Jaap Kooijman

UvA

… And the Pursuit of National Health

Why is there no national health insurance in the United States of America? This question became popular again when President Bill Clinton’s Health Security Plan of 1993 proved to be a failure. Throughout the twentieth century, every attempt to enact a national health insurance program failed. The majority of the working population is covered by private, employer-based health insurance, the elderly and the welfare poor by the government programs Medicare and Medicaid of 1965, while a growing number of Americans remain uninsured. This study focuses on two important decisions that have shaped American health care policy: the exclusion of national health insurance from the Social Security Act of 1935 and the shift of focus from a health insurance program for the working population to a hospital insurance program for the elderly and the welfare poor. Based on presidential archives and the papers of social security policymakers, this study examines the incremental strategy to achieve health insurance coverage for all Americans. The result is a compelling history of political compromise that will be of interest to both the scholars of the welfare state and the scholars of American ideology and exceptionalism.

Cover text of Jaap Kooijman, … And the Pursuit of National Health: The Incremental Strategy Toward National Health Insurance in the United States of America, Amsterdam/Atlanta: Rodopi, 1999.

Reviews

  • Georgina Feldberg in The American Historical Review 106:2 (April 2001): 611.
  • Jill Quadagno in American Studies 42:1 (Spring 2001): 218.
  • Gerard F. Anderson and Peter Sotir Hussey in The Bulletin of the History of Medicine 74:4 (2000): 868-870.
  • Alan Derickson in Labor History 41:3 (August 2000): 372-373.
  • Bart Tromp in Het Parool (22 September 1999), in Dutch.
  • Larry DeWitt, historian of the Social Security Administration, editorial review, 1999.
    “This book is well-researched and written and is a good overview of the development of public health insurance from the turn of the century through the Clinton adminstration’s health care proposals. It is especially noteworthy for its history of the health insurance issue during the work of the 1934-35 Committee on Economic Security.”