Abstract: | Suggests that the deliberations surrounding Medicare may once again become the key to the enactment of national health care reform legislation and argues that if psychologists want to directly influence public policy, more of them must become personally involved in full-time advocacy and public policy work. Examples of federal policies that affect psychologists are discussed as well as the importance of joint psychology-law programs and the efforts of a psychologist and associate commissioner in Maine to shape a unified, outcome-driven mental health and mental retardation system. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |