Indian health care.DIANE Publishing, 1986 - 377 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 10
... Medicaid, Medicare, private insurance) for which the Indian patient is eligible must be ex- hausted before IHS will pay for medical care. For direct IHS services, the residual payer role is dis- cretionary (42 CFR 36.12 [c]), and as a ...
... Medicaid, Medicare, private insurance) for which the Indian patient is eligible must be ex- hausted before IHS will pay for medical care. For direct IHS services, the residual payer role is dis- cretionary (42 CFR 36.12 [c]), and as a ...
Page 16
... Medicaid and Medicare, rather than from private health insurance, because of the low income of many Indian people (especially those who are reservation-based) and their lack of employment-related health insurance benefits. Photo credit ...
... Medicaid and Medicare, rather than from private health insurance, because of the low income of many Indian people (especially those who are reservation-based) and their lack of employment-related health insurance benefits. Photo credit ...
Page 17
... Medicaid , with Medicaid payments to be made totally out of Fed- eral funds , and with the revenues to be used to restore or keep the facilities and their services in compliance with the conditions and requirements of the Medicare and ...
... Medicaid , with Medicaid payments to be made totally out of Fed- eral funds , and with the revenues to be used to restore or keep the facilities and their services in compliance with the conditions and requirements of the Medicare and ...
Page 18
... Medicaid for services provided to eligible Indians in IHS facilities . The Medicaid reimbursements are somewhat surprising in view of the impres- sion OTA received during the course of this assessment that many more Indians should be ...
... Medicaid for services provided to eligible Indians in IHS facilities . The Medicaid reimbursements are somewhat surprising in view of the impres- sion OTA received during the course of this assessment that many more Indians should be ...
Page 19
... Medicaid programs, range from an expected 30 to 50 percent of contract care charges that should be collected from non-IHS payers. These estimates apply only to the service units in the Portland area and are based on all alternate ...
... Medicaid programs, range from an expected 30 to 50 percent of contract care charges that should be collected from non-IHS payers. These estimates apply only to the service units in the Portland area and are based on all alternate ...
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Common terms and phrases
11 IHS AREAS 638 contract Aberdeen AGE-ADJUSTED DEATH RATES AGE-ADJUSTED RATES AGE-SPECIFIC AND AGE-ADJUSTED Alaska Native Albuquerque Aleuts ALL-RACES allocation American Indians area Indians area office ATHEROSCLEROSIS average Bemidji Billings blood quantum budget California cause of death Census Cerebrovascular diseases clinical contract care program costs DEATHS ALL AGES Department of Health Diabetes mellitus dian eligible Eskimos estimated Federal females Fiscal Year 1984 funds Health and Human Health Resources high-cost HRT DS Human Services ices IHS areas IHS contract IHS direct IHS facilities IHS hospitals IHS service areas IHS’s Indian Health Service Indian population Indian tribes inpatient males Nashville Navajo non-Indians Oklahoma otitis media outpatient visits patient percent Phoenix Portland Portland area projects Public Health Service races rate reservation Resources and Services self-determination SEPTICEMIA Serv service population service unit Services Administration sexes sources staff Technology Assessment tion tribally operated Tucson U.S. all races U.S. Department
Popular passages
Page 228 - The Congress declares its commitment to the maintenance of the Federal Government's unique and continuing relationship with and responsibility to the Indian people through the establishment of a meaningful Indian self-determination policy which will permit an orderly transition from Federal domination of programs for and services to Indians to effective and meaningful participation by the Indian people in the planning, conduct, and administration of those programs and services.
Page 367 - American Hospital Association. American Hospital Association Guide to the Health Care Field.
Page 156 - Indian health and medical service program if he is regarded as an Indian by the community in which he lives as evidenced by such factors as tribal membership, enrollment, residence on taxexempt land, ownership of restricted property, active participation in tribal affairs, or other relevant factors in keeping with general Bureau of Indian Affairs practices in the jurisdiction.
Page 62 - Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Page 45 - The Congress hereby declares that it is the policy of this Nation, in fulfillment of its special responsibilities and legal...
Page 357 - Service, a bureau of the Public Health Service within the Department of Health and Human Services.
Page 156 - ... needed referrals cannot be made. Thus, while they may not be directly affected by ability to pay, Indians may face serious obstacles in obtaining health care services through IHS. Another obstacle to obtaining contract care is that eligibility for such services is more restricted than for direct care. Another factor in the IHS delivery system since the Indian SelfDetermination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 (Public Law 93-638), amended in 1988 (Public Law 100-472), has been the operation...
Page 50 - The power of an administrative agency to administer a congressionally created . . . program necessarily requires the formulation of policy and the making of rules to fill any gap left, implicitly or explicitly, by Congress.