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9780300120912

Origins of American Health Insurance : A History of Industrial Sickness Funds

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780300120912

  • ISBN10:

    0300120915

  • Format: Trade Book
  • Copyright: 2007-11-13
  • Publisher: Yale University Press

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Summary

How did the United States come to have its distinctive workplace-based health insurance system? Why did Progressive initiatives to establish a government system fail? This book explores the history of health insurance in the United States from its roots in the nineteenth-century sickness funds offered by industrial employers, fraternal organizations, and labor unions to the rise of such group plans as Blue Cross and Blue Shield in the mid-twentieth century. Historians generally view the failure to establish universal health insurance during the first half of the twentieth century as an indicator of the political clout of insurers, employers, unions, and physicians who thwarted Progressive efforts. But the explanation is actually simpler, John Murray contends in this book. Careful analysis of the workings of industrial sickness funds suggests that workers rejected plans for compulsory state insurance because they were largely content with existing private plans. Murray revises our understanding of the evolution of health care insurance in the United States and discusses the implications of that history for the ongoing debates of today.

Author Biography

John E. Murray is professor of economics, University of Toledo. He lives in Toledo, OH.

Table of Contents

Prefacep. xi
Sickness Funds in the Progressive Era
Industrial Sickness Fundsp. 3
Political Economy of Progressive-Era Sickness Insurancep. 16
Progressive Ideals: Private and Public Insurance in Europep. 38
Rise and Operation
The Rise of Sickness Fundsp. 65
How Establishment Funds Workedp. 92
How Labor Union Funds Workedp. 123
Workers' Decisions to Save or Buy Insurancep. 145
Workers' Decisions to Work or Stay Home Sickp. 169
Innovation and Decline
Insured Workers' Health in the Great Depressionp. 203
Actuarial Science and the Decline of Sickness Fundsp. 218
Succession in the Forest of Health Care Reformp. 237
Data Sourcesp. 249
Additional Regressions for Chapter 7p. 252
Notesp. 259
Bibliographyp. 289
Indexp. 305
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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