National Health Planning and Resources Development Act

The National Health Planning and Resources Development Act, or Public Law 93-641 is a piece of 1974 American Congressional legislation. Many Certificate of Need programs trace their origin to the act which offered incentives for states to implement these programs.[1][2]

Details of the Act

In this Act, three distinct existing programs were consolidated:

  • Hill-Burton
  • Regional Medical Program
  • Comprehensive Health Planning Act

Congress realized that the provision of federal funds for the construction of new health care facilities was contributing to increasing health care costs by generating duplication of facilities.

The intent of Congress in passing this Act was to create throughout the United States, a strengthened and improved federal-, state- and area-wide system of health planning and resources development that would help provide solutions to several identified problems.

The perceived problems the Act was intended to address were as follows:

  • lack of equal access to quality health care at reasonable cost
  • infusion of federal funds into the health care system was contributing to inflationary health care costs while failing to produce an adequate supply or distribution of health resources
  • the lack of a comprehensive, rational approach by the public and private sectors to creation of uniformly effective methods of delivering health care
  • misdistribution of health care facilities and manpower
  • increasing and uncontrolled inflation of health care costs, particularly the costs associated with hospital stays
  • inadequate incentives for the use of alternative levels of health care and the substitution of ambulatory and intermediate care for inpatient hospital care
  • the lack of basic knowledge regarding proper personal health care and methods for effective use of available health services in large segments of the population

This legislation was also intended to encourage health care providers to play an active role in developing health policy.

gollark: It's not between those though.
gollark: It's fuzzily defined, somewhat niche as a concern anyway, and rarely actually encoded into law.
gollark: Also the rest of the government I think. Similar to the US's many mass surveillance laws.
gollark: The "investigatory powers bill" is also rather bad but many countries have the same sort of thing nowadays, so the awfulness isn't very unique.
gollark: If you like that you'll love UK knife law!

References

  1. Certificate of Need Laws: A Prescription for Higher Costs, "In 1974, Congress passed a mandate for all states to establish a CON program as part of the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act."
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