Dead on Arrival: The Politics of Health Care in Twentieth-Century America by Colin Gordon, Gary Gerstle (Editor), William Chafe (Editor)

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(Paperback - New Edition)

  • Pub. Date: November 2004
  • 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 305,121
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2004
    • Publisher: Princeton University Press
    • Format: Paperback, 336pp
    • Sales Rank: 305,121

    Synopsis

    "This is a bold, clearly written, and engaging analysis of the place of universal health insurance in the American welfare state. It represents a serious argument about the American political arena, presents a plausible argument for its position, and backs that up with a standard of scholarship I respect."--Ted Marmor, Yale University, author of The Politics of Medicare

    Publishers Weekly

    The United States is alone among industrial democracies in having no national health insurance system, even as polls show large majorities of Americans favoring one. This comprehensive and convincing academic study illuminates this great American political conundrum. Gordon, a historian and author of New Deals: Business, Labor and Politics in America, 1920-35, examines reform efforts from the First World War to the Clinton health plan fiasco, and critiques scholarly explanations of the failure of more ambitious national healthcare initiatives. He explores America's idiosyncratic conception of healthcare as quasi-contractual social insurance and consumer commodity, not a right of citizenship, and its legacy in our ungainly system of private employment-based insurance. He traces the abandonment of national health insurance by its natural allies in the labor movement, which concentrated on protecting its private benefits, and among reformers, who settled for piecemeal programs that serve a portion of the population but undermine the rationale for universal coverage. Most of all, he points to the subservience of the American political system to economic interests. Time and again, he finds, the private healthcare industry has used its financial clout to "throttle" popular reforms through bare-knuckled lobbying, political donations, and PR campaigns associating national health insurance with Communism and vilifying successful Canadian and European systems. The result is a muddled system driven by the contradictory demands of doctors, hospitals, insurers and employers, one that generates the world's highest medical bills while leaving millions uninsured. Gordon synthesizes an enormous amount of scholarly research into a readable and compelling account of the debate over healthcare policy, one that poses larger questions about the failings of American democracy. (May) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Colin Gordon is Professor of History at the University of Iowa. He is the author of "New Deals: Business, Labor, and Politics in America, 1920-1935".

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