Results 301 to 310 of about 408,399 (355)
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Fees and Charges

Journal of International Arbitration, 1985
exaly   +2 more sources

To fee or not to fee: Requester attitudes toward freedom of information charges

Government Information Quarterly, 2023
This study seeks to establish a foundation for how FOI fees are received by public record requesters, and how fees influence behavior across demographics and requester types. A survey of 330 public records requesters in the United States revealed sharp disparities in how requesters perceive fees.
A. Jay Wagner, David Cuillier
openaire   +1 more source

MEDICAL FEES AND CHARGES

BMJ: British Medical Journal
exaly   +2 more sources

Additional Fees and Charges

2022
This chapter provides a summary of the option available to a successful party to seek an uplift on the fee element of their account of expenses following upon a general finding of expenses in their favour. The criteria which form the basis for such an application for additional fee or charge are examined and commentary provided thereon.
openaire   +1 more source

Charging Back, Charging Out, Charging Fees

The Bottom Line, 1991
How do librarians charge back, charge out, and charge fees rather than have the cost of their operations totally accounted for as overhead expense? There is no one‐size‐fits‐all method of managing these finances; what you will do depends on your organization's goals and situation.
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Charges and Fees

1993
James Buchanan has expressed ‘major concern’ at the escalation in the cost of care: ‘In the United States, a large and ever-increasing share of total economic value is directed toward outlay on medical or health care services … It becomes relatively easy to think of a share of one-quarter of the total value produced in the economy being devoted to ...
openaire   +1 more source

Charging patients fees is bad medicine

BMJ, 2013
A poll of general practitioners, recently splashed all over the newspapers, had most supporting charging patients up to £25 (€29; $39) a visit.1 The rationale runs like this. When something is free it isn’t valued. So patients don’t value doctors or our advice.
openaire   +2 more sources

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