Prevention in health policy in the Federal Republic of Germany

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Abstract

The comparative study of what tend to be regarded as marginal questions of health policy, such as prevention, is developing slowly. This case study covers important developments in preventive policymaking in the Federal Republic of Germany in the period 1968-1990. The paper considers the evolving positional interests of federal and state governments, the public health service, the sickness insurance funds and the medical profession. It looks in detail at constitutional conflict over prevention at the end of the 1960s, at the progressivism of health policy conceptions of the early 1970s, at the liberal conservatism which characterised the 1980s and at the place of prevention in health care reform legislation. It refers to responses to HIV and AIDS and comments on the extent to which the circumstances of preventive policy making in health have changed with unification. -from Author

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3-16
Number of pages14
JournalPolicy & Politics
Volume22
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1994

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