen alternative for each type of strategy
must be evaluated. In addition, at least some thought must be given to the
likely outcomes resulting from the different choices. After the evaluation, a
recommendation needs to be made from among the alternatives.
Nothing will happen, of course, unless the
strategy can be implemented. Therefore, the case analyst must address how the
strategy will be carried out. The development of a feasible implementation plan
should include specific service delivery and support strategies and, where
possible, action plans. These areas are important because they create value for
the organization and translate strategy into organizational and individual
actions–the work to be done.
Finally, the case analyst should consider how
the success of the proposed strategy should be measured. Returning to the
mission, vision, values, and goals will provide an initial measure of success.
Other measures will include fit with the changing environment, internal changes
(development of competitive advantages and lessening of competitive
disadvantages), and other more specific measures such as financial measures,
market share, growth, and so on.
Although the approach outlined here is logical,
it is important to remember that a case should be approached and appreciated as
a unique opportunity for problem solving. Cases that everyone agrees have only
one solution are not good decision-making aids. Moreover, managers in health
care organizations rarely face problems where the solution is obvious to
everyone. This does not mean that there are no good and bad answers or
solutions in case analysis; some are better than others on the basis of the
logic presented. Sometimes the issues presented in a case are not even problems
(defined as a negative occurrence that needs to be addressed). Often the
greatest challenge facing an organization is recognizing and acting on an
opportunity rather than solving a problem. The evaluation of a case analysis is
often based more on the approach and logic employed than the precise
recommendation offered.
Cases,
Strategic Management, and Health Care Organizations
Cases add realism that is impossible to achieve
in traditional lecture classes. Realism results from the essential nature of
cases, although students may complain that cases fail to provide all the
information necessary for decision making. The complaint is valid because cases
rarely provide everything that is needed. However, decision makers in health
care organizations rarely have all the information they want or need when they
face decisions. Risks must be taken in case analysis just as in actual decision
making.
Risk Taking in Case Analysis
Any decision about the future involves
uncertainty. Decision making under conditions of uncertainty requires that
means be devised for dealing with the risks faced by leaders. Cases are
valuable aids in this area because they allow the analysts to practice making
decisions in low-risk environments. Decisions in a poor caseanalysis may be embarrassing, but at
least they will not result in the closure of a hospital or medical practice. At
the same time, the lessons learned by solving cases and participating in
discussions will begin to build problem-solving skills.
Solving Case Problems
Solving a case is much like solving any problem.
First, information is gathered and issues are defined; the competitive
situation is analyzed; alternatives are generated, evaluated, selected, and
implemented. Although the person solving the case seldom has the chance to
implement a decision, he or she should always keep in mind that recommendations
must be tempered by the limitations imposed on the organization in terms of its
resources, competencies, and capabilities (although strategies to improve these
areas may be required). As the success or failure of the recommendation is
analyzed, lessons are learned that can be applied to future decision making.
Alternative Perspectives: Passion or Objectivity
Different hypothetical roles can be assumed when
analyzing cases. Some prefer to think of themselves as the chief executive
officer or leader to impose a perspective on the problems presented in the
case, providing the case analyst with the liberty to become a passionate
advocate for a particular course of action. Others prefer to observe the case
from the detached objectivity of a consultant who has been employed by the
organization to solve a problem.
Either the leader or the consultant perspective
may be assumed, but the first offers some unique advantages. To answer the
questions from the leader's perspective, it is important to get inside the
decision maker's head–to feel the excitement and fear of doing new and
innovative things in the dynamic and complex health care environment. However,
the passion and frustration of the leader suggest why some case analysts prefer
to assume the objective posture of a consultant. Not being in the front line
can sometimes suggest alternatives that cannot be seen by those directly
involved in making the payroll and paying the bills. The consultant can more
easily play the devil's advocate and point out how actions are at odds with
current theory. Although the fun and excitement of case analysis is enhanced by
assuming the decision maker's role, the options might be expanded through a
more objective and detached outlook of an outsider. There are no absolutely
correct or incorrect answers to complex cases. The most important lesson is to
learn problem-solving and strategic management skills.
