25 results on '"Blendon, Robert J."'
Search Results
2. Problems in Developing Health Services in Poverty Areas: The Johns Hopkins Experience
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J. and Gaus, Clifton R.
- Published
- 1971
3. Future Health Care Challenges
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J. and DesRoches, Catherine
- Published
- 2003
4. Trust in Medicine, the Health System & Public Health.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J. and Benson, John M.
- Subjects
- *
TRUST , *PUBLIC opinion polls , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
This essay reviews more than forty years of public opinion polling to look at trust in medicine, the health system, and public health. We use polling data to explore the reasons for the decline and current level of public trust in leaders of medicine and public health, including underlying forces such as the decline in trust in other institutions. Except for the military, none of the efforts to improve public trust in various institutions have been very successful to date. Given the uncertainty about how to restore trust, this essay makes a number of recommendations that might improve public trust in medicine and public health in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Toward a Corporate Culture of Health: Results of a National Survey.
- Author
-
KYLE, MICHAEL ANNE, SEEGARS, LUMUMBA, BENSON, JOHN M., BLENDON, ROBERT J., HUCKMAN, ROBERT S., and SINGER, SARA J.
- Subjects
BUSINESS ,CORPORATE culture ,CULTURE ,HEALTH ,HEALTH planning ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,PRIVATE sector ,HEALTH & social status ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Policy PointsThe private sector has large potential influence over social determinants of health, but we have limited information about how businesses perceive or engage in actions to promote health and well‐being.We conducted a national survey of more than 1,000 businesses of varying sizes and industries to benchmark private sector engagement in employee, environmental, consumer, and community health, which we collectively refer to as a corporate culture of health.Overall, the private sector is taking steps to foster health and well‐being but still has substantial opportunity for growth. Context: The private sector has a large potential role in advancing health and well‐being, but attention to corporate practices around health tends to focus on a narrow range of issues and on large businesses. Systematically describing private sector engagement in health and well‐being is a necessary step toward understanding the current state of the field and developing an agenda for businesses going forward. Methods: We conducted a national survey of 1,017 private sector organizations to assess current levels of engagement in what we term a culture of health (CoH). We measured corporate CoH along four dimensions, which assess the extent to which businesses promote employee, environmental, consumer, and community health and well‐being. We also explored potential explanations for the number of health‐related actions taken in each dimension. Findings: On average, businesses took 38% of health‐related actions included in our survey. For each dimension, we found variation among businesses in the number of actions taken (on average, there were almost fourfold differences between the bottom and top quartiles of businesses in terms of actions taken). Mentioning health and well‐being in the corporate mission, having a strategic plan for CoH, and perceiving a positive return on CoH investments were all associated with businesses' actions taken. Fewer than half of businesses, however, perceived a positive return on their CoH investments. Conclusions: Overall, the private sector is taking steps to foster health and well‐being. However, there remains substantial variation among businesses and opportunity for growth, even among those currently taking the most action. Strengthening the business case for a corporate CoH may increase private sector investments in health and well‐being. Actions taken by individual businesses, business groups, industries, and regulators have the potential to improve corporate engagement and impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Do elections matter for private-sector healthcare management in Brazil? An analysis of municipal health policy.
- Author
-
McGregor, Alecia J., Siqueira, Carlos Eduardo, Zaslavsky, Alan M., and Blendon, Robert J.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,MANAGED care programs ,NONPROFIT sector ,MEDICAL care cost statistics ,CONTRACTING out ,CONTRACTS ,DATABASES ,HEALTH services administration ,METROPOLITAN areas ,PRACTICAL politics ,REGRESSION analysis ,PRIVATE sector ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Background: This study analyzed several political determinants of increased private-sector management in Brazilian health care. In Brazil, the poor depend almost exclusively on the public Unified Health System (the SUS), which remains severely underfunded. Given the overhead costs associated with privately contracted health services, increased private management is one driver of higher expenditures in the system. Although left parties campaign most vocally in support of greater public control of the SUS, the extent to which their stated positions translate into health care policy remains untested.Methods: Drawing on multiple publicly available data sources, we used linear regression to analyze how political party-in-power and existing private sector health care contracting affect the share of privately managed health care services and outsourcing in municipalities. Data from two election periods-2004 to 2008 and 2008 to 2012-were analyzed.Results: Our findings showed that although private sector contracting varies greatly across municipalities, this variation is not systematically associated with political party in power. This suggests that electoral politics plays a relatively minor role in municipal-level health care administration. Existing levels of private sector management appear to have a greater effect on the public-private makeup of the Brazilian healthcare system, suggesting a strong role of path dependence in the evolution of Brazilian health care delivery.Conclusion: Despite campaign rhetoric asserting distinct positions on privatization in the SUS, factors other than political party in power have a greater effect on private-sector health system management at the municipal-level in Brazil. Given the limited effect of elections on this issue, strengthening participatory bodies such as municipal health councils may better enfranchise citizens in the fundamental debate over public and private roles in the health care sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Public and the Gene-Editing Revolution.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J., Gorski, Mary T., and Benson, John M.
