Abstract Over the past several years there has been a striking increase in policy-makers ’ attention to health care reform. This paper explores whether there has been a corresponding shift in popular attitudes and identifies factors that may have changed these attitudes. The first part of the analysis relies on survey data collected between 1975 and 1989 to estimate a set of regression models, relating support for federal in-volvement in health care, antipoverty programs, and general domestic policies to a set of sociodemographic characteristics. Relative to other federal policies, support for health initiatives grew over this period. During this same period, long-standing differ-ences in support between rich and poor, old and young, educat...
To examine what factors the public thinks are important determinants of health and whether social po...
Congress repealed the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, which expanded Medicare benefits, ...
The U.S. health-care costs have increased at a rapid rate over the last several decades. How much re...
This paper investigates comparative public attitudes as a mechanism to explain American welfare stat...
The U.S. is the only developed country without some form of national health insurance. Yet, public o...
Health care systems worldwide are experiencing similar pressures such as rising cost, aging populati...
In the health policy literature, scholars and practitioners distinguish broadly between health care ...
In the health policy literature, scholars and practitioners distinguish broadly between health care ...
There is no question in the minds of those of us who monitor public opinion that health care has the...
Public preferences for policy are formed in a little-understood process that is not adequately descr...
Currently in the United States there are approximately 47.5 million Americans without health insuran...
The primary intention of this paper is to explore the relationship between socioeconomic status and ...
Objective - To obtain information from a cohort of physicians about their attitudes toward current h...
Let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. Within that category of countries ...
Full text of this article is not available in SOAR.Although pronouncements of the ¿health care crisi...
To examine what factors the public thinks are important determinants of health and whether social po...
Congress repealed the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, which expanded Medicare benefits, ...
The U.S. health-care costs have increased at a rapid rate over the last several decades. How much re...
This paper investigates comparative public attitudes as a mechanism to explain American welfare stat...
The U.S. is the only developed country without some form of national health insurance. Yet, public o...
Health care systems worldwide are experiencing similar pressures such as rising cost, aging populati...
In the health policy literature, scholars and practitioners distinguish broadly between health care ...
In the health policy literature, scholars and practitioners distinguish broadly between health care ...
There is no question in the minds of those of us who monitor public opinion that health care has the...
Public preferences for policy are formed in a little-understood process that is not adequately descr...
Currently in the United States there are approximately 47.5 million Americans without health insuran...
The primary intention of this paper is to explore the relationship between socioeconomic status and ...
Objective - To obtain information from a cohort of physicians about their attitudes toward current h...
Let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. Within that category of countries ...
Full text of this article is not available in SOAR.Although pronouncements of the ¿health care crisi...
To examine what factors the public thinks are important determinants of health and whether social po...
Congress repealed the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, which expanded Medicare benefits, ...
The U.S. health-care costs have increased at a rapid rate over the last several decades. How much re...