In this session, participants will explore the shifting health policy climate towards one that is more pervasive and invasive in medical practice. Whether via bans on youth gender care, curtailing of publicly funded insurance eligibility, or policies that shape access to reproductive healthcare (to name just a few), the laws, litigation and regulations that impact access to medical care are exerting more power over the pursuit of health than ever before. Dr. McNamara will review the history of health policy in pediatrics and reproductive medicine up until present day and explore emerging trends. She will then build the argument that policy functions as medical care, and operates without the self-regulating guardrails that shape medical practice. If we hold health policy to bioethical standards, perhaps we can conceptualize an idealized framework by which policy and healthcare should intersect.
Learning Objectives: After this webinar, attendees will be able to:
- Define policy, health policy, the social contract and bioethically sound health policy.
- Describe the past and present relationships between policy and healthcare with historical examples.
- Conceptualize emerging trends in health policy and apply bioethical principles to their impacts.
- Build a shared understanding of effective engagement in health policy development processes.
This is an event of the Office of Academic Clinical Affairs (OACA), hosted by the Center for Bioethics, and co-sponsored by the following U of MN Units: Business Advancement Center for Health (BACH), Minnesota Carlson; Center for the Study of Political Psychology, College of Liberal Arts; Center for Women’s Health Research, Medical School; Center on Women, Gender, and Public Policy, Humphrey School of Public Affairs; College of Pharmacy; Community-University Health Care Center (CUHCC); Department of Pediatrics, Medical School; Eli Coleman Institute for Sexual and Gender Health, Medical School; Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, College of Liberal Arts; Medical School; Minnesota Population Center; Program in Health Disparities Research, Medical School; Rural Health Research Center; School of Dentistry; School of Nursing; School of Public Health.