The New England Journal of Medicine
e-mail icon  FREE NEJM E-TOC    HOME   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   CURRENT ISSUE   |   PAST ISSUES   |   COLLECTIONS   |    Advanced Search
Sign in | Get NEJM's E-Mail Table of Contents — Free | Subscribe
 
Book Review
PreviousPrevious
Volume 330:872-873 March 24, 1994 Number 12
NextNext

The Health of Nations: Public Opinion and the Making of American and British Health Policy

Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings.

 Sign up for free e-toc
 

This Article
-Full Text
-Purchase this article

Tools and Services
-Add to Personal Archive
-Add to Citation Manager
-Notify a Friend
-E-mail When Cited

More Information
By Lawrence R. Jacobs. 259 pp. Ithaca, N.Y., Cornell University Press, 1993. $34.50. ISBN 0-8014-2761-4.

Public opinion, systematically sampled in polls, mattered a great deal to makers of health policy in Britain in the 1940s and in the United States in the 1960s, according to Lawrence R. Jacobs. "Political struggles," caused mainly by doctors, he writes, "heightened state actors' sensitivity to public opinion and their willingness to make authoritative choices among alternative principles and administrative arrangements."

Jacobs has three purposes in writing this book. The first is to describe and compare how officials made decisions about policy on the basis of data from systematic polling in Britain and the United States. Although he acknowledges the . . . [Full Text of this Article]


This article has been cited by other articles:



HOME  |  SUBSCRIBE  |  SEARCH  |  CURRENT ISSUE  |  PAST ISSUES  |  COLLECTIONS  |  PRIVACY  |  TERMS OF USE  |  HELP  |  beta.nejm.org

Comments and questions? Please contact us.

The New England Journal of Medicine is owned, published, and copyrighted © 2009 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.