The New Politics of State Health Policy
Edited by Robert B. Hackey and David A. Rochefort
May 2001
360 pages, 2 cartoons, 6 x 9
Studies in Government and Public Policy
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1084-6, $45.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1085-3, $19.95
With the collapse of national
health care reform efforts in the early 1990s, states emerged
as a focal point for new policy and administrative developments
in U.S. health care. This book provides a timely overview of
the key issues facing states as they have responded to this challenge.
It tells how states are making decisions about health policies
and then putting them into action-and how legislatures, executives,
courts, and bureaucracies all participate in this process.
The New Politics of State Health Policy describes many
of the major trends in states' responses to health care problems
of the 1990s, and it identifies the forces that will influence
state policy actions in the new century. It examines reforms
now under way, from Medicaid to tobacco control to mental health,
and addresses today's most pressing issues surrounding managed
care, health insurance, and public health administration.
Editors Hackey and Rochefort have brought together a distinguished
group of scholars and practitioners in the field of health policy
analysis. Frank Thompson, Theodore Marmor, Michael Dukakis, and
others map out the different institutional frames shaping how
each state approaches the health care domain. While some states
deliberate over universal coverage, others have shifted to the
county level decisions once made in Washington, D.C. But all
face the difficulty of taking on unprecedented responsibilities
with limited resources amid the often-conflicting concerns of
public management and "moral politics."
Each contribution in the volume explores the interplay between
state governance and health care policy by addressing four themes:
the capacity of states to fulfill their new health care roles,
the significance of recent policy changes, patterns in the politics
of state health policy making, and the relationship of state-level
changes to failed national health care reform. Together, they
sound the call for stronger partnerships with both federal agencies
and private sector organizations and the need for state officials
to engage in broader, "outside-the-box" thinking.
As these essays show, health care policy can only be as good
as the governments that make it. The New Politics of State
Health Policy can help scholars, researchers, and practitioners
better assess the programs and policy process in their own states
in order to meet the demands of the health care marketplace on
the one hand and public expectations on the other.
"Hackey and Rochefort do a splendid job of capturing
the excitement and significance of state health policy. A long-awaited
addition to the field."--Carol Weissert, coauthor
of Governing Health
"An informative, stimulating, and indispensable guide
to recent developments in state health policy."--David
Mechanic, author of Mental Health and Social Policy
"Describes how and why state government has become increasingly
important in health policy in response to the rising expectations
of voters and interest groups and the challenge of managing huge
amounts of federal money."--Daniel M. Fox, President,
Milbank Memorial Fund
ROBERT B. HACKEY is professor of health policy and
management at Providence College and author of Rethinking
Health Care Policy: The New Politics of State Regulation.
DAVID A. ROCHEFORT is professor of political science
and public administration at Northeastern University and coeditor
of The Politics of Problem Definition:
Shaping the Policy Agenda, also from Kansas.
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