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Policymaking for Healthcare and ... Chapter Summary I. Health Care Policy (588-598) A. The Health of Americans Americans are generally healthy but statistics show that they still lag behind other countries in some key health care categories, such as life expectancy and infant mortality rates. B. The Cost of Health Care Health is one of the largest components of America’s economy, accounting for one-seventh of the gross domestic product. Costs of health care have been a major obstacle to balancing the federal budget and investing in the economy. Costs are rising for several reasons. Health providers have overbuilt medical care facilities. New technologies, drugs, and procedures have added to the costs. Patients do not ask for cheaper care because they do not face the full financial consequences of their care. Increased medical costs have caused insurance rates to skyrocket. C. Access to Health Care Inequalities in health and health care are serious problems. Access to health care is not universal in the United States. Many people contract with a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) that directly provides all or most of a person’s health care for a yearly fee. Most Americans have health insurance, but 16 percent of the public is without for the entire year. Millions of others are without insurance for shorter periods. Getting and keeping health insurance are often linked to having a job, especially a high-paying job. Many small companies do not offer insurance. Also part-time workers often do not get insurance. Even with group insurance, people may have to pay a large share of the cost. Access to health care in America is tied to race and income. The higher a family’s income, the more likely it is that its members are insured. Discrepancies in access to health care are reflected in the health of different groups. Whites have higher life expectancy and lower infant mortality rates than African Americans. A major consequence of not having health insurance is lack of access to a family doctor or someone to administer prenatal and neonatal care. Even among those who have insurance, coverage is often incomplete. One of the biggest constraints on obtaining health insurance is cost. Private market forces have transformed health care. Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) are restricted physician lists for the provision of care. Managed care grew on the strength of its claims to provide better service at lower cost. It is intended to improve health care by focusing on prevention rather than treatment and by designating a single doctor as a patient’s primary care provider rather than having patients treated by different specialists with no central coordination or oversight. These measures are designed to contain the costs of health care, but they have done nothing to ease the plight of those without health insurance. D. The Role of Government in Health Care The United States has the most thoroughly privatized medical care system in the developed world with 46 percent of the country’s total health bill paid for by government compared to an average of 75 percent for all industrialized nations. Private insurance companies cover one-third and Americans pay nearly one-fifth of their health care cost out of their own pockets. Most countries have a national health insurance, a compulsory insurance program to finance all medical care. In 1965 Congress passed Medicare as part of Social Security to provide hospitalization insurance and short-term nursing care and inexpensive coverage for doctor fees for elderly Americans. Medicaid is a means-tested program designed to provide health care for the poor and serves about 35 million people. E. Policymaking for Health Care One of the reasons why the United States emphasizes expensive and high-tech solutions to complicated health problems is that no single institution pays the medical bills. Many lifesaving procedures are very expensive, so allocating their use involves complicated question of public policy. Dollars spent on expensive procedures to save a few lives cannot be spent on other, equally pressing health needs. Powerful lobbies representing hospitals, doctors, and the elderly want Medicare to pay for the latest techniques. Other groups are unrepresented in government. The elderly are one of the most powerful voting and lobbying forces in politics. They have successfully lobbied for their health care needs. Workers in lowpaying service jobs that do not include health insurance, and for those who are unemployed and cannot afford private insurance, there is no organization capable of exerting such influence in government. The groups that enjoy good healthcare coverage are those that are well organized to influence the government. Business groups have been calling for relief in the health care field. Insurance companies have been making it more difficult for doctors and hospitals to pass along the costs of others’ unpaid bills to them, causing a cost crunch for some institutions, including inner-city hospitals and trauma centers that serve the poor. President Clinton made health care reform the centerpiece of his first administration. His main concern was guaranteeing health care coverage for all Americans. The program was to be paid for by a requirement that employers provide health insurance for their employees or pay a premium into a public fund. The reform failed because it was seen as bureaucratic and complicated. The middle class felt its health care threatened. After a long battle it died in Congress. Opponents to managed care claim that its cost-cutting bureaucrats impose stifling rules on physicians, block sick patients from seeing specialists, and delay or deny coverage for recommended treatments or medications. There has been a wave of state legislative action to protect patients’ rights, including an effort by President Clinton, which was killed by the Republican Congress in 2000. There have also been efforts, especially by the elderly, to add the cost of prescription drugs to Medicare. II. Environmental Policy (598-609) A. Economic Growth and the Environment Environmental controls figure prominently in the debate about local and state economic development. States compete for economic development. Sometimes stringent pollution standards drive businesses away; sometimes they attract businesses. Business and government battle over the impact of pollution control. Concern for the environment and concern about economic development can overlap. When Congress set standards for ambient air in 1970 environmentalists argued that higher standards be set for areas with cleaner air. Thus the nondegradation standard was adopted in which communities were not allowed to degrade their air quality. The