Healthcare Today Legal and Political Issues

What is Health Policy and Why Does it Matter To Me as a Patient?


Author:

Ann Carroll, PhD

New York State Task Force on Life and the Law

Medically Reviewed On: March 31, 2006

Introduction
What is Health Policy
Setting the Stage: The United States' Health Care System
How Health Care is Organized
Paying for Health Care: Insurance
Health Care Policy: Who Makes It, Who is Affected?
The Policy Process: How Are Health Policy Decisions Made?
Health Policy in Action: Banning “Drive-Through Deliveries”
Health Policy Issues Today and How They Affect You
 
 

Introduction

I’m healthy now, but what if I get sick? Will I have a choice of doctors and treatment plans? Will I be able to afford care?

What about my parents, who are retired? They have Medicare, but they have a tough time paying for prescription drugs. What happens if one of them gets really sick and needs to go into a nursing home?

How can I be sure about the quality of care in my local hospital?

I have a strong family history of breast cancer, and my doctor says I should consider a genetic test. But who has access to my test results, and, if I test positive, who gets to see my results? Will that affect my health insurance?
 

These questions, and others like them, are asked by millions of Americans who have watched the changing health care scene over the last decade. The answers influence the lives and well being of health care consumers and patients. We are all affected by critical health care decisions, policies, and plans that are made by the government, by employers, by health care professionals, and by private health care businesses. As a consumer, you too have an important role in determining health policy.
 

What Is Health Policy?

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