Sardell A, Johnson K
Queens College, City University of New York, USA.
Milbank Q. 1998;76(2):175-205. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.00086.
The Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) program, which was designed to ensure that Medicaid-eligible children receive comprehensive health services, is the only national attempt to provide a right to these services. The political factors that have shaped national EPSDT policy during the past decade are described, based on a conceptual framework developed by John W. Kingdon. The analysis focuses on the roles of two distinct sets of policy entrepreneurs: child health advocates and fiscally conservative governors. Their activities are described in relation to the larger political environment, or "political stream," from the period of the expansion of Medicaid eligibility for pregnant women and children in the late 1980s to the enactment of a new State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) in 1997. The relative saliency of eligibility and benefit issues in children's health policies had a major influence on the politics and outcomes.
早期定期筛查、诊断与治疗(EPSDT)项目旨在确保符合医疗补助条件的儿童获得全面的健康服务,这是唯一一项在全国范围内保障这些服务权利的举措。基于约翰·W·金登提出的概念框架,本文描述了过去十年间塑造全国EPSDT政策的政治因素。分析聚焦于两类不同的政策倡导者的作用:儿童健康倡导者和财政保守派州长。文章描述了他们在从20世纪80年代末孕妇和儿童医疗补助资格扩大时期到1997年新的儿童健康保险计划(SCHIP)颁布这一更大的政治环境,即“政治潮流”中的活动。儿童健康政策中资格与福利问题的相对突出性对政治和结果产生了重大影响。