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Private Power in Public Programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and the Structural Power of Private Insurance
by
Kelly, Andrew S.
in
Beneficiaries
/ Bipartisanship
/ Delegation
/ Economic growth
/ Enrollments
/ Health care industry
/ Health care policy
/ Health insurance
/ Health services
/ Influence
/ Insurance companies
/ Insurance coverage
/ Insurance industry
/ Managed care
/ Market forces
/ Medicaid
/ Medicare
/ Political economy
/ Political power
/ Politics
/ Power
/ Public health
/ Reforms
/ Social policy
/ Social programs
/ Social theories
/ State government
/ State power
/ Transformation
2023
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Private Power in Public Programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and the Structural Power of Private Insurance
by
Kelly, Andrew S.
in
Beneficiaries
/ Bipartisanship
/ Delegation
/ Economic growth
/ Enrollments
/ Health care industry
/ Health care policy
/ Health insurance
/ Health services
/ Influence
/ Insurance companies
/ Insurance coverage
/ Insurance industry
/ Managed care
/ Market forces
/ Medicaid
/ Medicare
/ Political economy
/ Political power
/ Politics
/ Power
/ Public health
/ Reforms
/ Social policy
/ Social programs
/ Social theories
/ State government
/ State power
/ Transformation
2023
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Private Power in Public Programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and the Structural Power of Private Insurance
by
Kelly, Andrew S.
in
Beneficiaries
/ Bipartisanship
/ Delegation
/ Economic growth
/ Enrollments
/ Health care industry
/ Health care policy
/ Health insurance
/ Health services
/ Influence
/ Insurance companies
/ Insurance coverage
/ Insurance industry
/ Managed care
/ Market forces
/ Medicaid
/ Medicare
/ Political economy
/ Political power
/ Politics
/ Power
/ Public health
/ Reforms
/ Social policy
/ Social programs
/ Social theories
/ State government
/ State power
/ Transformation
2023
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Private Power in Public Programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and the Structural Power of Private Insurance
Journal Article
Private Power in Public Programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and the Structural Power of Private Insurance
2023
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Overview
In 2019, nearly 70 percent of Medicaid beneficiaries received their health insurance coverage through a private, managed care organization (MCO). Twenty-five years earlier, 9.5 percent of Medicaid beneficiaries were enrolled in MCOs. This dramatic growth in Medicaid managed care enrollment represents the delegation of significant power by federal and state governments over a critical social program to private actors and market forces. Medicare, too, experienced a similar pattern of transformation. Together, Medicaid and Medicare, two critical pillars of American social policy, paid more than half a trillion dollars to private insurance companies in 2019 to provide public health insurance to 75 million people. This manuscript examines the policy consequences of building private firms directly into the structure of American social policies. In contrast to existing work on “submerged” or “delegated” policies, this manuscript highlights the structural power that such policies bestow on the government's private partners and develops a new theory of structural power in which firms are able to constrain health policy reform through their threats to disrupt the delivery of public policies and social benefits to millions of people across the United States.
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