result of this policy was that industries were discouraged from relocating in clean-air environments (the Sunbelt). Concern for the environment has increased in the United States since the 1950s. Steadily increasing percentages of Americans are willing to see the government spend money to clean up and protect the environment. B. Environmental Policies in America The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is the nation’s largest federal regulatory agency charged with administering policies dealing with land use, air and water quality, and wilderness and wildlife preservation. The centerpiece of federal environmental policy is the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) created in 1969. This law requires both government and private agencies to complete environmental impact statements (EIS) detailing possible effects of the policy. An EIS is merely a procedural requirement. Although it does not does give the environmental groups the right to stop environmentally unsound activities, it does give them the opportunity to delay construction so much that agencies simply give up. The Clean Air Act of 1970 charges the Department of Transportation with the responsibility of reducing automobile emissions. In 1990 Congress passed a reauthorization of the Clean Air Act, which significantly increased the controls on cars, oil refineries, chemical plants, and coal-fired utility plants, as well as permitting utility plants to use emissions trading. Congress acted to control pollution in lakes and rivers with the Water Pollution Control Act of 1972. Wilderness has been given special attention through the national park system and national forests. The United States has been a world leader in wilderness preservation. The Endangered Species Act of 1973 created an endangered species protection program and required the government to protect actively each of the hundreds of species listed as endangered—regardless of the economic effect on the surrounding towns or region. C. Energy, the Environment, and Global Warming Energy issues continually present thorny problems for policymakers to resolve, and government is constantly involved in battles concerning what forms of energy the country should be producing, and from what sources. Coal is America’s most abundant fuel, but also the dirtiest. Oil is cleaner, but reliance on imports often result in oil spills. The most controversial energy source is nuclear power. The wave of environmental concern over radiation leaks and accidents in the late 1960s devastated the nuclear power industry, and no new plants were built in the United States after 1978. Each source of energy poses potential risks to the environment. Interest in conservation, renewable energy supplies, and alternative fuels has increased. The 1992 energy bill encourages the development of renewable energy sources and alternative “clean” fuels. As the twenty-first century began, America was once again faced with high energy costs and shortages. One of the most intractable and potentially most serious issues relating to energy and the environment is global warming. Many scientists argue that the earth is warming at a rapid rate and will result in potential environmental, social and economic disasters. There is no technology to control carbon emissions, so the only way to reduce greenhouse gases is to burn less fuel or find alternative sources of energy. In 1997 150 nations met in Kyoto, Japan, and agreed in principle to require 38 industrial nations to reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases below 1990 levels by about 2010. Opponents of the treaty in the U.S. fear that cutting greenhouse gases will cost too much and that it is unfair that the developed nations should bear the burden of cutting emissions. D. Toxic Wastes Long before the environmental movement, polluters created problems that we are still trying to solve. In 1980, Congress established the Superfund (created by taxing chemical products) to deal with toxic waste. It established the principle that those who polluted the land were responsible for paying to clean it up. The Superfund law has virtually eliminated haphazard dumping of toxic wastes, but has been less successful in cleaning up existing waste due to endless rounds of litigation. The EPA has found it more difficult to clean up toxic sites than it had hoped. The damage at some sites is so serious they may never be cleaned up. Another serious environmental challenge is the disposal of nuclear wastes, such as that from nuclear reactors and the production of nuclear weapons. The question is where to store the nation’s nuclear waste. E. Making Environmental Policy Environmental concerns often conflict with equally legitimate concerns about foreign trade, economic growth, and jobs. Those who generate pollution do so in their efforts to make cars, produce electricity, and provide food and consumer products. Federally owned land is rich in resources that many believe should be tapped. One of the biggest changes in environmental policy in recent years is the increasing presence of new interest groups, which complain about pollution and press for government action. The 1960s and 1970s saw an explosion in the size and number of environmental interest groups. The nature of environmental policymaking has changed. The environmental movement has spawned a backlash against vigorous protection of the environment. Opponents argue that employment, economic growth, and international competitiveness must be part of the policymaking equation. Furthermore local groups have begun to resist planned development complicating environmental policymaking. III. Understanding Health Care and Environmental Policy (610-611) A. Democracy and Health Care and Environmental Policy High-tech issues strain the limits of public participation in a democracy. The issues associated with high technology are often so complex that many different levels of government become heavily involved. Maintaining the right balance between public participation and technological competence is not an easy task. High-technology issues make it especially difficult to include the public in reasoned political debate. Policymaking for technological issues seems to rely heavily on groups as opposed to individual citizens. B. The Scope of Government and Health Care and Environmental Policy Americans do not hesitate to call for government to play a greater role in high-technology issues, and the scope of the federal government has grown in response to these demands. At the same time, important forces rein in the federal government, as occurred with President Clinton’s health care proposal. There is a tension between demands for government services and protections and a concern about the government providing those services and protections.