- Subjects
- *
GENE therapy , *GENOME editing , *PUBLIC opinion , *PUBLIC health , *INTELLECT , *ENDOWMENT of research , *GENETIC engineering , *GOVERNMENT aid - Abstract
The authors discuss the findings of a study on the opinion of the U.S. public on gene therapy and gene editing in adults and children. The study finds that the public likes the idea of gene editing to improve the health of the person undergoing gene therapy, but opposes to changing human genes before birth to improve intelligence, physical traits or appearance. The authors think that public opinion on gene editing and therapy could change over time as discussions about them continue to evolve.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Threats to polio eradication in high-conflict areas in Pakistan and Nigeria: a polling study of caregivers of children younger than 5 years.
- Author
-
SteelFisher, Gillian K, Blendon, Robert J, Guirguis, Sherine, Brulé, Amanda, Lasala-Blanco, Narayani, Coleman, Michael, Petit, Vincent, Ahmed, Mashrur, Mataruse, Noah, Corkum, Melissa, Nisar, Mazhar, Ben-Porath, Eran N, Gigli, Susan, and Sahm, Christoph
- Subjects
- *
POLIOVIRUS , *ENDEMIC diseases , *VACCINATION , *POLIO prevention , *CAREGIVERS , *HEALTH attitudes , *HEALTH services accessibility , *IMMUNIZATION , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL protocols , *POLIO , *PUBLIC health , *DISEASE eradication - Abstract
Background: Elimination of poliovirus from endemic countries is a crucial step in eradication; however, vaccination programmes in these areas face challenges, especially in regions with conflict. We analysed interviews with caregivers of children living in two polio-endemic countries to assess whether these challenges are largely operational or also driven by resistance or misinformation in the community.Methods: We designed and analysed polls based on face-to-face interviews of a random sample of parents and other caregivers of children younger than 5 years in regions of Pakistan and Nigeria at high risk for polio transmission. In both countries, the sample was drawn via a stratified multistage cluster design with random route household selection. The questionnaire covered awareness, knowledge, and attitudes about polio and oral polio vaccine (OPV), trust in vaccination efforts, and caregiver priorities for government action. We assessed experiences of caregivers in accessible higher-conflict areas and compared their knowledge and attitudes with those in lower-conflict areas. Differences were tested with two-sample t tests.Findings: The poll consisted of 3396 caregivers from Pakistan and 2629 from Nigeria. About a third of caregivers who responded in higher-conflict areas of Pakistan (Federally Administered Tribal Areas [FATA], 30%) and Nigeria (Borno, 33%) were unable to confirm that their child was vaccinated in the previous campaign. In FATA, 12% of caregivers reported that they were unaware of polio, and in Borno 12% of caregivers reported that vaccinators visited but their child did not receive the vaccine or they did not know whether the child was vaccinated. Additionally, caregivers in higher-conflict areas are less likely to hold beliefs about OPV that could motivate acceptance and are more likely to hold concerns than are caregivers in lower-conflict areas.Interpretation: Beyond the difficulties in reaching homes with OPV, challenges for vaccination programmes in higher-conflict areas extend to limited awareness, negative attitudes, and gaps in trust. Vaccination efforts might need to address underlying attitudes of caregivers through direct communications and the selection and training of local vaccinators.Funding: Harvard T H Chan School of Public Health and UNICEF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Adoption of preventive behaviors in response to the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic: a multiethnic perspective.
