Hearings, Reports and Prints of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, Parts 1-3U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967 |
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Page 32
... individual in a particular neigh- borhood who is cut off from health care for economic or social or any other ... individuals will be served , 32 COSTS OF HEALTH SERVICES TO OLDER AMERICANS.
... individual in a particular neigh- borhood who is cut off from health care for economic or social or any other ... individuals will be served , 32 COSTS OF HEALTH SERVICES TO OLDER AMERICANS.
Page 43
... individual Senator is how do we get the doctors and the executive branch of the Government to get to- gether and eliminate these kinds of little silly rules and regulations which unnecessarily put the doctor on the spot , cost the ...
... individual Senator is how do we get the doctors and the executive branch of the Government to get to- gether and eliminate these kinds of little silly rules and regulations which unnecessarily put the doctor on the spot , cost the ...
Page 74
... individual to seek medical attention . A person who lives alone and is denied this oppor- tunity is much less apt to act on this symptom . This is the reason in addition to the tremendous threat to a person's whole life that a serious ...
... individual to seek medical attention . A person who lives alone and is denied this oppor- tunity is much less apt to act on this symptom . This is the reason in addition to the tremendous threat to a person's whole life that a serious ...
Page 81
... individual's financial resources to meet it are less , and the physical procurement of needed medical care is impeded by numerous problems of transportation and understanding . The enactment of the medicare amendments to the Social ...
... individual's financial resources to meet it are less , and the physical procurement of needed medical care is impeded by numerous problems of transportation and understanding . The enactment of the medicare amendments to the Social ...
Page 94
... individual better ? Dr. ROEMER . It would serve the individual better and probably then it would save money in the long run , yes . Some of the 3 - day - hospital admissions now are essentially abuses ; the management of the patient did ...
... individual better ? Dr. ROEMER . It would serve the individual better and probably then it would save money in the long run , yes . Some of the 3 - day - hospital admissions now are essentially abuses ; the management of the patient did ...
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Common terms and phrases
Administration aged assistance benefits bill Blue Cross Blue Shield California Chairman charges CHERKASKY chronic clinic coinsurance committee comprehensive costs deductible director disease doctors drugs effect elderly eligible facilities Federal fees funds group practice GUINEY health agencies health aides health care health centers health insurance health planning home care home health aides hospital illness income increase institutions legislation major medical services medically indigent Medicare and Medicaid medicare program medicine ment mental million multiphasic screening National neighborhood nursing homes operation organization ORIOL participation patient payment percent personnel persons physicians population present problems professional Public Health question reimbursement require responsibility Senator SMATHERS Senator WILLIAMS senior citizens Social Security Social Security Administration staff statement Subcommittee tion Title U.S. Senate utilization visits voluntary welfare York City
Popular passages
Page 614 - For age is opportunity no less Than youth itself, though in another dress, And as the evening twilight fades away The sky is filled with stars, invisible by day.
Page 457 - In a joint effort, the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare...
Page 209 - Smith observed that the division of labor is limited by the extent of the market.
Page 189 - ... by less than the standard error. The chances are about 95 out of 100 that the difference would be less than twice the standard error. The...
Page 188 - The standard error is primarily a measure of sampling variability, that is, of the variations that occur by chance because a sample rather than the whole of the population is surveyed. As calculated for this report, the standard error also partially measures the effect of response and enumeration errors, but it does not measure as such, any systematic biases in the data.
Page 188 - Reliability of the Estimates. Since the estimates are based on a sample, they may differ somewhat from the figures that would have been obtained if a complete census had been taken using the same schedules, instructions and enumerators.
Page 197 - ... 12-18% in blood grouping and typing; by 20-30% in hemoglobin measurements; by 40-80% in differential characterization of blood cells; and by 2030% in measurement of serum electrolytes. There also exists considerable variation In results from laboratory to laboratory. This information imlicutes that erroneous results are obtained in more than 25% of all tests analyzed by these studies.
Page 370 - American patent system and the need for legislative reform to eliminate the opportunity for misusing patents, stated: "* * * but we must be careful not to throw out the baby with the bath water.
Page 332 - Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in cooperation with the Department of Defense and the Veterans...
Page 189 - The memory factor in data derived from field surveys of income probably produces underestimates, because the tendency is to forget minor or irregular sources of income. Other errors of reporting are due to misrepresentation or to misunderstanding as to the scope of the income concept.