National Health Insurance: Panel Discussions Before the Subcommittee on Health of the Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives, Ninety-fourth Congress, First Session ....U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975 - 463 pages |
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Page 4
... practice medicine and wouldn't have first - hand knowledge of such practice . Are we planning on a panel of actual physicians or people in the medical field who are actually out in the boondocks practicing medicine ? I would say that ...
... practice medicine and wouldn't have first - hand knowledge of such practice . Are we planning on a panel of actual physicians or people in the medical field who are actually out in the boondocks practicing medicine ? I would say that ...
Page 5
... practiced , I think could have been a little better balanced . Mr. ROSTENKOWSKI . As I said earlier , Mr. Duncan , it's ... practice of preventive medi- cine , it is unlikely that we would have to hold the hearings today . It would seem ...
... practiced , I think could have been a little better balanced . Mr. ROSTENKOWSKI . As I said earlier , Mr. Duncan , it's ... practice of preventive medi- cine , it is unlikely that we would have to hold the hearings today . It would seem ...
Page 10
... practice faculty at the University of Connecticut , and the president of the National Fund for Medical Education . I would like to assure Mr. Duncan I have taken care of patients for 25 years and I am still taking care of them now . I ...
... practice faculty at the University of Connecticut , and the president of the National Fund for Medical Education . I would like to assure Mr. Duncan I have taken care of patients for 25 years and I am still taking care of them now . I ...
Page 11
... practice in many , if not most , communities . Use of hospital ambulatory facilities for diagnosis and treatment has risen far more rapidly than in - patient admissions . Ambulatory visits now exceed admissions by 5 to 1. But since ...
... practice in many , if not most , communities . Use of hospital ambulatory facilities for diagnosis and treatment has risen far more rapidly than in - patient admissions . Ambulatory visits now exceed admissions by 5 to 1. But since ...
Page 12
... practice . It is a symbiotic relationship . The doctors are dependent on the hospital's diagnostic , treatment , domiciliary and , to a growing extent , educational facilities . The hospitals depend on the doctors to refer the patients ...
... practice . It is a symbiotic relationship . The doctors are dependent on the hospital's diagnostic , treatment , domiciliary and , to a growing extent , educational facilities . The hospitals depend on the doctors to refer the patients ...
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Common terms and phrases
administrative American believe Bellin benefits bill Blue Shield catastrophic CATHLES Chairman coinsurance committee CONGRESS THE LIBRARY consumers CORMAN cost control COTTER coverage Dan Rostenkowski delivery system demand doctors DUNCAN economic effective employees expenditures Federal Government fee-for-service FEIN FELDSTEIN financing FREYMANN going health care system Health Department health insurance plan health insurance program health insurance system Health Maintenance Organizations health planning hospital incentives income increase individual inflation legislation LIBRARY OF CONGRESS major medicare Medicare and Medicaid medicine ment million national health insurance National Health Service nursing home organization panel Pap smear patient payment percent physicians podiatrists podiatry political population practice practitioner premium present private sector problem professional PSRO question reimbursement responsibility ROSTENKOWSKI Social Security staff subcommittee Sweden Thank things tion United utilization utilization review VANIK York City
Popular passages
Page 195 - Nothing in this title shall be construed as authorizing the Secretary or any other officer or employee of the United States to interfere in any way with the practice of medicine or with relationships between practitioners of medicine and their patients, or to exercise any supervision or control over the administration or operation of any hospital. (2) The term "period of disability...
Page 427 - Lenin was certainly right. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.
Page 425 - And the use of all of these terms, 'treaty', 'agreement', 'compact', show that it was the intention of the framers of the Constitution to...
Page 147 - Up to 1905, the National Association of Manufacturers, the US Chamber of Commerce, and the...
Page 427 - Lenin is said to have declared that the best way to destroy the capitalist system was to debauch the currency.
Page 326 - Congress passed in the spring of 1966 was a program to encourage regional cooperative arrangements in the diagnosis and treatment of heart disease, cancer, stroke, and related diseases.
Page 258 - ... of the problem. For there are two— and really only two— key ingredients to understanding the rise in hospital costs: the changing nature of the hospital product, and the impact of insurance. Of these, the second is the more crucial— and largely explains the first. The changing hospital product The most obvious thing about hospital care today is that it is very different from what it was 25 years ago. Today's care is more complex, more sophisticated, and, it is to be hoped, more effective....
Page 354 - Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. First of all, I would like to commend the committee for getting into this subject of skyjacking.
Page 126 - Wash.) (This paper was presented before the Medical Care Section of the American Public Health Association at the 88th annual meeting in San Francisco, Calif., Nov. 2, 1960.) Dr.
Page 426 - Common thought and parlance tend to conceal or deny the fact that demand for all practical purposes is unlimited. The vulgar assumption is that there is a definable amount of medical care 'needed', and that if that 'need' was met, no more would be demanded. This is absurd. Every advance in medical .science creates new needs that did not exist until the means of meeting them came into existence, or at least into the realm of the possible.