- Author
-
SteelFisher, Gillian K., Blendon, Robert J., Kang, Minah, Ward, Johanna R. M., Kahn, Emily B., Maddox, Kathryn E.W., Lubell, Keri M., Tucker, Myra, and Ben‐Porath, Eran N.
- Subjects
- *
H1N1 influenza , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *HEALTH & race , *PUBLIC health , *PUBLIC opinion , *SOCIAL status - Abstract
Background As public health leaders prepare for possible future influenza pandemics, the rapid spread of 2009 H1N1 influenza highlights the need to focus on measures the public can adopt to help slow disease transmission. Such measures may relate to hygiene (e.g., hand washing), social distancing (e.g., avoiding places where many people gather), and pharmaceutical interventions (e.g., vaccination). Given the disproportionate impact of public health emergencies on minority communities in the United States, it is important to understand whether there are differences in acceptance across racial/ethnic groups that could lead to targeted and more effective policies and communications. Objectives This study explores racial/ethnic differences in the adoption of preventive behaviors during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic. Patients/Methods Data are from a national telephone poll conducted March 17 to April 11, 2010, among a representative sample of 1123 white, 330 African American, 317 Hispanic, 268 Asian, and 262 American Indian/Alaska Native adults in the USA. Results People in at least one racial/ethnic minority group were more likely than whites to adopt several behaviors related to hygiene, social distancing, and healthcare access, including increased hand washing and talking with a healthcare provider (P-values <0.05). Exceptions included avoiding others with influenza-like illnesses and receiving 2009 H1N1 and seasonal influenza vaccinations. After we controlled the data for socioeconomic status, demographic factors, healthcare access, and illness- and vaccinerelated attitudes, nearly all racial/ethnic differences in behaviors persisted. Conclusions Minority groups appear to be receptive to several preventive behaviors, but barriers to vaccination are more pervasive [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Predicting support for non-pharmaceutical interventions during infectious outbreaks: a four region analysis.
- Author
-
Matthews Pillemer, Francesca, Blendon, Robert J., Zaslavsky, Alan M., and Lee, Bruce Y.
- Subjects
- *
SARS disease , *PUBLIC health , *DISEASE outbreaks , *MINORITIES - Abstract
Non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) are an important public health tool for responding to infectious disease outbreaks, including pandemics. However, little is known about the individual characteristics associated with support for NPIs, or whether they are consistent across regions. This study draws on survey data from four regions-Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, and the United States-collected following the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak of 2002-03, and employs regression techniques to estimate predictors of NPI support. It finds that characteristics associated with NPI support vary widely by region, possibly because of cultural variation and prior experience, and that minority groups tend to be less supportive of NPIs when arrest is the consequence of noncompliance. Prior experience of face-mask usage also results in increased support for future usage, as well as other NPIs. Policymakers should be attentive to local preferences and to the application of compulsory interventions. It is speculated here that some public health interventions may serve as 'gateway' exposures to future public health interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Public response to the 2009 influenza A H1N1 pandemic: a polling study in five countries
- Author
-
SteelFisher, Gillian K, Blendon, Robert J, Ward, Johanna RM, Rapoport, Robyn, Kahn, Emily B, and Kohl, Katrin S
- Subjects
- *
H1N1 influenza , *PANDEMICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *VACCINATION , *PUBLIC health , *QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Summary: Background: Many important strategies to reduce the spread of pandemic influenza need public participation. To assess public receptivity to such strategies, we compared adoption of preventive behaviours in response to the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic among the public in five countries and examined whether certain non-pharmaceutical behaviours (such as handwashing) were deterrents to vaccination. We also assessed public support for related public health recommendations. Methods: We used data from simultaneous telephone polls (mobile telephone and landline) in Argentina, Japan, Mexico, the UK, and the USA. In each country, interviews were done in a nationally representative sample of adults, who were selected by the use of random digit dial techniques. The questionnaire asked people whether or not they had adopted each of various preventive behaviours (non-pharmaceutical—such as personal protective and social distancing behaviour—or vaccinations) to protect themselves or their family from H1N1 at any point during the pandemic. Two-tailed t tests were used for statistical analysis. Findings: 900 people were surveyed in each country except the USA where 911 people were contacted. There were wide differences in the adoption of preventive behaviours between countries, although certain personal protective behaviours (eg, handwashing) were more commonly adopted than social distancing behaviours (eg, avoiding places where many people gather) across countries (53–89%vs 11–69%). These non-pharmaceutical behaviours did not reduce the likelihood of getting vaccinated in any country. There was also support across all countries for government recommendations related to school closure, avoiding places where many people gather, and wearing masks in public. Interpretation: There is a need for country-specific approaches in pandemic policy planning that use both non-pharmaceutical approaches and vaccination. Funding: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Public Health Information Coalition. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Americans' Conflicting Views About The Public Health System, And How To Shore Up Support.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J., Benson, John M., SteelFisher, Gillian K., and Connolly, John M.
