HSOC1411 - American Health Policy

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
202
Title (text only)
American Health Policy
Term
2024C
Subject area
HSOC
Section number only
202
Section ID
HSOC1411202
Course number integer
1411
Meeting times
F 12:00 PM-12:59 PM
Meeting location
LERN 210
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Caroline Wechsler
Description
"American Health Policy" places the success or failure of specific pieces of U.S. health care legislation into social and political context. The course covers the time period from the U.S. Civil War to the 2010 Affordable Care Act (ACA), addressing two central questions: 1) Why was the United States one of the only industrialized nations to, until recently, have a private, non-nationalized, non-federalized health care system? 2) Why has U.S. health insurance historically been a benefit given through places of employment? Some topics addressed include: private health insurance, industrial health and workmen's compensation, the welfare state (in Europe, Canada, and the U.S.), maternal and infant care programs, Medicare and Medicaid. One of the main take-home messages of the course is that 20th-century U.S. health care policies both reflected and shaped American social relations based on race, class, gender, and age. This course is a combination lecture and "SAIL" class. SAIL stands for "Structured, Active, In-Class Learning." During many class periods, students will work in small groups on a specific exercise, followed by a large group discussion and/or brief lecture. Students who choose to take this course, therefore, must be fully committed to adequately preparing for class and to working collaboratively in class.
Course number only
1411
Use local description
No