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4.
J Health Polit Policy Law ; 46(2): 357-374, 2021 04 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32955558

RÉSUMÉ

The Trump administration's Healthy Adult Opportunity waiver follows a long history of Republican attempts to retrench the Medicaid program through block grants and to markedly reduce federal spending while providing states with substantially greater flexibility over program structure. Previous block grant proposals were promulgated during the presidential administrations of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush and majorities in Congress led by House Speaker Newt Gingrich and House Budget Committee Chair and then Speaker Paul Ryan. Most recently, Medicaid block grants featured prominently in Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. This essay traces the history of Republican Medicaid block grant proposals, culminating in the Trump administration's Healthy Adult Opportunity initiative. It concludes that the Trump administration's attempt to convert Medicaid into a block grant program through the waiver process is illegal and, if implemented, would leave thousands of people without necessary medical care. This fact, combined with failed legislative efforts to block grant Medicaid during the last forty years, highlights the substantial roadblocks to radically restructuring a popular program that helps millions of Americans.


Sujet(s)
Gouvernement fédéral , Financement du gouvernement/économie , Medicaid (USA)/économie , Politique , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Histoire du 21ème siècle , Medicaid (USA)/histoire , Gouvernement d'un État , États-Unis
6.
PLoS One ; 15(6): e0233367, 2020.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32480400

RÉSUMÉ

Total NIH funding dollars have increased from 2009-2018. We questioned whether this growth has occurred proportionately around the country and throughout allopathic medical schools. Therefore, we compared the trend in NIH grant funding from 2009 to 2018 for United States allopathic medical schools among historically top-funded schools, private and public schools, and by region of the country. Changes in both unadjusted and real funding dollars over time revealed a significant difference. Region was the only significant factor for mean percent change in funding from 2009-2018, with the Western region showing a 33.79% increase in purchasing power. The Northeastern region showed a -6.64% decrease in purchasing power while the Central and Southern regions reported changes of 2.46% and -6.08%, respectively. The mean percent increases were more proportional and nonsignificant in the public vs. private institutions comparison, at -3.41% and 4.75%, respectively. Likewise, the top-funded institutions vs. other institutions comparisons demonstrated modest, nonsignificant differences. However, although the relative changes might be proportional, the absolute increases evidence a pattern of growing cumulative advantage that favor the highest-funded institutions and private institutions. The potential consequences of this disproportionate increase include health science education, biomedical research, and patient access disparities in large parts of the country. The NIH and the scientific community should explore potential solutions in its funding models.


Sujet(s)
Financement du gouvernement/tendances , National Institutes of Health (USA)/tendances , Écoles de médecine/économie , Recherche biomédicale/économie , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Financement organisé/tendances , Histoire du 21ème siècle , Humains , National Institutes of Health (USA)/économie , National Institutes of Health (USA)/histoire , États-Unis
8.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 26(suppl 1): 79-108, 2020.
Article de Portugais, Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31994682

RÉSUMÉ

This article investigates how the santas casas de misericórdia charitable associations in the state of São Paulo were subsidized by the municipal, provincial, and state governments at the turn of the twentieth century. Budget appropriations from 1838 to 1915 were examined to evaluate these charitable grants as well as the growth in funding during this period. While a care network created with strong state backing, it was put into action by philanthropic assistance. This network of hospital care retained the same format until at least the first third of the twentieth century, and included misericórdia establishments created within the interior of the state of São Paulo.


O artigo analisa como as santas casas de misericórdia do estado de São Paulo foram subvencionadas pelos governos municipais, provincial e estadual na passagem do século XIX para o XX. Para tanto, são discutidas as dotações orçamentárias realizadas de 1838 a 1915, com o fim de avaliar o repasse e a ampliação de verbas nesse ínterim. É possível notar que foi criada uma rede de assistência fortemente apoiada pelo Estado, mas efetivada pela assistência filantrópica. Essa rede de atendimento hospitalar permanece com o mesmo formato até pelo menos o primeiro terço do século XX, contexto em que se incluíam as misericórdias criadas pelo interior do estado paulista.