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTION of obesity , *CHRONIC diseases , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *COST control , *EMERGENCY management , *FOOD contamination , *IMMUNIZATION , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL protocols , *PRACTICAL politics , *PREVENTIVE health services , *PUBLIC health , *PUBLIC opinion , *SURVEYS , *GOVERNMENT aid , *SCALE items , *SECONDARY analysis , *HEALTH care reform - Abstract
This analysis of national opinion polls shows that a majority of Americans support increased spending on public health in general and that they see public health interventions as saving money in the long term. At the same time, many do not favor increased federal spending in a number of areas that public health officials deem important. In addition, polls show striking partisan differences, with Republicans much less supportive than Democrats of additional spending on public health. This split may have political implications for the public health component of the new health reform law if there is a change in party control of one or more houses of Congress after the November 2010 elections. As a result, in order to sustain public support for increased spending, it will be critically important to give examples of cost savings from public health programs and to highlight how they have reduced mortality from major chronic illnesses, such as cancer, heart disease, and HIV/AIDS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. A Partisan Divide On The Uninsured.
- Author
-
Oakman, Tara Sussman, Blendon, Robert J., Campbell, Andrea L., Zaslavsky, Alan M., and Benson, John M.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH care reform , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICALLY uninsured persons , *PUBLIC health , *REPUBLICANS , *DEMOCRATS (United States) , *HOSPITALS , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
The partisan split in Congress over health reform may reflect a broader divide among the public in attitudes toward the uninsured. Despite expert consensus over the harms suffered by the uninsured as a group, Americans disagree over whether the uninsured get the care they need and whether reform legislation providing universal coverage is necessary. We examined public perceptions of health care access and quality for the uninsured over time, and we found that Democrats are far more likely than Republicans to believe that the uninsured have difficulty gaining access to care. Senior citizens are less aware than others of the problems faced by the uninsured. Even among those Americans who perceive that the uninsured have poor access to care, Republicans are significantly less likely than Democrats to support reform. Thus, our findings indicate that even if political obstacles are overcome and health reform is enacted, future political support for ongoing financing to cover the uninsured could be uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The role of tobacco-specific media exposure, knowledge, and smoking status on selected attitudes toward tobacco control.
- Author
-
Blake, Kelly D., Viswanath, K., Blendon, Robert J., and Vallone, Donna
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,HEALTH programs ,HEALTH promotion ,CANCER prevention ,SMOKING laws - Abstract
Background:: In August 2007, the President’s Cancer Panel urged the leadership of the nation to “summon the political will to address the public health crisis caused by tobacco use” (President’s Cancer Panel, N, 2007, Promoting healthy lifestyles: Policy, program, and personal recommendations for reducing cancer risk. http://deainfo.nci.nih.gov/advisory/pcp/pcp07rpt/pcp07rpt.pdf). While some research has examined predictors of public support for tobacco control measures, little research has examined modifiable factors that may influence public attitudes toward tobacco control. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Will Americans Support The Individual Mandate?
