All Stories

  1. Provider directory accuracy and timely access to mammograms in California
  2. When a school is more than just a school: Improving school‐based health in the wake of COVID‐19
  3. Just say no? Public attitudes about supportive and punitive policies to combat the opioid epidemic
  4. Handmaidens of the legislature? Understanding regulatory timing
  5. Past experiences with surprise medical bills drive issue knowledge, concern and attitudes toward federal policy intervention
  6. Mixed signals: The inadequacy of provider‐per‐enrollee ratios for assessing network adequacy in California (and elsewhere)
  7. Joining the herd? U.S. public opinion and vaccination requirements across educational settings during the COVID-19 pandemic
  8. Shared Stigma: The Effect of LGBT Status on Attitudes About the Opioid Epidemic
  9. From Poor to Worse: Health Policy and Politics Scholars’ Assessment of the U.S. COVID‐19 Response and Its Implications
  10. When Adolescents are in School During COVID-19, Coordination Between School-Based Health Centers and Education is Key
  11. Lingering Legacies: Public Attitudes about Medicaid Beneficiaries and Work Requirements
  12. Inadequate in the Best of Times: Reevaluating Provider Networks in Light of the Coronavirus Pandemic
  13. Quality Advantage? Provider Quality and Networks in Medicare Advantage
  14. Out of the public’s eye? Lobbying the President’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
  15. A Look Under the Hood: Regulatory Policy Making and the Affordable Care Act
  16. Going the Extra Mile? How Provider Network Design Increases Consumer Travel Distance, Particularly for Rural Consumers
  17. Political Science and U.S. Health Policy in the Era of the Affordable Care Act
  18. Monetizing Bowser: A Contingent Valuation of the Statistical Value of Dog Life – Corrigendum
  19. Monetizing Bowser: A Contingent Valuation of the Statistical Value of Dog Life
  20. A Consumer-Centric Approach To Network Adequacy: Access To Four Specialties In California’s Marketplace
  21. A Tale of Two Programs: Access to High Quality Providers for Medicare Advantage and Affordable Care Act Beneficiaries in New York State
  22. A Knotty Problem: Consumer Access and the Regulation of Provider Networks
  23. How Medicare Advantage Provider Networks Shape Access to Specialists
  24. The Demise of Community Responsibility: Unintended Consequences of Coverage Expansions on California Public Hospitals
  25. Presidentially Directed Policy Change: The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs as Partisan or Moderator?
  26. How Intense Policy Demanders Shape Postreform Politics: Evidence from the Affordable Care Act
  27. Secret Shoppers Find Access To Providers And Network Accuracy Lacking For Those In Marketplace And Commercial Plans
  28. Network Adequacy Standards and Health Insurance—Reply
  29. Inching Toward Universal Coverage: State-Federal Health-Care Programs in Historical Perspective
  30. Narrow Networks and the Affordable Care Act
  31. Influence and the Administrative Process: Lobbying the U.S. President's Office of Management and Budget
  32. California Hospital Networks Are Narrower In Marketplace Than In Commercial Plans, But Access And Quality Are Similar
  33. Book Review: Why Government Fails so Often: And How It Can Do BetterSchuckP. H. (2014). Why Government Fails so Often: And How It Can Do Better. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 471 pp. $27.95 (hb), ISBN: 9780691161624
  34. Federalism and the AFC
  35. Balancing adequacy and affordability?: Essential Health Benefits under the Affordable Care Act
  36. Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches to Health Care Quality: The Impacts of Regulation and Report Cards
  37. You Can't Make Me Do It: State Implementation of Insurance Exchanges under the Affordable Care Act
  38. Making the Affordable Care Act Work: High-Risk Pools and Health Insurance Marketplaces
  39. Beyond Path Dependence: Explaining Healthcare Reform and Its Consequences