Sujet(s)
Oeuvres de bienfaisance/histoire , Politique de santé/histoire , Hôpitaux/histoire , Brésil , Budgets/histoire , Oeuvres de bienfaisance/économie , Oeuvres de bienfaisance/législation et jurisprudence , Économie hospitalière/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Gouvernement/histoire , Histoire du 18ème siècle , Histoire du 19ème siècle , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Humains
9.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 26(supl.1): 79-108, out.-dez. 2019. tab, graf
Article de Portugais | LILACS | ID: biblio-1056285

RÉSUMÉ

Resumo O artigo analisa como as santas casas de misericórdia do estado de São Paulo foram subvencionadas pelos governos municipais, provincial e estadual na passagem do século XIX para o XX. Para tanto, são discutidas as dotações orçamentárias realizadas de 1838 a 1915, com o fim de avaliar o repasse e a ampliação de verbas nesse ínterim. É possível notar que foi criada uma rede de assistência fortemente apoiada pelo Estado, mas efetivada pela assistência filantrópica. Essa rede de atendimento hospitalar permanece com o mesmo formato até pelo menos o primeiro terço do século XX, contexto em que se incluíam as misericórdias criadas pelo interior do estado paulista.


Abstract This article investigates how the santas casas de misericórdia charitable associations in the state of São Paulo were subsidized by the municipal, provincial, and state governments at the turn of the twentieth century. Budget appropriations from 1838 to 1915 were examined to evaluate these charitable grants as well as the growth in funding during this period. While a care network created with strong state backing, it was put into action by philanthropic assistance. This network of hospital care retained the same format until at least the first third of the twentieth century, and included misericórdia establishments created within the interior of the state of São Paulo.


Sujet(s)
Humains , Histoire du 18ème siècle , Histoire du 19ème siècle , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Oeuvres de bienfaisance/histoire , Politique de santé/histoire , Hôpitaux/histoire , Brésil , Budgets/histoire , Oeuvres de bienfaisance/économie , Oeuvres de bienfaisance/législation et jurisprudence , Économie hospitalière/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Gouvernement/histoire
10.
Am J Public Health ; 109(4): 572-577, 2019 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30789772

RÉSUMÉ

The nation's first broad-based, mandatory investment in public health and prevention, the Prevention and Public Health Fund (the Fund), has had a brief and controversial history. Advocates for the Fund have had to defend it from both Democratic and Republican threats, including being used as an offset for administration priorities, and from congressional efforts to repeal and replace the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Lessons learned from efforts to sustain the Fund are instructive in addressing current and future challenges faced by advocates for public health programs and prevention policies.


Sujet(s)
Financement du gouvernement/législation et jurisprudence , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (USA)/économie , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (USA)/histoire , Services de médecine préventive/économie , Santé publique , Prestations des soins de santé/organisation et administration , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Histoire du 21ème siècle , Humains , Défense du patient , Santé publique/économie , Santé publique/histoire , États-Unis
11.
Med Law Rev ; 27(2): 267-294, 2019 May 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30272190

RÉSUMÉ

This article explores the relationship between obligation and publicly funded healthcare. Taking the National Health Service (NHS) as the focal point of discussion, the article presents a historical analysis of the shifting nature and function of obligation as it relates to this institution. Specifically, and drawing inspiration from recent literature that takes seriously the notion of the tie or bond at the core of obligation, the article explores how the forms of social relation and bonds underpinning a system like the NHS have shifted across time. This is undertaken via an analysis of Aneurin Bevan's vision of the NHS at its foundation, the importance today of the patient (and the individual generally) within publicly funded healthcare, and the role of contract as a contemporary governance mechanism within the NHS. A core feature of the article is its emphasis on the impact that a variety of economic factors-including privatisation, marketisation, and the role of debt and finance capital-are having on previously settled understandings of obligation and the forms of social relation underpinning them associated with the NHS. It is therefore argued that an adequate analysis of obligation in healthcare law and related fields must extend beyond the doctor-patient relationship and that of state-citizen of the classical welfare state in order to incorporate new forms of relation, such as that between creditor and debtor, and new actors, including private healthcare providers and financial institutions.


