Vladeck B C
Am J Public Health. 1977 Jan;67(1):23-9. doi: 10.2105/ajph.67.1.23.
Examination of the provisions of the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act, P.L. 93-641, concerning the composition of Health Systems Agencies, which are to be the primary building-blocks of local health planning, suggests that expectations of substantial change may be unrealistic. Specifically, in its provision for representation on the HSAs, Congress appears to have been accepting an implicit theory of pluralist interest-group representation that has long been prevalent in other sectors of public life in the United States, and long subject to significant criticism. Such forms of representation tend to lead to bargaining, log-rolling, and collusive competition among narrowly-defined special interests, with the interests of the broader general public less well-served. The application of this theory to health planning in P.L. 93-641 is examined, and predictions drawn about the implications of this analysis for health planning and health policy in the United States in general.
对《第93 - 641号公法:国家卫生规划与资源开发法案》中有关卫生系统机构组成的条款进行审查后发现,这些机构本应是地方卫生规划的主要基石,但期望出现重大变革可能并不现实。具体而言,在关于卫生系统机构代表权的规定中,国会似乎接受了一种隐含的多元主义利益集团代表理论,这种理论在美国公共生活的其他领域长期盛行,且长期受到重大批评。这种代表形式往往会导致狭义定义的特殊利益集团之间的讨价还价、互投赞成票和勾结性竞争,而更广泛公众的利益则得不到很好的保障。本文将研究该理论在《第93 - 641号公法》中对卫生规划的应用,并总体上对这一分析对美国卫生规划和卫生政策的影响进行预测。