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Public Policy &
Aging E-Newsletter
Volume 1, Number 2, March 2007
This bimonthly e-newsletter highlights key developments
and viewpoints in the field of aging policy from a wide variety
of sources, including articles and reports circulating in the media,
academy, think tanks, private sector, government and nonprofit organizations.
The goal of this email publication is to reach teachers, students,
and citizens interested in aging-related issues, especially those
who may not have access to policy information disseminated both
in Washington and around the country.
I. WHATS HAPPENING IN WASHINGTON?
A. The Presidents Plan for Health Care Reform: Click here
to view a fact sheet summary of the Presidents plan for affordable,
accessible, and flexible health coverage.
B. The Presidents FY 2008 Budget Proposal: Click here
to view excerpts from the budget highlighting key Medicare, Medicaid,
and Older Americans Act proposed spending levels.
C. Health Coverage Coalition for the Uninsured: A new coalition
of the largest physician, hospital, business, insurance, pharmaceutical,
and consumer organizations in the U.S. has announced a historic
agreement to work together to expand health coverage for the uninsured.
Click here
to learn more.
II. WHATS HAPPENING AROUND THE COUNTRY?
A. State of the States 2007: This new report from AcademyHealth
offers a nationwide review of the state-based health care reform
movement. Click here
to view.
B. Health Care for America: Click here
to read Jacob Hackers proposal for guaranteed, affordable
health care for all Americans building on Medicare and employment-based
insurance (from the Economic Policy Institutes Agenda
for Shared Prosperity initiative).
C. California Governors Health Care Proposal: Click here
to view Governor Arnold Schwarzeneggers vision for health
reform.
III. THIS ISSUE'S MAJOR POLICY STORY: HEALTH CARE REFORM
Historians of aging-related policymaking make better Monday morning
quarterbacks than political and social forecasters. But the historical
moment seems right for lawmakers and informed citizens to re-consider
the century-long quest for a universal health-insurance initiative.
It is likely that we will reform programs at the state and national
level already in place. To this end, I have read several books that
deepened my understanding of the complexities of the situation.
I recommend some to you and to your students:
1. Jill Quadagno, One Nation, Uninsured: Why the U.S. Has No
National Health Insurance (Oxford University paperback, 2006).
Glum but balanced, Quadagno thinks that politics since the Progressive
era has made it difficult to implement comprehensive coverage.
2. James A. Morone and Lawrence R. Jacobs, Healthy, Wealthy,
& Fair: Health Care and the Good Society (Oxford University,
2005). A cogent and lucid case for why the U.S. needs national health
insurance.
3. David Mechanic, Lynn B. Rogut, and David C. Colby, eds., Policy
Challenges in Modern Health Care (Rutgers University, 2005).
Twenty five experts grapple with a wide range of issues, including
the nursing shortage, rationing, and insurance gaps especially among
the disadvantaged.
4. Michael E. Porter and Elizabeth Olsted Teisberg, Redefining
Health Care: Creating Value Based Competition on Results (Harvard
Business School, 2006). The authors propose ways to allocate resources
based on patient value over the cycle of care.
Andy Achenbaum
IV. WORTH NOTING
A. Retirement Policy by the Numbers: Click here
to view a series of charts prepared by The Urban Institute that
address trends in labor force participation rates, potential consequences
of an aging workforce, and the difficulties and benefits of working
longer. (Click here for a link to download the underlying data)
B. Data Sources on Older Americans: Click here
to view a summary of government-sponsored surveys and products containing
statistical information about the older population compiled by the
Federal Inter-Agency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics.
C. National Clearinghouse for Long-Term Care Information: Click
here
to view a new web site developed by the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services to provide information and resources to help
individuals and their families plan for future long-term care (LTC)
needs.
V. WHAT'S HAPPENING ABROAD?
A. Accounting for the Cost of Health Care in the United States:
This new report from the McKinsey Global Institute examines why
the United States spends approximately $480 billion ($1,600 per
capita) more on health care than other OECD countries, and considers
potential strategies for health care reform in the U.S. Click here
to view. (access requires site registrationfreeand includes
interactive graphic overview of the report)
B. United Nations Economic and Social Council: Click here
to view the Report of the Secretary General on Major Developments
in the Area of Ageing since the 2002 Second World Assembly on Ageing.
VI. PERSPECTIVES ON POLICY: ROB HUDSON, EDITOR, PP&AR
At a time when many Americans are alleged to have become increasingly
isolated and apathetic, a "new" senior population is emerging,
one marked by better health, vast experience, and expressing widespread
distain toward joining "a reserve army of the leisured."
Rather than being identified with the "deficit model of aging,"
which centers on needs and benefits, the recent civic engagement
movement sees older adults as a population fully capable of being
productive and contributing to American life.
The current issue of Public Policy & Aging Report explores
the promise of senior participation while also acknowledging its
potential pitfalls. Sabrina Reilly from the National Council on
Aging, together with excerpts from a new Senior Service America
report, provides front-line perspectives on how older Americans
are meaningfully engaging in community activities. Andy Achenbaum
places civic engagement in an historical context, discussing how
organizations like Civic Ventures can and do build on those historical
concerns. I contribute a political analysis, noting how commentators
on the right and left view elders' civic engagement and the larger
purposes it might serve. Finally, Martha Holstein outlines the collective
fate that might befall older people - women in particular - should
the civic engagement mantra redefine the social and economic place
of elders in American life.
To purchase the current issue of PP&AR, or to subscribe, click
here.
The Public
Policy & Aging E-Newsletter is a free bimonthly email publication.
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Newsletter Editors: Ellyn Emsley and Greg O'Neill, National Academy
on an Aging Society; Andy Achenbaum, University of Houston.
The Public Policy and Aging E-Newsletter is supported in part
by a grant from the AARP Office of Academic Affairs.
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