In this Issue
A leading journal in its field, and the primary source of communication across the many disciplines it serves, the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law focuses on the initiation, formulation, and implementation of health policy and analyzes the relations between government and health--past, present, and future.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 24, Number 5, October 1999Table of Contents
- Populists in a Global Market
- pp. 887-895
- Why Liberals Should Embrace Managed Care
- pp. 911-919
- Adverse Consequences of Adverse Selection
- pp. 921-930
- Employer Decisions and the Seeds of Backlash
- pp. 941-947
- Managed Care as Victim or Villain?
- pp. 949-956
- ISO Quick Fix, Free Lunch, and Share of Pie
- pp. 973-983
- Changing Perceptions, Changing Reality
- pp. 985-992
- Choice, Trust, and Two Models of Quality
- pp. 993-999
- The View from Communities
- pp. 1005-1013
- What's behind the Public's Backlash?
- pp. 1015-1019
- The Misleading Language of Managed Care
- pp. 1033-1043
- The Who, What, and How of Managed Care
- pp. 1045-1049
- Can Public Policy Fix What Ails Managed Care?
- pp. 1051-1060
- Managed Care at the Millennium: Scenes from a Maul
- pp. 1061-1070
- Finding "Truth" in Managed Care
- pp. 1077-1093
- The View from the Health Plan Trenches
- pp. 1095-1098
- A Balanced Framework for Change
- pp. 1107-1114
- Backlash as Prelude to Managing Managed Care
- pp. 1115-1126
- Can the Market Ensure Quality without Government?
- pp. 1127-1135
- Why We Need a Patients' Bill of Rights
- pp. 1137-1144
- Back-Off Not Backlash in Medicaid Managed Care
- pp. 1159-1172
- The Poor and Managed Care in the Oregon Experience
- pp. 1173-1184
- The Death of Managed Care as We Know It
- pp. 1201-1205
- Managed Care's Fifteen Minutes of Fame
- pp. 1207-1211
- Managed Care and the Second Great Transformation
- pp. 1213-1218
- News from Affiliated Organizations
- pp. 1259-1264
- Books Received
- pp. 1245-1247
- News and Notes
- pp. 1249-1264
- Contributors
- pp. 1265-1273