Healthy or sick? : coevolution of health care and public health in a comparative perspective
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Healthy or sick? : coevolution of health care and public health in a comparative perspective
(Cambridge studies in comparative public policy / general editors, M. Ramesh, Xun Wu, Michael Howlett)
Cambridge University Press, 2018
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 282-312) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The book analyses how policies to prevent diseases are related to policies aiming to cure illnesses. It does this by conducting a comparative historical analysis of Australia, Germany, Switzerland, the UK, and the US. It also demonstrates how the politicization of the medical profession contributes to the success of preventative health policy. The book argues that two factors lead to a close relationship of curative and preventative elements in health policies and institutions: a strong national government that possesses a wide range of control over subnational levels of government, and whether professional organizations (especially the medical profession) perceive preventative and non-medical health policy as important and campaign for it politically. The book provides a historical and comparative narrative to substantiate this claim empirically.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Sectoral coupling of health care and public health
- 3. Theoretical priors
- 4. Global context and case selection
- 5. UK: institutional unification and tight coupling of health care and public health
- 6. Australia: politicized professions and tight coupling of health care and public health
- 7. Germany: dominance of individual health care and de-coupling from public health
- 8. Switzerland: Institutional fragmentation, depoliticized professions, and non-coupling
- 9. US: politicized professions and loose coupling of health care and public health
- 10. Coevolution of policy sectors. Health care and public health in a comparative perspective.
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