For
More Information, Contact:WASHINGTON, D.C. (January 30, 2004) – An assessment of health care in the 50
states, released here today, cites programs in Idaho and several other states
in the Northwest for utilizing an intense “evidence-based” approach to controlling
drug costs. The report touts
“All states have had to take steps to control huge
increases in their pharmacy bills,” says Richard Greene, co-author of the
special issue of Governing. “The development of preferred-drug lists is
often controversial, but
Governing’s analysis of state-funded health care is part of the Government Performance Project, a six-year-old effort, funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts, to evaluate a wide range of state government management and policy functions. This year’s special report focuses on six critical health care problems facing states: long-term care, public health, mental health, prescription drugs, access to care for the uninsured, and care for children.
The Government Performance Project found and documented
the inability of the 50 states’ health care system to deliver improvements in
medicine fairly and consistently to many of their citizens. Health care in most
states is not just inadequate, the study concluded--it’s deteriorating. “After
exhaustive analysis and hundreds of interviews,” says Peter Harkness, Governing’s
publisher and editor, “it became clear that there is a health care crisis
in
Governing is a policy and management magazine aimed at high-level state and local government officials. An online version of this report will be available at http://www.governing.com/gpp/2004/intro.htm as of January 29. Press releases for each of the 50 states can be found at http://www.governing.com/gpp/2004/press.htm.
###