Opportunities for Success: Cost Effective Programs for Children : Update, 1988 : a Report of the Select Committee on Children, Youth, and Families, U.S. House of Representatives, One Hundredth Congress, Second SessionU.S. Government Printing Office, 1988 - 72 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 12
Page 6
... MEDICAID CHILDHOOD IMMUNIZATION HIGHLIGHTS OF PROGRAM EFFECTS BENEFITS FOR CHILDREN Reduction in infant mortality ... costs $ 1 investment can save $ 3.38 in cost of care for low birthweight infants $ 1 spent on comprehensive prenatal care ...
... MEDICAID CHILDHOOD IMMUNIZATION HIGHLIGHTS OF PROGRAM EFFECTS BENEFITS FOR CHILDREN Reduction in infant mortality ... costs $ 1 investment can save $ 3.38 in cost of care for low birthweight infants $ 1 spent on comprehensive prenatal care ...
Page 9
... ( Costs for longer - term treatment of disabilities caused by low birthweight are not included in calculated cost / benefit . ) WIC participation in Missouri associated with the reduction in Medicaid newborn costs of about $ 76 .... For ...
... ( Costs for longer - term treatment of disabilities caused by low birthweight are not included in calculated cost / benefit . ) WIC participation in Missouri associated with the reduction in Medicaid newborn costs of about $ 76 .... For ...
Page 10
... Medicaid Costs for Missouri Newborns : 1982 Update . " Health Reports . Vol . 101. November / December 1986 . Study replicated 1980 evaluation of WIC prenatal participa- tion in Missouri utilizing 9,086 Medicaid records matched with ...
... Medicaid Costs for Missouri Newborns : 1982 Update . " Health Reports . Vol . 101. November / December 1986 . Study replicated 1980 evaluation of WIC prenatal participa- tion in Missouri utilizing 9,086 Medicaid records matched with ...
Page 11
... Medicaid Costs in Missouri : A Cost / Benefit Analysis . American Journal of Public Health . Vol . 75 . No. 8. August 1985 . Study conducted to " determine if WIC prenatal participation is associated with a reduction in Medicaid costs ...
... Medicaid Costs in Missouri : A Cost / Benefit Analysis . American Journal of Public Health . Vol . 75 . No. 8. August 1985 . Study conducted to " determine if WIC prenatal participation is associated with a reduction in Medicaid costs ...
Page 17
... Medicaid , permanently authorized under Title XIX of the Social Security Act . Early and adequate prenatal care has ... costs could have been avoided with adequate prenatal care . An Institute of Medicine calculated that for every $ 1 spent , ...
... Medicaid , permanently authorized under Title XIX of the Social Security Act . Early and adequate prenatal care has ... costs could have been avoided with adequate prenatal care . An Institute of Medicine calculated that for every $ 1 spent , ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
$1 investment $1 spent ALAN WHEAT associated babies benefits Centers for Disease chil Child Health children ages Children's Defense Fund Colorado Committee on Children compensatory education comprehensive prenatal Cost Effectiveness cost-benefit decrease Department of Education diphtheria Disease Control dren early intervention employability Employment and Training enrolled EPSDT estimated Evaluation families grade grams Head Start High/Scope Human Services impact improved incidence of low increased Infants and Children infants born Institute of Medicine Job Corps low birthweight births low birthweight infants low-income women Maternal MATTHEW F measles Medicaid Medicaid costs million mothers mumps National newborn non-WIC nutrition parent involvement perinatal pertussis polio pregnancy pregnant women preschool education Program for Women program participants Project Public Health received adequate prenatal reduction Research risk rubella saved showed significantly special education Special Supplemental Food Statistics summer learning loss Supplemental Food Program tetanus U.S. Department vaccine WIC participation WIC program youth employment
Popular passages
Page 71 - National Center for Health Statistics. Advance Report of Final Natality Statistics. 1985.
Page 20 - overwhelming weight of the evidence is that prenatal care reduces low birthweight. This finding is strong enough to support a broad, national commitment to ensuring that all pregnant women, especially those at medical or socioeconomic risk, receive high-quality care.
Page 33 - Measles Outbreak in a Vaccinated School Population: Epidemiology, Chains of Transmission and the Role of Vaccine Failures.
Page 10 - Prenatal participation in WIC related to Medicaid costs for Missouri newborns: 1982 update.
Page 28 - Select Committee on Children, Youth, and Families. US House of Representatives. June 30, 1983.
Page 10 - Source of Prenatal Care and Infant Birthweight: The Case of a North Carolina County.
Page 36 - White, CC An update on the benefits and costs of measles and rubella immunization. In proceedings of the symposium, "Conquest of agents that endanger the brain.
Page 21 - ... percent, the increased expenditures for prenatal services would be approximately equal to a single year of cost savings in direct medical care expenditures for the low birthweight infants born to the target population. If the rate were reduced to 9 percent (the 1990 goal set by the Surgeon General for a maximum low birthweight rate among high-risk groups) , every additional dollar spent for prenatal care within the target group would save $3.38 in the total cost of caring for low birthweight...
Page 27 - Federal Health Program Reforms: Implications for Child Health Care.
Page 32 - ... Rosenbaum S, et al. The health of America's children: maternal and child health data book. Washington: Children's Defense Fund, 1987. 26- Geronimus A. The effects of race, residence and prenatal care on the relationship of maternal age to neonatal mortality. Am J Public Health 1986; 76:1416-21. 27- Johnson K. Who is watching our children's health? The immunization status of American children. Washington: Children's Defense Fund, 1987. 28- Anonymous. Blood pressure levels and hypertension in persons...