Constraining National Health Care Expenditures: Achieving Quality Care at an Affordable CostU.S. General Accounting Office, 1986 - 302 pages |
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Page ix
... major issues should be addressed in constraining health care expenditures ? 32 Resource issues 33 Delivery system issues 42 Utilization issues Financing issues 53 62 CHAPTER 2 HEALTH RESOURCES Personnel General Physicians Why has the.
... major issues should be addressed in constraining health care expenditures ? 32 Resource issues 33 Delivery system issues 42 Utilization issues Financing issues 53 62 CHAPTER 2 HEALTH RESOURCES Personnel General Physicians Why has the.
Page xii
... major payers Actions by some payers may shift expenses to other payers 189 189 Methods used by third - party payers to pay for health care services Recent changes in reimbursement for hospital services Payments for physicians ' services ...
... major payers Actions by some payers may shift expenses to other payers 189 189 Methods used by third - party payers to pay for health care services Recent changes in reimbursement for hospital services Payments for physicians ' services ...
Page 2
... major sections of the report inevitable . Other ways of organizing the report , such as focusing on the effects of major policies on the demand for and supply of health services , would not , however , have eliminated this overlap ...
... major sections of the report inevitable . Other ways of organizing the report , such as focusing on the effects of major policies on the demand for and supply of health services , would not , however , have eliminated this overlap ...
Page 5
... major Today , a major issue focuses on the appropriate use of such care . Confronted with legal , ethical , and religious issues as well as the constant threat of malpractice suits , providers are placed in a difficult position of ...
... major Today , a major issue focuses on the appropriate use of such care . Confronted with legal , ethical , and religious issues as well as the constant threat of malpractice suits , providers are placed in a difficult position of ...
Page 9
... major- ity of health care spending in both 1960 and 1983.30 Spending on hospital care increased from $ 9.1 billion ( about 34 percent of health care spending ) in 196031 to $ 157.9 billion ( about 41 percent ) in 1984.32 Spending for ...
... major- ity of health care spending in both 1960 and 1983.30 Spending on hospital care increased from $ 9.1 billion ( about 34 percent of health care spending ) in 196031 to $ 157.9 billion ( about 41 percent ) in 1984.32 Spending for ...
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Common terms and phrases
Accounting Office alternative delivery American Hospital Association American Medical Association APPENDIX II APPENDIX appropriate beneficiaries benefits Blue Cross California capital centers community hospital competition Congressional Budget Office consumers cost containment cost-effective cost-sharing coverage defensive medicine delivery systems Department of Health disease effect efforts elderly example excess beds expensive facilities for-profit Health and Human health care costs health care expenditures Health Care Financing health care services health care spending health care system health insurance Health Maintenance Organizations health planning Health Policy health services HMOs home health hospital beds Human Services Ibid impact incentives increased inpatient Institute issues long-term malpractice Medicaid programs medical technology Medicare and Medicaid Medicine million nursing home beds organizations outpatient patients percent persons Ph.D physicians population private sector prospective payment system rates reduce reimbursement renal dialysis result surgery transplants U.S. Department U.S. General Accounting utilization review Washington
Popular passages
Page 79 - Congress further finds and declares that there is no longer an insufficient number of physicians and surgeons in the United States...
Page 161 - The Commission concludes that society has an ethical obligation to ensure equitable access to health care for all. This obligation rests on the special importance of health care: its role in relieving suffering, preventing premature death, restoring functioning, increasing opportunity, providing information about an individual's condition and giving evidence of mutual empathy and compassion. Furthermore, although life style and the environment can affect health...
Page 249 - President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research, Deciding to Forego Life-Sustaining Treatment...
Page 252 - A Report to the President and Congress on the Status of Health Professions Personnel in the United States.
Page 178 - Roundtable describes itself as: an association of chief executive officers who examine public issues that affect the economy and develop positions which seek to reflect sound economic and social principles.
Page 281 - Wennberg and A. Gittelsohn, Variations in medical care among small areas.
Page 216 - Dept. of Medical Care Organization, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104.
Page 113 - Hospital and outpatient care also is provided for certain dependents and survivors of veterans under the civilian health and medical program of the Veterans Administration (CHAMPVA).
Page 234 - DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT, SCHOOL OF HYGIENE AND PUBLIC HEALTH, JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY, BALTIMORE, MD Ms.
Page 174 - ... formula grants to States to provide health services to mothers and children — title V of the Social Security Act, Maternal and Child Health (MCH), and Crippled Children's (CC) Services. Program funds were targeted primarily to mothers and children in rural or economically depressed areas. States were required to match a certain portion of the Federal allotment with their own funds. PL 97-35 established a new Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant under title V of the Social Security...