> In the absence of meaningful quality of care information
Except that quality information gets provided quite satisfactorily in plenty of industries, even ones that might appear otherwise quite opaque. Sure, sometimes it is done in distorted and counterintuitive ways (many marketing practices, including many kinds of advertising, are ultimately reputational games that are designed to signal quality), but meaningful info is far from "absent"!
Except that quality information gets provided quite satisfactorily in plenty of industries, even ones that might appear otherwise quite opaque. Sure, sometimes it is done in distorted and counterintuitive ways (many marketing practices, including many kinds of advertising, are ultimately reputational games that are designed to signal quality), but meaningful info is far from "absent"!