Paperback: 500 pages
Publisher: University of California Press; With a New Preface edition (September 21, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0520268091
ISBN-13: 978-0520268098
Product Dimensions: 6 x 1.2 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
Best Sellers Rank: #448,440 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #147 in Books > Textbooks > Medicine & Health Sciences > Administration & Policy > Health Policy #234 in Books > Textbooks > Medicine & Health Sciences > Medicine > Special Topics > History #314 in Books > Medical Books > Administration & Medicine Economics > Health Policy
As a health policy researcher and doctor, I approach this book with some trepidation. I did not want a book that was going to feel like "work" to read, and yet I am genuinely interested in the details. Blumenthal and Marone got it just right. They move through a mountain of material in a well paced mix of interesting (often original) detail and insight. It could not be more timely given the debate in the country right now. This is the best available lense through which to watch how the national health reform process is playing out. Disclosure: Blumenthal used to be my boss.
At nearly 500 pages in length, this well-researched book may contain more historical information about the politics of health care than many people would care to read carefully.After a 20-page introduction, the authors survey eleven successive presidents in eleven chapters:(1) Franklin D. Roosevelt(2) Harry S. Truman(3) Dwight D. Eisenhower(4) John F. Kennedy(5) Lyndon B. Johnson(6) Richard M. Nixon(7) Jimmy Carter(8) Ronald Reagan(9) George H. W. Bush(10) Bill Clinton(11) George W. BushBut the 12-page conclusion is worth the price of the book. In the conclusion, the authors set forth what they consider to be "eight rules for the heart of power" -- rules that President Barack Obama and others in his administration might want to consider carefully as the August recess of Congress draws to a close and the battle in Congress over health-care-reform legislation resumes in earnest.
From Roosevelt to H.Bush had active rolls in the development of National Health Insurance. How did their childhood and adulthood backgrounds influence their presidential decisions to maintain a 70 year development of Health Insurance?Blumenthal gives a concise biography of each president as well as the individual managerial style to navigate the governmental complexities of politics and policy development. Tune up your highlighter!
I've read many books that expanded my store of knowledge, but few that changed my perspective. The Heart of Power changed the way I view health care policy and the ongoing debate about it.Although the book covers the policies of each presidential administration from Franklin Roosevelt to George W. Bush (Gerald Ford excepted), it lays a foundation for an historical understanding of why Barack Obama made the critical decision to endorse a plan based on a public-private partnership. Blumenthal and Morone show convincingly that while liberals promoted and sustained the *idea* of universal health care access, conservatives were, over time, able to redefine the terms of the debate. The authors also include an important humanizing twist: Each president's personal -- and often traumatic -- experience with the health care system.After WW2, no Democrat (save Jimmy Carter, who ran under unique circumstances) successfully ran for president without a major commitment to health care reform. And yet, once in office, each found passing legislation to be a maddening affair complicated by an arcane process, other priorities, formidable lobbying (first the AMA and the insurance industry). Truman never tried, and Kennedy and Clinton failed. Lyndon Johnson succeeded in enacting Medicare, but it was a surprisingly near thing.Among Republicans, the private insurance market grew under Eisenhower and Nixon encouraged the development of HMOs. Concerned about the inevitability of a liberal government program, Eisenhower developed and Nixon refined Republican thinking about universal health insurance as a public-private partnership. Ronald Reagan pursued a massive extension of Medicare, later repealed when it proved unpopular with seniors. Bush I cared little about health policy, but his administration came up with ideas that Obama eventually coopted. In 2003, Bush II retreated on plans to offer privatized Medicare, Part D (a prescription drug benefit) when -- as incredible as it seems just seven years later -- the Republican leadership balked.I have two criticisms of the book. First, the copy editing is execrable -- I'd estimate an error in punctuation, spelling, or conjugation every 10-15 pages. For example, President Obama's name is "Barack," not "Barak," and Bob Dole is from "KS," not "KA."The Heart of Power would have been even stronger had it consistently considered the state of American health care in the context of each presidency, especially once more Americans had health insurance than did not, which occurred during the Eisenhower Administration. Sometimes, it's a little difficult to figure out exactly what problem a president is attempting to address and why. For example, was Bush I's disinterest in health policy a matter of disinclination or philosophy, or did he believe that there was no problem?Overall, though, this is one of the few books that, without reading it, the individual citizen has an incomplete picture of an issue. We need more books like The Heart of Power that cover the history of a policy from its inception through the tumult of changing times. Highly recommended.
David Blumenthal's and Jame's Morone's extremely readable history of healthcare reform from FDR forward is a must-read even if only for the wonderful stories told that were drawn from an immense amount of research into Presidential archives. Beyond that, it provides a well-constructed analysis of the reasons why health care reform is such a difficult nut to crack and the skills needed for reform to go forward. While they stay away from specific policy recommendations, for very good reasons, it is clear that they support reform that will insure that good health is in reach for all and no individual is wasted.
Wonderful and insightful review of the approach to national health insurance since the 1930's by different presidents, from Franklin D. Roosevelt through G.Bush. In the process, we are made to understand what makes each man tick,his flaws and strengths.We are also left to wonder some big what if's of national health policy as well as of possible second terms(particularly Lyndon Johnson's). As the authors mention in the introduction, our current president would be well served if he used this book as a road map for promoting his plan. Essential text to understand our current quandary.
This is an invaluable book for anyone interested in the making of health policy in the US government. Very well researched and written by two experts in the field. I recommend it most highly.
This book as a great inside look not only at the evolution of healthcare policy in the US, but a fascinating look at how Presidents have exercised the power of their office.
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