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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Actors and Interpretations
- Chapter 1. Anticipated Consequences: Historians, History, and Health Policy 13
- Chapter 2. The More Things Stay the Same the More They Change: The Odd Interplay between Government and Ideology in the Recent Political History of the U.S. Health-Care System 32
- Chapter 3. Medical Specialization as American Health Policy: Interweaving Public and Private Roles 49
-
Part II. Rhetoric, Rights, Responsibilities
- Chapter 4. Patients or Health-Care Consumers? Why the History of Contested Terms Matters 83
- Chapter 5. The Democratization of Privacy: Public-Health Surveillance and Changing Conceptions of Privacy in Twentieth-Century America 111
- Chapter 6. Building a Toxic Environment: Historical Controversies over the Past and Future of Public Health 130
-
Part III. Priorities and Politics
- Chapter 7. Situating Health Risks: An Opportunity for Disease-Prevention Policy 153
- Chapter 8. The Jewel in the Federal Crown? History, Politics, and the National Institutes of Health 176
- Chapter 9. A Marriage of Convenience: The Persistent and Changing Relationship between Long-Term Care and Medicaid 202
-
Part IV. Policy Management and Results
- Chapter 10. Rhetoric, Realities, and the Plight of the Mentally Ill in America 229
- Chapter 11. Emergency Rooms: The Reluctant Safety Net 250
- Chapter 12. Policy Implications of Hospital System Failures: The Allegheny Bankruptcy 273
- Chapter 13. The Rise and Decline of the HMO: A Chapter in U.S. Health-Policy History 309
- Contributors 341
- Index 345
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Actors and Interpretations
- Chapter 1. Anticipated Consequences: Historians, History, and Health Policy 13
- Chapter 2. The More Things Stay the Same the More They Change: The Odd Interplay between Government and Ideology in the Recent Political History of the U.S. Health-Care System 32
- Chapter 3. Medical Specialization as American Health Policy: Interweaving Public and Private Roles 49
-
Part II. Rhetoric, Rights, Responsibilities
- Chapter 4. Patients or Health-Care Consumers? Why the History of Contested Terms Matters 83
- Chapter 5. The Democratization of Privacy: Public-Health Surveillance and Changing Conceptions of Privacy in Twentieth-Century America 111
- Chapter 6. Building a Toxic Environment: Historical Controversies over the Past and Future of Public Health 130
-
Part III. Priorities and Politics
- Chapter 7. Situating Health Risks: An Opportunity for Disease-Prevention Policy 153
- Chapter 8. The Jewel in the Federal Crown? History, Politics, and the National Institutes of Health 176
- Chapter 9. A Marriage of Convenience: The Persistent and Changing Relationship between Long-Term Care and Medicaid 202
-
Part IV. Policy Management and Results
- Chapter 10. Rhetoric, Realities, and the Plight of the Mentally Ill in America 229
- Chapter 11. Emergency Rooms: The Reluctant Safety Net 250
- Chapter 12. Policy Implications of Hospital System Failures: The Allegheny Bankruptcy 273
- Chapter 13. The Rise and Decline of the HMO: A Chapter in U.S. Health-Policy History 309
- Contributors 341
- Index 345