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In the past few months, a key point of contention in the health care reform debate has been whether a public health insurance option should be included in the final legislation. Although polls have shown that 52 to 69% of Americans support such an option,1 the views of physicians are unclear. Physicians are critical stakeholders in health care reform and have been influential in shaping health policy throughout the history of organized medicine in the United States.2 The voices of physicians in the current debate have emanated almost exclusively from national physicians' groups and societies. Like any special-interest group, these . . .
Keyhani et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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