- Author
-
Sussman, Tara, Blendon, Robert J., and Campbell, Andrea Louise
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *HEALTH attitudes , *PUBLIC health , *HEALTH insurance , *INSURANCE companies , *PUBLIC opinion , *MULTIPLE-line insurance ,INSURANCE plans - Abstract
An individual mandate is an important feature of many recent plans to achieve universal health insurance coverage in the United States, without radically changing the way most Americans get health care and coverage. Using national public opinion data, we find that on its own, an individual mandate does not have broad support across partisan and sociodemographic groups. Policymakers who choose to pursue an individual mandate for policy reasons may expand the base of supporters by incorporating it into a "shared- responsibility" plan that includes requirements for employers, government, and insurers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Public Response to Community Mitigation Measures for Pandemic Influenza.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J., Koonin, Lisa M., Benson, John M., Cetron, Martin S., Pollard, William E., Mitchell, Elizabeth W., Weldon, Kathleen J., and Herrmann, Melissa J.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health , *COMMUNITY health services , *PANDEMICS , *INFLUENZA , *MINORITIES , *HEALTH & race - Abstract
We report the results of a national survey conducted to help public health officials understand the public's response to community mitigation interventions for a severe outbreak of pandemic influenza. Survey results suggest that if community mitigation measures are instituted, most respondents would comply with recommendations but would be challenged to do so if their income or job were severely compromised. The results also indicate that community mitigation measures could cause problems for persons with lower incomes and for racial and ethnic minorities. Twenty-four percent of respondents said that they would not have anyone available to take care of them if they became sick with pandemic influenza. Given these results, planning and public engagement will be needed to encourage the public to be prepared. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Attitudes Toward The Use Of Quarantine In A Public Health Emergency In Four Countries.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J., Desroches, Catherine M., Cetron, Martin S., Benson, John M., Meinhardt, Theodore, and Pollard, William
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICABLE diseases , *QUARANTINE , *ISOLATION (Hospital care) , *PUBLIC health , *EPIDEMICS , *HEALTH - Abstract
Countries worldwide face the threat of emerging infectious diseases. To understand the public's reaction to the use of widespread quarantine should such an outbreak occur, the Harvard School of Public Health, with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, undertook a survey of residents of Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, and the United States. A sizable proportion of the public in each country opposed compulsory quarantine. Respondents were concerned about overcrowding, infection, and inability to communicate with family members while in quarantine. Officials will need specific plans to deal with the public's concerns about compulsory quarantine policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Experiences of Hurricane Katrina Evacuees in Houston Shelters: Implications for Future Planning.
- Author
-
Brodie, Mollyann, Weltzien, Erin, Altman, Drew, Blendon, Robert J., and Benson, John M.
- Subjects
HURRICANE Katrina, 2005 ,EMERGENCY management ,CRISIS management in government ,PUBLIC health ,DISASTER relief policy ,DISASTER relief ,DISASTER victims ,PHYSIOLOGICAL stress ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Objectives. To shed light on how the public health community can promote the recovery of Hurricane Katrina victims and protect people in future disasters, we examined the experiences of evacuees housed in Houston area shelters 2 weeks after the hurricane. Methods. A survey was conducted September 10 through 12, 2005, with 680 randomly selected respondents who were evacuated to Houston from the Gulf Coast as a result of Hurricane Katrina. Interviews were conducted in Red Cross shelters in the greater Houston area. Results. Many evacuees suffered physical and emotional stress during the storm and its aftermath, including going without adequate food and water, in comparison with New Orleans and Louisiana residents overall, disproportionate numbers of this group were African American, had low incomes, and had no health insurance coverage. Many had chronic health conditions and relied heavily on the New Orleans public hospital system, which was destroyed in the storm. Conclusions. Our results highlight the need for better plans for emergency communication and evacuation of low-income and disabled citizens in future disasters and shed light on choices facing policymakers in planning for the long-term health care needs of vulnerable populations. (Am J Public Health. 2006;96: 1402-1408. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2005.084475) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Understanding The American Public's Health Priorities: A 2006 Perspective.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J., Hunt, Kelly, Benson, John M., Fleischfresser, Channtal, and Buhr, Tami
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL care costs , *ELECTRONIC data processing , *MEDICAL records , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Opinion surveys conducted in 2006 show that health care is an important but second-tier issue in terms of priorities for government action. Americans' top health care concerns are mostly related to economic insecurity: rising costs and the problems of the uninsured. The biggest perceived health threats are cancer, HIV/AIDS, and avian flu. Although most Americans do not think that the health system is in crisis, the public remains dissatisfied with both the country's health care and public health systems. These attitudes are likely to create a climate that is supportive of increased health spending and substantial policy changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Health News and the American Public, 1996--2002.
