Results 301 to 310 of about 1,800,488 (355)

Health economics.

open access: yesIndian journal of public health, 1991
openaire   +1 more source

Health Economics

Information Knowledge Systems Management, 2009
Health care spending and more importantly, health care spending growth rates, are unsustainable. Past strategies of price controls, reliance on administered pricing for Medicare and the dominance of a la carte fee for service reimbursement have been part of the problem and do not represent promising strategies for the future.
Zweifel, Peter   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

One health economics.

2021
Abstract This chapter presents examples that demonstrate how economic analysis involving human and animal health sectors has become a central element for providing evidence of the added value of a One Health approach, then reflects on the new developments in One Health, in particular, approaches based on systems thinking, and their implications
Häsler, Barbara   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Economics, health and health economics: HYEs versus QALYs

Journal of Health Economics, 1993
This paper responds to Culyer and Wagstaff's (CW) and Buckingham's (B) arguments. We refute their claim about the equivalence of HYEs and QALYs; they fail to distinguish between choice under uncertainty and under certainty CW assume that all individuals have a specific form of utility function, which yields their conclusion of equivalence.
Gafni, A, Birch, S, Mehrez, A
openaire   +3 more sources

Postmodern Health Economics

Health Care Analysis, 1999
Postmodernism and health economics are both concerned with questions about choices and values, risk and uncertainty. Postmodernists seek to respond to such questions in the context of a world of uncoordinated and often contradictory chances, a world devoid of clear-cut standards.
R, Mannion, N, Small
openaire   +2 more sources

Health Economics and Health Economics Research

The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society, 1979
Economists were working on health care long before there was a subdiscipline called health economics. In the 1930s the American Medical Association (AMA) maintained a permanent Bureau of Medical Economics or Medical Economics Research. The Committee on the Costs of Medical Care (CCMC) conducted numerous surveys, studies, and analyses, off which the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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