How much responsibility for providing health care to the poor
should be devolved from the federal government to the states? Any
answer to this critical policy question requires a careful
assessment of the Medicaid program. Drawing on the insights of
leading scholars and top state health care officials, this volume
analyzes the policy and management implications of various options
for Medicaid devolution. Proponents of devolution typically express
confidence that states can meet the challenges it will pose for
them. But, as this book shows, the degree to which states have the
capacity and commitment to use enhanced discretion to sustain or
improve health care for the poor remains an open question. Their
failure to attend to issues of politics, implementation, and
management could lead to disappointment. Chapters focus on such
topics as Medicaid financing, benefits and beneficiaries, long-term
care, managed care, safety net providers, and the appropriate
division of labor between the federal government and the states.
The contributors are Donald Boyd, Center for the Study of the
States; Lawrence D. Brown, Columbia University; James R. Fossett,
Rockefeller College; Richard P. Nathan, Nelson A. Rockefeller
Institute of Government, State University of New York, Albany;
Michael Sparer, Columbia University; James Tallon, United Hospital
Fund; and Joshua M. Weiner, the Urban Institute.
General
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