Reading the
Case
Effective case analysis begins with data
collection. This means carefully reading the case, rereading it, and sometimes
reading it yet again. Rarely can anyone absorb enough information from the
initial reading of a comprehensive case to adequately
solve it. From the very first reading of the case, the analyst should start to
list the external issues and the organization's internal strengths and
weaknesses. For example, when a significant issue is discovered it should be
marked for more detailed examination. “Is the issue financial? Do the primary
issues appear to be those of human resources, capital investment, or marketing?”
Perhaps there are few, if any, apparent issues with negative consequences. The
strategic issue facing the organization may be one to be exploited or it may
have both positive and negative aspects. For example, managed care has created
some interesting positive and negative consequences for many health care
organizations.
Listing the possible strengths and weakness in
the initial reading provides some perspective concerning the organization's
resources, competencies, and capabilities. This list will provide a basis for
further investigation and provide a guide for additional information gathering.
Once the situation has been reviewed, a better evaluation of the issues facing
the organization can be made. An effective way of summarizing the results is
through the use of an internal/external strategy matrix (refer to Exhibit 7–1
on page 249) showing the long- and short-term competitive advantages and
disadvantages as well as external issues.
Gathering Information
The information required to successfully analyze
a case comes in two forms. The first type of information is given as part of
the case and customarily includes history of the hospital, long-term care
facility, or home-health care agency; its organizational structure; its
management; and its financial condition. Gathering this information is
relatively easy because the author of the case has typically done the work.
A second type of information is “obtainable.”
This information is not provided in the case or by the instructor but is
available from secondary sources in the library, familiar magazines and related
publications, or through an Internet site. Obtainable secondary information
helps with understanding the nature of the service category, the competition,
and even some managers, past and present, who have made an impact on the
service category.
If the case does not include service category
information or competitor information, the instructor may expect the class to
do some detective work before proceeding. Students should investigate to find
out what is happening in the service category and learn enough about trends to
position the problems discussed in the case in a broader health care context.
The culture of the organization or the style of the chief executive officer may
constitute relevant information. Some instructors do not want students to
investigate beyond the date of the case or to gather additional service
category data. Therefore, students must ask the instructor's preference.
Case Analysis
Using the Strategic Thinking Maps
The strategic thinking maps presented in this
text provide a means of thinking through strategic management issues and serve
as road maps to case analysis. They are useful for analyzing cases and
succinctly presenting strategic managementdecisions
in written reports and presentations. The following discussion provides some
tips for using the strategic thinking maps in each of the major elements of
case analysis–surfacing the issues, situational analysis, development of the
strategy, and development of the implementation plan.
Tips on Surfacing the Issues
The discussion and questions presented in the
“Managing Strategic Momentum” section of each chapter are designed to surface
present and potential issues. In case analysis, issues include not only
problems but also situations where things may be working well but improvements
are possible. The problem may actually be an opportunity that can be
capitalized on by the organization if it acts consciously and decisively. With
careful analysis, patterns can be detected and discrepancies between what
actually is and what ought to be become more apparent. In other words,
fundamental issues, not mere symptoms, begin to emerge.
Problems vs. Symptoms
It is important to realize that the things
observed in an organization and reported in a case may not be the real or
essential issues. Often what analysts observe are the symptoms of more serious
core problems. For example, increasing interest rates and cash-flow
discrepancies appear to be problems in many case analyses. In reality, the
issue is the fundamental absence of adequate financial planning. The lack of
planning is simply manifested as a cash-flow problem, and rising interest rates
certainly complicate cash flow.
Frequently, hospitals conclude that they have
operational problems in the area of marketing when bed occupancy rates decline.
Someone may suggest that the marketing department is not doing a good job of
convincing physicians to use the hospital. Sometimes people will complain that
the hospital is not spending enough on advertising. The real issue, however,
might be fundamental changes in the demographics of the market area or an
outdated services mix that no amount of advertising will overcome. In
organizations as complex as health care, problems may have more than a single
cause, so the analyst must not be overly confident when a single, simple reason
is isolated. In fact, the suggestion of a simple solution should increase
rather than decrease skepticism.