- Author
-
Brodie, Mollyann, Hamel, Elizabeth C., Altman, Drew E., Blendon, Robert J., and Benson, John M.
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
The Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard School of Public Health Health News Index, a series of 39 surveys with a total of over 42,000 respondents from 1996 through 2002, measures how closely Americans follow major health stories in the news and what they understand about the issues covered in those stories. On aver- age, four in ten adults reported following health news stories closely. The public reports paying the most attention to stories about public health, followed by health policy and disease-related stories. While knowledge about health news varies, individuals who follow health news stories closely are significantly more likely to give the correct answer to knowledge questions about those stories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Public Versus The World Health Organization On Health System Performance.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J., Kim, Minah, and Benson, John M.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health - Abstract
Compares World Health Organization (WHO) rankings for seventeen industrialized countries with the perceptions of their citizens on health systems. Methodological approaches used by WHO; Concern on how well people of varying economic status are served by their health systems.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Problems of Cost, Access, and Distribution of Medical Care.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,HUMAN services - Abstract
Examines the problems of cost, access and distribution of medical care in the U.S. Role of the government in addressing these problems; Principal unwanted side effect of making widespread health insurance available; Factor influencing the development of a highly complex health-care system in the country.
- Published
- 1986
23. One Academic's Perspective On The Role Of Health Affairs.
- Author
-
Blendon, Robert J.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH planning , *HEALTH services administration , *HEALTH policy , *HEALTH reformers , *HEALTH care reform , *PUBLIC health personnel , *POLICY analysis , *SOCIAL sciences , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Over the past twenty-five years, Health Affairs has become a visibly important source of information for policymakers. In addition, academic readers of Health Affairs have learned that the real world of policy making is complex; rarely involves decisions based on the thinking of a single discipline; and includes political, historical, and administrative factors in its outcome. Health Affairs has also made members of the academic community more appreciative of interdisciplinary work and more aware of other factors, such as health politics, that need to be addressed if their research is to be meaningful to decision- makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Religion, Parties, and Policymaking: Health Policy Debates in the United States and Brazil
- Author
-
McGregor, Alecia J. and Blendon, Robert J.
- Subjects
Public policy ,Public health ,Political Science ,Brazil ,Crack ,Evangelicals ,Politics ,Religion ,SUS - Abstract
This dissertation examines the role of religion, political parties, and strategic alliances in three contemporary health policy debates in the United States and Brazil.
- Published
- 2014
25. The Fourth Branch of Government: The Role of Interest Groups, the Media, and Political Advertisements in Contemporary Health Policy Debates
- Author
-
Rabinowitz, Aaron and Blendon, Robert J.
- Subjects
public policy ,public health ,advertisements ,health care ,interest groups ,media ,public opinion - Abstract
The first part of this dissertation explores whether interest group-sponsored political advertising campaigns influence how journalists frame health policy debates. The paper employs propensity score matching techniques, media content analysis and a modified version of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index to discern whether a prodigious and concentrated advertising campaign that aired during the health care reform debate under President Obama influenced newspaper coverage of the Affordable Care Act in markets that were exposed to the advertisements. The second part of the dissertation investigates public attitudes toward the various groups in the health care industry. It leverages data from an extensive public opinion survey conducted during the health care reform debate under President Obama, and employs survey weighted ordinal logistic regression models to understand public trust and confidence in a broad spectrum of interest groups, ranging from the American Medical Association to Blue Cross/Blue Shield to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The findings are particularly important and timely as the implementation battles surrounding the Affordable Care Act begin because citizens frequently take cues from interest group leaders to make sense of the political world, and public opinion frequently depends on how elites frame a particular issue. The final portion of the dissertation compares and evaluates several competing policy options designed to promote viewpoint diversity in extant policy debates. Several evaluative criteria are developed and applied to existing regulatory approaches to improving viewpoint diversity, and a novel approach is offered to better serve this ideal. Specifically, I propose a "marketplace of ideas tax" that would be levied on all political advertisements to endow a "marketplace of ideas trust fund," which would then be used to subsidize speech from underrepresented viewpoints. This approach leverages insights garnered from models of political learning and social science research concerning the role of political advertisements in contemporary health policy debates.
- Published
- 2012
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.