Sujet(s)
Prestations des soins de santé/économie , Prestations des soins de santé/éthique , Prestations des soins de santé/tendances , Programmes nationaux de santé/économie , Programmes nationaux de santé/éthique , Programmes nationaux de santé/tendances , Responsabilité sociale , Contrats , Prestations des soins de santé/histoire , Économie/tendances , Éthique des affaires , Éthique institutionnelle , Financement du gouvernement/économie , Financement du gouvernement/éthique , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/tendances , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Humains , Relations interprofessionnelles/éthique , Programmes nationaux de santé/histoire , Privatisation , Royaume-Uni
12.
Br J Hist Sci ; 52(1): 143-163, 2019 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30152303

RÉSUMÉ

The 'Rothschild reforms' of the early 1970s established a new framework for the management of government-funded science. The subsequent dismantling of the Rothschild system for biomedical research and the return of funds to the Medical Research Council (MRC) in 1981 were a notable departure from this framework and ran contrary to the direction of national science policy. The exceptionalism of these measures was justified at the time with reference to the 'particular circumstances' of biomedical research. Conventional explanations for the reversal in biomedical research include the alleged greater competence and higher authority of the MRC, together with its claimed practical difficulties. Although they contain some elements of truth, such explanations are not wholly convincing. Alternative explanations hinge on the behaviour of senior medical administrators, who closed ranks to ensure that de facto control was yielded to the MRC. This created an accountability deficit, which the two organizations jointly resolved by dismantling the system for commissioning biomedical research. The nature and working of medical elites were central to this outcome.


Sujet(s)
Recherche biomédicale/histoire , Agences gouvernementales/histoire , Soutien financier à la recherche comme sujet/histoire , Recherche biomédicale/législation et jurisprudence , Recherche biomédicale/organisation et administration , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/législation et jurisprudence , Réglementation gouvernementale/histoire , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Humains , Politique publique/histoire , Personnel de recherche/histoire , Soutien financier à la recherche comme sujet/législation et jurisprudence , Royaume-Uni
14.
Br J Sociol ; 68(4): 643-669, 2017 Dec.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28783229

RÉSUMÉ

Monetary financing - the funding of state expenditure via the creation of new money rather than through taxation or borrowing - has become a taboo policy instrument in advanced economies. It is generally associated with dangerously high inflation and/or war. Relatedly, a key institutional feature of modern independent central banks is that they are not obligated to support government expenditure via money creation. Since the financial crisis of 2007-2008, however, unorthodox monetary policies, in particular quantitative easing, coupled with stagnant growth and high levels of public and private debt have led to questions over the monetary financing taboo. Debates on the topic have so far been mainly theoretical with little attention to the social and political dynamics of historical instances of monetary financing. This paper analyses one of the most significant twentieth-century cases: Canada from the period after the Great Depression up until the monetarist revolution of the 1970s. The period was a successful one for the Canadian economy, with high growth and employment and manageable inflation. It offers some interesting insights into the relationship between states and central banks and present-day discussions around the governance of money creation.


Sujet(s)
Économie/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Banques de sang/histoire , Canada , Récession économique/histoire , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Humains
16.
Br J Community Nurs ; 22(7): 324-330, 2017 Jul 02.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28686104

RÉSUMÉ

The case study explores how the expansion of the health services during the interwar period impacted upon the status of district nursing and examines how being a voluntary service shaped district nursing associations. A range of primary sources were used; the Association Annual Reports, the Medical Officer for Health Annual Reports for the Borough of Chelsea, the Ministry of Health records, the archives of the Queen's Nursing Institute (QNI) and the Borough of Chelsea Council Minutes. The Medical Officer for Health Reports and the Council minutes identify efforts to improve environmental factors that impacted upon health. These primary sources briefly note the contribution of the Association suggesting that it was integral to the health care provision but considered a constant. The impact of changes to the 1932 Sunday Entertainments Act provide an interesting juxtaposition between the acknowledged value of district nursing and the constant struggle to fundraise in order to provide home nursing. Throughout the 1930s the Association experienced staff shortages and challenges regarding recruitment. The complexities of payment for municipal health services following the 1929 Local Government Act contributed to the staffing challenges. The move to a block grant in 1938 provided increased stability with regards to income. The case study identifies a contradiction regarding the esteem and value placed upon district nursing associations providing home nursing and the constant challenge of resources. District nursing services face similar challenges and this is the 130th anniversary of the Queen's Nursing Institute.