Using Tools
Identifying key issues requires that information
be carefully examined and analyzed. Often, quantitative tools are helpful.
Financial ratio analysis of the exhibits included in the case will sometimes be
helpful in the identification of the real problems. In arriving at the final
determination of core problems, the analyst should try not to slip into
“paralysis by analysis” and waste more time than is necessary on identifying
problems. At the same time, premature judgments must be avoided because then
real issues may be missed. One general guideline isthat when research and analysis cease
to generate surprises, the analyst can feel relatively, though not absolutely,
sure that adequate research has been conducted and the key issues have been
identified.
Check Facts
The issue discovery process should not become
myopic. There may be a tendency on the part of individuals interested and
experienced in accounting and finance to see all problems in terms of
accounting and finance. A physician approaching the same case will likely focus
on the medical implications. This approach is too limited a view for effective
strategic decision makers. Strategic analysis effectively transcends a single
function. Insistence on approaching case analysis exclusively from the
viewpoint of the analyst's expertise and training is not likely to produce an
accurate overall picture of the situation facing the organization; nor is this
approach likely to improve the organization's performance.
Information, either given or obtained, must
never be accepted at face value. If a CEO states that the hospital delivers
outstanding quality care, it should not be accepted as a statement of fact
without some thought. For example, a character in the case may voice an opinion
that is not grounded in fact. The ratios on a long-term care facility's
financial statements may look strange, but are they? Before jumping to such a
conclusion, analysts should look at the financial ratios in a historical
perspective. Even better, they should look at the history (as well as similar
ratios) of other long-term care facilities of the same size during the same
time period.
Relevant Issues
Once the issues are identified, they must be
precisely stated and their selection defended. The best defense for the
selection of the key issues is the data set used to guide the issue discovery
process. The reasons for selection of the issues should be briefly and
specifically summarized along with the supportive information on which
judgments have been based. The issue statement stage is not the time for
solutions. Focusing on solutions at this point will reduce the impact of the
issue statement. If the role of consultant has been assumed, the issue
statement must be convincing, precise, and logical to the client organization,
or credibility will be reduced. If the role of the strategic decision maker has
been selected, the student must be equally convincing and precise. The
strategic decision maker should be as certain as possible that the correct
issues have been identified to pursue the appropriate alternatives.
The statement of the issues should relate only
to those areas of strategy and operations where actions have a chance of
producing results. The results may be either increasing gains or cutting
potential losses. Long- and short-range aspects of issues should be identified
and stated. In strategic analysis the emphasis is on long-range issues rather
than merely handling emergencies and holding things together. However, in some
situations, immediate problems have to be solved and then a strategy developed
to avoid similar situations in the future (combination strategy).
It is important for students to keep in mind
that most strategic decision makers can deal with only a limited number of
issues at a single time. Therefore, identify key result areas that will have
the greatest positive impact on organizational performance.
Tips on
Analyzing the Situation
Situational analysis is one of the most
important steps in analyzing a case. In most instances instructors will expect
comprehensive external and internal environmental analyses. For external
environmental analysis, the case analyst may want to use and present a variety
of tools including a trend analysis, stakeholder analysis, the development of a
scenario, and service area competitive analysis. Whatever method is used, a
clear picture and assessment of the external environment should be presented.
Chapters 2 and 3 provide strategic thinking maps for assessing the external
environment.
For the internal environment, it is important
that the case analyst understands the strengths and weaknesses of the
organization in terms of its resources, competencies, and capabilities.
Therefore, the case analyst may want to use the value chain, as discussed in
Chapter 4, to map resources, competencies, and capabilities and assess their
strategic relevance using the criteria of value, rareness, imitability, and
sustainability.
Understanding the mission is a good starting
point to assess the directional strategies. If a mission statement is included
in the case, the analyst should ask “Does it serve the purpose of communicating
to the public why the organization exists? Does it provide employees with a
genuine statement of what the organization is all about?” In addition, the
other directional strategies (vision, values, and strategic goals) should be
evaluated as to their appropriateness to the organization and its environment.
