The House of Falk: the paranoid style in American health politics.
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 87 (11) , 1836-1843
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.87.11.1836
Abstract
The onset of the Cold War had a blighting effect on the campaign for a national health insurance program in the United States. In the highly charged atmosphere of the late 1940s, proponents of social insurance spent considerable time and energy denying that they were agents of foreign powers. In one widely promoted conspiratorial formulation, some on the right traced the origins of subversion not only to Moscow but also to Geneva, Switzerland, home of the International Labor Organization. In the fractiously partisan context of the period, conservative political leaders amplified concerns over disloyal bureaucrats' manipulating the levers of legislative politics as well as the design of health policy. One federal official in particular, I. S. Falk, became the object of outright demonization. The paranoid attacks took their toll on the drive to extend social protection. The reformers' difficulties suggest the limitations of heavy dependence on bureaucratic expertise in the pursuit of health security.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health Care Reform Stages a Comeback in MassachusettsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- “Medical McCarthyism”: The Physicians Forum and the Cold WarJournal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 1994
- Radiolabeled antibody therapy of lymphomaPublished by Springer Nature ,1993
- The Fat Kid on the Seesaw: American Business and Health Care Cost Containment, 1970-1990Annual Review of Public Health, 1991
- I.S. Falk, the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care, and the Drive for National Health Insurance.American Journal of Public Health, 1985
- Americanism versus sovietism: a study of the reaction to the committee on the costs of medical care.1979