Results 261 to 270 of about 3,305,571 (308)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Multipayer provider agreements: The gift that keeps on giving (and giving, and giving…)
Journal of the American College of Radiology, 2004This article discusses provider agreements that can be accessed by various different payers rather than solely by the single parties that originated the agreements. In recent years, these "multipayer agreements" have been used both more widely and for wider purposes than in the past. The application of multipayer agreements is becoming more complex and
Michael L, Resnick, Barry D, Pressman
openaire +2 more sources
Give and Take or Give and Give: Charitable Giving in Migrant Households [PDF]
We investigate how households from migrant communities in Australia deal with conflicting claims on their resources for charitable giving in various forms, using household survey data. We examine financial donations, volunteering and remittances among the competing claims on migrants' resources and the effect of secular consumption on giving.
Richard P.C. Brown +3 more
openaire
To Give or Not to Give: The Challenge of Pharmaceutical Coupons
The Journal of Clinical Ethics, 2018Diabetes is epidemic and many people cannot afford insulin, a lifesaving medication, as its price has increased by almost 160 percent in the past five years.1 To help subsidize the cost of insulin, one of the staff members at my hospital would like to give patients copayment coupons provided to her by pharmaceutical companies. I advised my colleague to
Mihail, Zilbermint, Louise, Schiavone
openaire +2 more sources
Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2018
Aim‘Between September 2006 and June 2009, the NPSA (National Patient Safety Agency) received reports of 27 deaths, 68 severe harms and 21 383 other patient safety incidents relating to omitted or delayed medicines’.1 The Trust’s Medicines Code states that ‘critical’ medicines should be administered within one hour of the prescribed times, and all other
openaire +1 more source
Aim‘Between September 2006 and June 2009, the NPSA (National Patient Safety Agency) received reports of 27 deaths, 68 severe harms and 21 383 other patient safety incidents relating to omitted or delayed medicines’.1 The Trust’s Medicines Code states that ‘critical’ medicines should be administered within one hour of the prescribed times, and all other
openaire +1 more source
Assessing the knower-level framework: How reliable is the Give-a-Number task?
Cognition, 2022Elisabeth Marchand, David Bärner
exaly
Follow-up questions influence the measured number knowledge in the Give-a-number task
Cognitive Development, 2021Attila Krajcsi
exaly

