What are Employers?
This type of advocacy attempts to solve one person, family or community's problem at a time.
What is Case Advocacy?
This act mandated ingredient disclosure which eliminated misleading health claims in many cases and set standards for drug purity and equity.
What is the Pure Food and Drug Act?
This stage of the policy development process is often underfunded, but is considered essential to effective policy making.
What is Policy Evaluation & Modification?
On a stakeholder heat map, this is identified as the X-axis.
What is Interest?
This stakeholder wants fair reimbursement, manageable workloads, and professional autonomy.
What are Providers?
Policy advocacy can solve problems for this size of population.
What are large populations?
This act strengthened patient confidence in the healthcare system and enforced strict rules to protect personal health information (PHI).
What is the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)?
This stage of the policy development process involves interpretation, detailed regulation, and enforcement.
What is policy implementation?
As a result of this act, patients (stakeholders) may have said, "We finally have a hospital nearby!"
What is the Hill-Burton Act?
This stakeholder group is most directly impacted financially by lower negotiated drug prices.
Pharmaceutical and Medical Device Companies
Formal policy mechanisms, such as laws or government regulations, are a key part of this type of advocacy.
What is Policy Advocacy?
This act was heavily supported by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal Coalition. While this act did not create health insurance, it laid the foundation for future health programs, such as Medicare and Medicaid.
What is the Social Security Act?
During this stage, lawmakers, think tanks, interest groups, and experts all propose solutions - this is where ideas get turned into proposals.
What is Policy Formulation?
On a stakeholder heat map, this is identified as the Y-axis.
What is Power/Influence?
This stakeholder group will benefit most from lower out-of-pocket costs for medications.
What are patients/consumers?
Advocacy comes from a term in Ancient Rome used to describe people who did this.
What is championed or defended others?
What is the Occupational Safety and Health Act?
What is policy adoption?
In health policy, there is a classic tension between these two things:
Stakeholders found in Quadrant I on a Stakeholder Heat Map are known as this:
What are Key Stakeholders?
What is Issue Advocacy?
This act was known as the "Anti-Dumping Law" which prevents hospitals from denying or limiting treatment to people who are unable to pay or don't have insurance. This act also covers pregnant women who are in active labor.
What is the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act?
This stage of the policy development process is influenced most by media coverage, public opinion, interest groups and crises.
As a result of this act, providers may have said, "More patients are insured, but our administrative complexities have risen substantially."
What is the Affordable Care Act?