The vision and goals provide a profile of the future and targets to focus
organizational actions. Sometimes the case will indicate what the health care organization
plans to achieve in the next year and where it hopes to be in three years, or
even in five years. As with mission statements, if the vision and goals are not
explicitly stated, there is a need to speculate about them because they will be
the standards against which the success or failure of a particular strategy
will be evaluated. Moreover because strategic planning is futuristic and no one
can predict the future with complete accuracy, vision and goals should always
be adaptable to the changing conditions taking place in the organization and in
the service category. Sometimes an organization will have to face a major
strategic problem simply because it was unwilling to alter its vision and goals
in light of changing conditions.
Tips on Formulating the Strategy
After the situational analysis, a recommended
course of action–the strategy–must be developed. Thus, adaptive, market entry,
and competitive strategies for the
organization must be recommended and defended. Exhibit 6–4 (p. 201) provides a
strategic thinking map depicting the various alternatives for each of the types
of strategy in the strategy formulation process.
Effective Alternatives
If obtaining and organizing information have
been done well, the generation of strategic alternatives will be a challenging
yet attainable task. Good alternatives possess specific characteristics:
1. They should be
practical or no one will seriously consider them. Alternative courses of action
that are too theoretical or abstract to be understood by those who have to
accomplish them are not useful.
2. Alternatives should be specific.
3. Alternatives should be related to the key issue they are intended to
address. If the strategic alternatives generated do not directly address key
issues, the analyst should ask how important the issues are to the case
analysis; rethinking the issues may be required. Exhibit 6–1 (p. 199) is
helpful in demonstrating how the strategic alternatives relate to external and
internal issues.
4. Alternatives should be usable. A usable alternative is one that can be
reasonably accomplished within the constraints of the financial and human
resources available to the organization.
5. Alternatives should be ones that can be placed into action in a relatively
short period of time. If it takes too long to implement a proposed solution, it
is likely that the momentum of the recommended action will be lost.
Alternative Evaluation
Alternatives should be evaluated according to both quantitative and qualitative
criteria. Financial analysis provides one basis for examining the impact of
different courses of action. However, a good alternative course of action is
more than merely the one with the highest payoff. It may be that the culture of
the organization cannot accommodate some of the more financially promising
alternative courses of action. For the adaptive strategies, one or more of the
decision-making tools discussed in Chapter 7 should be used–External/Internal
Strategy matrix, PLC analysis, BCG portfolio analysis, extended portfolio
matrix analysis, SPACE analysis, or program evaluation. For the market entry
and competitive strategies, matching the external conditions appropriate for
the strategies with the internal requirements of the strategies as discussed in
the text with internal strengths and weaknesses and external conditions
described in the case provide a basis for selecting and defending these
strategies (Chapter 7).
The case analyst should be able to map the strategies selected in the strategy
formulation process. Strategy maps similar to the one presented in Exhibit 7–22
(p. 284) show the ends–means decision logic for each strategic initiative and
provide an excellent overview of the strategy of the organization.
Tips on Developing Implementation Strategies
Once a strategic alternative has been selected, an action plan is required.
Action planning moves the decision maker from the realm of strategy to
operations. Now the question becomes, “How does the group accomplish the work
in the most effective and efficient way possible?”
The task of case
analysis does not require that the analyst actually implements a decision;
however, because the strategies must be implementable, it is necessary that
thought be given to how each strategy would be put into action. Therefore,
value adding service delivery and support strategies must be developed as well
as action plans. This process is a continuation of the ends–means linkage
started in strategy formulation–the implementation strategies are the means to
achieve the overall organizational strategies.
Each element of the value chain should be addressed comparing the results of
the internal analysis with the requirements of the selected strategy. Matching
the present situation with the requirements of the strategy provides a basis to
maintain the value chain element or change it to meet the needs of the
strategy. Exhibits 8–9 (p. 322) and 9–6 (p. 358–9) provide examples of what
instructors might expect for presenting the value adding strategies.
