Description
This AJN award-winning textbook helps readers understand and critically assess the U.S. health care system and policies. With a focus on the prevalence of disparities in health and health care, the book reviews the historical evolution and organization of our health care system. Several social justice theories are used to critically evaluate current U.S. health care systems and policies, providing readers with various perspectives of the field. Extensive coverage of our health care system's structures, finances, and performance on a variety of population health indicators provides the necessary background, frameworks, and principles through which the adequacy of alternative health care system financing strategies can be analyzed.
Highlights include:
- Analyzes the current U.S. health care system and policies from several social justice theories, providing a critical examination of the field.
- Examines the historical evolvement of the U.S. health care system, its financing and health care delivery structures, and the prospects for health care reform.
- Analyzes disparities in access to health and health care by race, ethnicity, class, age, gender, and geography.
- Compares the U.S. health care system with that of other democracies, providing a unique comparative perspective.
New to This Edition:
- Revised chapter on health care reform that considers the 2016 election and anticipated changes to the Affordable Care Act.
- Provides the latest information on the financing and organization of the U.S. health care system.
- Examines the nation's health care needs, the prevalence of health and health care disparities, and the latest theories that explain the causal origins of health and health care disparities.
- Addresses the latest developments in health care policy domains such as long-term care, end-of-life care, and initiatives to reduce disparities in health.
- Updated data on long-term financing and expenditures including baby boomers' increased demand for long-term services and expanded entitlements for the disabled.
- Updated instructor's resources include for each chapter: chapter synopsis and learning objectives, ideas worth grasping, key terms and concepts, discussion questions, and writing assignments.
This book is an ideal text for graduate courses in health care policy or disparities in the U.S. health care system in schools of social work, public health, nursing, medicine, and public policy and administration.
About the Author
Almgren, Gunnar: -
Gunnar Almgren, PhD, is Professor of Social Work and Social Welfare at the University of Washington, Seattle Campus. Prior to that, he was a social work practitioner and administrator in not-for-profit and public health care systems for 15 years. His teaching and research interests include health care policy, social welfare policy, poverty and inequality, safety-net health care systems, and the determinants of disparities in health and in health care. He is also the co-author of The Safety-Net Health Care System: Health Care at the Margins (Springer Publishing, 2012).
Wishlist
Wishlist is empty.
Compare
Shopping cart