Sujet(s)
Services de santé communautaires/histoire , Sociétés des infirmiers et infirmières/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Services de soins à domicile/histoire , Humains , Londres , Infirmières en santé communautaire/histoire , Infirmières en santé communautaire/ressources et distribution
19.
J Hist Med Allied Sci ; 70(2): 279-311, 2015 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25862750

RÉSUMÉ

The establishment of National Institutes of Health (NIH) extramural grants in the second half of the twentieth century marked a signal shift in support for medical research in the United States and created an influential model for the rest of the world. A similar landmark development occurred in the first half of the twentieth century with the creation of the Rockefeller Foundation and its funding programs for medical research. The programs and support of the foundation had a dramatic impact on medical research in the United States and globally. This paper examines early connections between these two developments. The NIH grants have usually been seen as having their roots primarily in the government programs of the Second World War. This article finds direct and indirect influence by the Rockefeller Foundation, as well as parallel developments in these two monumental programs of support for medical research.


Sujet(s)
Recherche biomédicale/histoire , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Fondations/histoire , National Institutes of Health (USA)/histoire , Recherche biomédicale/économie , Financement du gouvernement/économie , Fondations/économie , Histoire du 20ème siècle , National Institutes of Health (USA)/économie , États-Unis
20.
Milbank Q ; 93(1): 139-78, 2015 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25752353

RÉSUMÉ

UNLABELLED: POLICY POINTS: A retrospective analysis of federally funded homeless research in the 1980s serves as a case study of how politics can influence social and behavioral science research agendas today in the United States. These studies of homeless populations, the first funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, demonstrated that only about a third of the homeless population was mentally ill and that a diverse group of people experienced homelessness. This groundbreaking research program set the mold for a generation of research and policy characterizing homelessness as primarily an individual-level problem rather than a problem with the social safety net. CONTEXT: A decade after the nation's Skid Rows were razed, homelessness reemerged in the early 1980s as a health policy issue in the United States. While activists advocated for government-funded programs to address homelessness, officials of the Reagan administration questioned the need for a federal response to the problem. In this climate, the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) launched a seminal program to investigate mental illness and substance abuse among homeless individuals. This program serves as a key case study of the social and behavioral sciences' role in the policy response to homelessness and how politics has shaped the federal research agenda. METHODS: Drawing on interviews with former government officials, researchers, social activists, and others, along with archival material, news reports, scientific literature, and government publications, this article examines the emergence and impact of social and behavioral science research on homelessness. FINDINGS: Research sponsored by the NIMH and other federal research bodies during the 1980s produced a rough picture of mental illness and substance abuse prevalence among the US homeless population, and private foundations supported projects that looked at this group's health care needs. The Reagan administration's opposition to funding "social research," together with the lack of private-sector support for such research, meant that few studies examined the relationship between homelessness and structural factors such as housing, employment, and social services. CONCLUSIONS: The NIMH's homelessness research program led to improved understanding of substance abuse and mental illness in homeless populations. Its primary research focus on behavioral disorders nevertheless unwittingly reinforced the erroneous notion that homelessness was rooted solely in individual pathology. These distortions, shaped by the Reagan administration's policies and reflecting social and behavioral scientists' long-standing tendencies to emphasize individual and cultural rather than structural aspects of poverty, fragmented homelessness research and policy in enduring ways.


Sujet(s)
Recherche comportementale/histoire , Désinstitutionnalisation/histoire , /histoire , Personnes atteintes de troubles mentaux/statistiques et données numériques , National Institute of Mental Health (USA)/histoire , Politique , Troubles liés à une substance/épidémiologie , Recherche comportementale/économie , Désinstitutionnalisation/économie , Désinstitutionnalisation/législation et jurisprudence , Financement du gouvernement/histoire , Histoire du 20ème siècle , /législation et jurisprudence , /statistiques et données numériques , Humains , Entretiens comme sujet , Personnes atteintes de troubles mentaux/histoire , Personnes atteintes de troubles mentaux/psychologie , Évaluation des besoins , Études de cas sur les organisations de santé , Politique publique , Soutien financier à la recherche comme sujet/histoire , Études rétrospectives , Troubles liés à une substance/économie , Troubles liés à une substance/histoire , États-Unis/épidémiologie , Rénovation urbaine/économie , Rénovation urbaine/histoire
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