Next, action plans for the major organizational units affected by the strategy
should be developed. Objectives, action plans, and budgets should be addressed
if enough detail is provided in the case. Finally, the responsibility for
accomplishing the different groups of tasks must be clearly assigned to the
appropriate individuals in the organization. Although this is not always
possible in case analysis, it is important that consideration be given to how,
in a real organization, the recommendations would be accomplished. If, in the
process of thinking about getting the different activities completed, it
becomes apparent that the organization lacks the resources or the structure to
accomplish a recommendation, another approach should be proposed.
The process of developing action plans for important organizational
units–whether a highly focused unit, such as a pharmacy, or a broadly focused
unit, such as a hospital division for a health system–should not be neglected.
Organizations sometimes spend large amounts of money and resources developing
strategic plans only to discover that they are not prepared to implement them
in an effective manner.
Making Recommendations
Making good recommendations is a critical aspect of successful case analysis.
If recommendations are theoretically sound and justifiable, people will pay
attention to them. If they are not, little is likely to result from all the
work done to this point.
One effective method for presenting recommendations is to relate each one to
organizational strengths. Or, if necessary, a recommendation may be related to
addressing a weakness. If the organization has sufficient financial strength,the recommendations should highlight
how each alternative will capitalize on the strong financial condition. If, on
the other hand, the resources are limited, it will be important to avoid
recommendations that rely on resources that are not available or there should
be a combination strategy to gain new resources.
It will be particularly useful to ask the following questions when making
recommendations:
• Does the health
care organization have the financial resources needed to make the
recommendation work?
• Does the organization have the personnel with
the right skills to accomplish what will be required by each recommendation?
• Does the organization have methods to monitor
whether or not the recommendations are being accomplished?
• Is the timing right to implement each
recommendation? If not, when will the timing be right? Can the organization
afford to wait?
Finalizing the Report
Preparation and presentation is the final
activity in most case analyses. The report can be either written or oral
depending on the preference of the instructor. Although the form is slightly
different, the goal is the same–to summarize and communicate in an effective
manner what the analysis has uncovered and what the organization should do.
Decision making is the intended result of the
report. The analysis must be complete; but the emphasis should be on making the
entire report brief enough to encourage people to read it and comprehensive
enough to ensure that no major factors are overlooked–especially those that
might adversely affect the decision. Therefore, charts and flow diagrams can be
effective. In brief outline, the important sections of a case analysis report
include:
•Executive summary–usually one page, and rarely
more than two pages, it functions as an abstract. Its purpose is to force the
writer to carefully evaluate what is really important in all the accumulated
facts and data. It is not an introduction.
•Body of the case report
–Key Issues: with the rationale for focusing on
them.
–Situational Analysis: results of the external
environmental analysis, service area competitor analysis, and internal
environmental analysis, as well as analysis of the directional strategies.
–Strategy Formulation: feasible alternatives for
directional, adaptive, market entry, and competitive strategies.
–Recommendation: analysis of the feasible
alternatives, and which one or ones is/are recommended.
–Implementation Strategies: service delivery and
support strategies with linkage to the directional, adaptive, market entry, and
competitive strategies.
–Benchmarks for Success and Contingency Plans:
measures of success for the strategy and alternative plans if a major
opportunity or threat is subject to change in the short run (contingency plan).
Conclusions
Case analysis is an art. There is no one precise
way to accomplish the task, and the analysis has to be adapted to the case
problem under review. The analyst must keep in mind that case analysis is a
logical process that involves: (1) clearly defining strategic issues; (2)
understanding the situation–the organization, service area/service category,
and environment; (3) developing a strategy to enable the organization to
accomplish its mission and vision; and (4) formulating an implementation plan.
The work of case analysis is not over until all
these stages are completed. Often a formal written report or oral presentation
of the recommendations is required. Case problems provide a unique opportunity
to integrate all that students have learned about decision making and direct it
toward issues faced by real organizations. It is an exciting way to gain
experience with decision making. Students should take it seriously and develop
their own, systematic, and defensible ways of solving management problems.
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Rating:
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Solution: Case Study Analysis: Obamacare and Insurance Rating Rules