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Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II [email protected] [email protected]
26

Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II [email protected] [email protected].

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Health Politics

Bill Weissert

936-1311 M3141 SPH II [email protected]

[email protected]

Page 2: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Course Objectives

• Understand how health policy is made and role of institutions which make it

• Equip you to keep up with policy changes

• See that you can change policy

• Learn one policy analysis technique

Page 3: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Why Care?

• Gov’t ubiquitous in health policy

• Half of all health dollars

• Controls who practices, served, covered, what paid for public clients

• Curbs and incentives on life styles

• Major surveillance efforts

• Reform everywhere– policy change rapid

Page 4: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Course Content• Institutions

– Congress, Pres, Budget, Int Groups, Bureaucracy, St Gov’t

• Structure, processes, incentives

• Role in policy making

• Policy making process• Agenda setting

• Problem definition

• Political feasibility

Page 5: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Texts• Weissert & Weissert.

Governing Health:

The Politics of Health Policy• Coursepack - optional• Web page

– http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/healpol.html

Page 6: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Requirements

• Assignment 1 Problem Definition– Due April

– Matrix: 2 10 pt pgs matrix, 3 pages text – 12 pt Columns

– Authors (3 or 4 key authors; all other authors)

Rows:• Nature of the problem, indicators, consequences, severity• Prevalence, incidence, differential effects, trends• Causes, contributing factors• Rationale for government intervention

Page 7: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Requirements continued

• Assignment 2: Solution Options (June)• Columns

• Solution Options (3 or 4)

• Rows: Criteria• Effectiveness (extent to which solves problem you defined) • Cost (per unit of effectiveness; total spending one or

multiple years)• Equity (vertical and horizontal)• Administrative burden (paperwork, privacy invasion,

transaction costs)• Political feasibility (will it be enacted and implemented –

why & why not)

• Your weights and recommendation

Page 8: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Requirements continued

• Assignment 3: Issue Participation• Due: August• Columns

– Committees, subcommittees responsible, party leaders participating

– Interest groups– Bureaucratic agencies

• Rows– Motivations, institutional endowments, strategies,

effectiveness

Page 9: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Some Basic Concepts

Page 10: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Freedom

• Absence of constraints

• Confidence that others will respect your life, liberty, property and pursuit of happiness

Page 11: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Government

• The social institution which is empowered to legitimately use force to regulate behavior

Page 12: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Policy

What government does

Page 13: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Power

• Ability to influence what gov’t, groups, and individuals do

Page 14: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Legitimate Use of Power

• Depends on political system– In monarchy: authorized by

hereditary king

– In oligarchy: acceptable to propertied and wealthy

– In democracy: consent of the governed

Page 15: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Politics

• The efforts of individuals, groups and institutions to gain power over policy.

Page 16: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

The Public Interest

Page 17: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Democratic Policy Making

• Political process by which

individuals, groups and institutions

exercise their power to influence

government policy.

Page 18: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Origins of Democracy

• Social contract theory

– Individuals form social compact

• agree to follow the rules laid down by

government

Page 19: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Mayflower Compact (1620)

• Formed compact:

– “solemnly and mutually...covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil body politic, for our better ordering...and by virtue hereof to enact, constitute, and frame such just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions, offices from time to time as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general good of the colony; unto which we promise all due submission and obedience.”

Page 20: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Some Major Ideas Behind Our American Social Contract

• Thomas Hobbes

– Leviathan (1651)

• John Locke

– Second Treatise on Gov’t (1690)

• Adam Smith

– Wealth of Nations (1776)

• Thomas Jefferson

– Jefferson’s Letters (1787)

• John Stuart Mill

– On Liberty (1859)

Page 21: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Hobbes

• Life in state of nature:– Solitary, mean, poor nasty, brutish and short

• Individuals compact, choose ruler– to control individuals’ behavior– but ruler is not party to compact– can coerce, confiscate property of, even kill

individuals

• But individual has a right to resist death

Page 22: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Locke

• Just as person has right to own body

• Has right to own labor– and fruits of labor

• People form gov’t to protect life, liberty, property

• Since gov’t formed to protect these– can’t harm or take them away

Page 23: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Smith

• Private enterprise most efficient means of production– produces most income and wealth

• Limited gov’t essential for econ freedom

• Government must protect econ freedoms:– free trade, free choice to work, invest, spend – by providing common defense, preventing

monopoly, regulating weights & measures

Page 24: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

JS Mill

• Individuals need freedom to develop full faculties– including thought and discussion

• Gov’t must be limited to protect these freedoms

• But must also protect minority views from majority

• Hence, need for limited gov’t based upon principles, not just majority rule

Page 25: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Thomas Jefferson

• “...I am not a friend to a very energetic gov’t. It is always oppressive...Nor will any degree of power in the hands of gov’t prevent insurrections...Educate and inform the whole mass of the people. Enable them to see that it is in their interest to preserve peace and order, and they will preserve them.”

Page 26: Health Politics Bill Weissert 936-1311 M3141 SPH II weissert@umich.edu ndobias@umich.edu.

Limited Government

• Three branches– to check each other

• Two levels– to share power

• Constitution – grant and constrain powers– assure individual liberties