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Page 35
... percentage was that ? Dr. SHEPPARD . Forty - five percent . In last Sunday's Washington Post , there was an article that revived public interest in the term , " The Establishment . " The article was about foreign affairs and the ...
... percentage was that ? Dr. SHEPPARD . Forty - five percent . In last Sunday's Washington Post , there was an article that revived public interest in the term , " The Establishment . " The article was about foreign affairs and the ...
Page 61
... percent blind . How they manage to take care of one another is almost a miracle . They have a little savings left and friends are trying to get them into a convalescent home , but so far no success as they do not have sufficient funds ...
... percent blind . How they manage to take care of one another is almost a miracle . They have a little savings left and friends are trying to get them into a convalescent home , but so far no success as they do not have sufficient funds ...
Page 71
... percent of them were depressed and confused and all complained about the food . In a smaller home , there were about eight elderly women . The facilities were good and the food was good . One woman in her late eighties started crying ...
... percent of them were depressed and confused and all complained about the food . In a smaller home , there were about eight elderly women . The facilities were good and the food was good . One woman in her late eighties started crying ...
Page 80
... per- cent to 31 percent of the Nation's children and from 31 percent to 43 percent of our aged . These measures of poverty and low income are based on the amounts needed by families of different size and composition to purchase ...
... per- cent to 31 percent of the Nation's children and from 31 percent to 43 percent of our aged . These measures of poverty and low income are based on the amounts needed by families of different size and composition to purchase ...
Page 81
... percent lower . The poverty index priced at the level for 1964 implied an average expenditure for food of 70 cents a day per person - 2.2 percent higher than in 1959. The low - cost index in 1964 implied about 90 cents a day for food ...
... percent lower . The poverty index priced at the level for 1964 implied an average expenditure for food of 70 cents a day per person - 2.2 percent higher than in 1959. The low - cost index in 1964 implied about 90 cents a day for food ...
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Common terms and phrases
abnormal age group assistance August 23 AutoAnalyzer automated benefits blood BRANNON cancer centers cervical cancer Chairman chest X-ray chronic diseases chronic illness circulatory system clinical Committee on Aging contribute cost Cost of Illness D.C. DEAR SENATOR dean DEAR SENATOR NEUBERGER DEBAKEY deduction diabetes diagnosis director disability doctor early detection elderly electrocardiogram examination exemption glaucoma going health department hearing heart disease hospital individual laboratory living MAURINE medical expenses Medicare Alert ment million mother multiphasic health screening multiphasic screening program Pap smear parents patient penicillin percent physician poor population poverty predictive medicine preventive medicine problem procedures Public Health Service question screening tests Senator SMATHERS Senator WILLIAMS Senator YARBOROUGH senior citizens Social Security statement Subcommittee on Health syphilis taxpayer techniques tion tonometry treatment tuberculosis U.S. Senate Washington X-ray
Popular passages
Page 4 - An aged man is but a paltry thing, A tattered coat upon a stick, unless Soul clap its hands and sing...
Page 18 - The first wealth is health. Sickness is poor-spirited, and cannot serve any one: it must husband its resources to live. But health or fulness answers its own ends and has to spare, runs over, and inundates the neighborhoods and creeks of other men's necessities.
Page 132 - Disease, held in 1951, defined screening as "the presumptive identification of unrecognized disease or defect by the application of tests, examinations, or other procedures which can be applied rapidly.
Page 73 - Peterson (Biomedical Engineering and Instrumentation Branch, Division of Research Services, National Institutes of Health, Public Health Service, US Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Bethesda, Md.).
Page 43 - Aging, the National Council of Senior Citizens, and the American Association of Retired Persons.
Page 339 - University of Colorado Medical Center, 4200 East Ninth Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80220 Western Orthopedic Association William H.
Page 33 - Where an individual is in an institution and his condition is such that the availability of medical care in such institution is not a principal reason for his presence there, only that part of the cost of care in the institution as Is attributable to medical care (as...
Page 337 - Medical Association, the American College of Surgeons, the American College of Physicians and the American Hospital Association.
Page 55 - ... or wilfully neglects or refuses to provide for the support and maintenance of his or her...
Page 33 - ... this subparagraph) in such institution is a principal reason for his presence there, and meals and lodging are furnished as a necessary incident to such care, the entire cost of medical care and meals and lodging at the institution, which are furnished while the individual requires continual medical care, shall constitute an expense for medical care. For example, medical care includes the entire cost of institutional care for a person who is mentally ill and unsafe when left alone.