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 | | The Public Private Health Care State: Essays on the History of American Health Care Policy | | Stevens, R.A. | | Published: 2007 | | Transaction Publishers | Show summary |
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The distinctive mixing and continuous remixing of pub- lic and private roles is a defining feature of health care in the United States. The Public-Private Health Care State explores the interweaving of public and private enterprise in health care in the United States as a basis for thinking about health care in terms of its history and its continuing evolution today. Historian and policy analyst Rosemary Stevens has selected and edited seventeen essays from both her published and unpublished work to illustrate continuing themes, such as: the flexible meanings of the terms “public” and “private,” and how useful their ambiguity has been and is; the role of ideology as ratifying rather than preordaining change; and the common behavior of public leaders and corporate entities in the face of fiscal opportunity.
The topics—covering the period of 1870 through the twenty-first century—represent Stevens’ research interests in hospital history and policy, the medical profession, government policy, and paying for health care. The volume also considers her involvement with policy questions, which include health services research, health maintenance organizations, and physician workforce policy.
Section I demonstrates the long history of state government involvement with private not-for-profit hospitals from the 1870s through the 1930s. Section II examines the federal role in health care from the 1920s through the 1970s, including the establishment of veterans’ hospitals and the implementation of Medicaid. Section III shows how shifting governmental roles require constantly changing organizing rhetoric, whether for inventing a federal role for health services research and HMOs, “regionalization” in the 1970s, or defining civil rights and “equity” as mobilizing vehicles in the 1980s. Section IV examines growing concerns from the 1970s through the present about the traditional “public” role of the largely “private” medical profession. Section V returns to the ambiguous public-private status of not-for profit hospitals, buffeted in the 1980s and 1990s by assumptions about the efficiency of the market.
Rosemary Stevens is a DeWitt Wallace Distinguished Scholar in social medicine and public policy at Weill Cornell Medical College, and Stanley I. Sheerr Professor Emeritus in the history and sociology of science at the University of Pennsylvania.
Linked Investigator Award(s):
| Rosemary A. Stevens, Ph.D., M.P.H. | Specialization in American Medicine Award Year: 1997 Show AbstractDr. Stevens examines specialization in American medicine during the past 25 years in order to shed light on recent trends and choices for the future. She looks at the structure of the medical profession and its response to significant change by examining the evolving roles of the 24 specialty-certifying boards. The project focuses on several contexts of specialty practice and how they have changed. These include: the science base and conceptions of disease; the emergence of new specialist fields; the treatment of chronic illness and disabilities that cut across traditional specialty domains; rapid changes in the job market for physicians and reductions in payment for services under managed care; and the changing roles of generalists and specialists and the resulting tensions between them. Dr. Stevens hypothesizes that the boards are quietly changing their role in American medicine. Her work provides insights about the ways in which the medical profession is and might be structured. |
More Books by Author(s):
| Stevens, R.A., The Public Private Health Care State: Essays on the History of American Health Care Policy. Transaction Publishers, 2007. | |
| Stevens, R.A., Rosenberg, C.E., Burns, L.R. editors, History and Health Policy in the United States: Putting the Past Back In. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2006. | |