Fr. 40.90

Grow and Hide - The History of America''s Health Care State

English · Hardback

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Description

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In Grow and Hide, Colleen M. Grogan details the history of the American health care state and argues that the public has been intentionally misled about the true role of government. The US created a publicly financed system while framing it as the opposite in what Grogan terms the "grow-and-hide regime." Today, the state's role is larger than ever, yet it remains largely hidden because stakeholders have repeatedly, and successfully, presented the illusion of minimal government involvement. As Grogan reveals if we want to fix care in America, we need to reimagine the way it is organized, prioritized, funded, and, perhaps most importantly, discussed. This book shows us a way forward.

List of contents










  • Introduction: America's Expanding, Unequal and Hidden Health Care State

  • Part I: The Emergence of a Public Health Care State: 1860-1930

  • Chapter 1: A Conspicuous Public Health Care State

  • Chapter 2: Expanding the Boundaries of Public Health

  • Chapter 3: Public Health Planning: Hope for a Unified Public-Private System

  • Part II: The Rise of Grow and Hide: 1930-1965

  • Chapter 4: The New Public Health Deal

  • Chapter 5: The Voluntary Way Hides the Role of Government

  • Chapter 6: Solidifying the Grow and Hide Approach

  • Part III: The Consequences of Grow and Hide: 1965-2020

  • Chapter 7: Fragmentation: The Failure of Health Care Planning

  • Chapter 8: Profiteering: The Hidden Financial Industry Takeover

  • Chapter 9: Inequality: How Medicaid is Designed to Grow and Hide

  • Chapter 10: The ACA Embraces Grow and Hide

  • Conclusion: Possibilities for Change

  • Notes

  • Index



About the author

Colleen M. Grogan is the Deborah R. and Edgar D. Jannotta Professor at the University of Chicago. Grogan's research focuses on health policy and politics with a primary focus on the US health care system and its complex entitlement programs. She is the author of Healthy Voices/ Unhealthy Silence: Advocacy and Health Policy for the Poor and numerous articles that focus on elite decision-making around America's Medicaid program and offer a fundamentally new way to view the politics of the program. She is an elected member of the National Academy of Social Insurance and served on its COVID-19 Policy Translation Task Force. Grogan's work has been covered by The Washington Post, NPR, and The Guardian.

Summary

A sweeping history of the American health care state that reveals the public has been intentionally misled about the true role of government.

The US government has always invested federal, state and local dollars in public health protection and prevention. Despite this public funding, however, Americans typically believe the current system is predominantly comprised of private actors with little government interference. In Grow & Hide, Colleen M. Grogan details the history of the American health care state and argues that the public has been intentionally misled about the true role of government.

The US created a publicly financed system while framing it as the opposite in what Grogan terms the "grow-and-hide regime." Today, the state's role is larger than ever, yet it remains largely hidden because stakeholders-namely, private actors and their allies in government-have repeatedly, and successfully, presented the illusion of minimal government involvement. The consequences of this narrative are scarce accountability and a highly unequal distribution of benefits.

In the wake of a pandemic that has killed over one million Americans--with the highest death rates among minorities and lower-income people--the time has come for an honest discussion about the health care system. As Grogan reveals, America has never had a system that resembles a competitive, free-market model. Given how much the government already invests in the health care system, means how these funds are distributed and administered are fundamental political questions for the American public, not questions that should be decided by the private sector. If we want to fix care in America, we need to reimagine the way it is organized, prioritized, funded, and, perhaps most importantly, discussed. Grow & Hide is an important contribution to this reimagining.

Additional text

Grow and Hide is that extreme rarity - a book that makes both a stellar addition to scholarship and an admirable contribution to democratic theory and practice. Enriched by Grogan's work, as penetrating as it is provocative, scholars of public health and public policy - and indeed open-minded citizens wherever they may be found - will be better equipped to interpret the import of the policy history it reveals and to ponder the range of political responses those revelations may call to mind.

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