Results 241 to 250 of about 7,846,704 (299)
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The Future of Children, 1995
Unlike children in most other economically developed countries, children in the United States are not guaranteed health insurance coverage. Indeed, many U.S. children have no health insurance coverage at all. Their lack of coverage restricts their access to health care services: uninsured children have fewer physician visits per year than children with
E M, Lewit, L S, Baker
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Unlike children in most other economically developed countries, children in the United States are not guaranteed health insurance coverage. Indeed, many U.S. children have no health insurance coverage at all. Their lack of coverage restricts their access to health care services: uninsured children have fewer physician visits per year than children with
E M, Lewit, L S, Baker
openaire +2 more sources
JAMA, 1920
To the Editor: —InThe Journal, Jan. 24, 1920, p. 271, Dr. E. M Stanton opposed the principles of compulsory health insurance on the grounds that the burdens of such insurance cannot be borne by the insured. In so doing, in my opinion, he made a very good argument in favor of compulsory health insurance.
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To the Editor: —InThe Journal, Jan. 24, 1920, p. 271, Dr. E. M Stanton opposed the principles of compulsory health insurance on the grounds that the burdens of such insurance cannot be borne by the insured. In so doing, in my opinion, he made a very good argument in favor of compulsory health insurance.
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1946
DOCTORS and hospitals cannot maintain a policy of isolationism in modern society any more than can governments and countries in the present economic world. The study of the interdependent relations that result is called "medical sociology." Today we are to explore some of the problems of medical sociology involving hospitals, but we shall soon discover
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DOCTORS and hospitals cannot maintain a policy of isolationism in modern society any more than can governments and countries in the present economic world. The study of the interdependent relations that result is called "medical sociology." Today we are to explore some of the problems of medical sociology involving hospitals, but we shall soon discover
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2014
Health Insurance aims at filling a gap in actuarial literature, attempting to solve the frequent misunderstanding in regards to both the purpose and the contents of health insurance products (and ‘protection products’, more generally) on the one hand, and the relevant actuarial structures on the other.
Emily Chai +3 more
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Health Insurance aims at filling a gap in actuarial literature, attempting to solve the frequent misunderstanding in regards to both the purpose and the contents of health insurance products (and ‘protection products’, more generally) on the one hand, and the relevant actuarial structures on the other.
Emily Chai +3 more
+5 more sources
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1973
Excerpt To the editor: I am sorry to have read Olser Peterson's analysis of national health insurance (Ann Intern Med78:739-749, 1973).
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Excerpt To the editor: I am sorry to have read Olser Peterson's analysis of national health insurance (Ann Intern Med78:739-749, 1973).
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1979
Publisher Summary This chapter provides an overview on the women's health insurance. Women have a unique relationship with the health-care system, the insurance companies that finance a large part of that system, and the general economic system. National health insurance is concerned with paying for medical care.
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Publisher Summary This chapter provides an overview on the women's health insurance. Women have a unique relationship with the health-care system, the insurance companies that finance a large part of that system, and the general economic system. National health insurance is concerned with paying for medical care.
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Changing Health Insurance Trends
New England Journal of Medicine, 2002With health care expenditures growing far more rapidly than the economy, employers and the health insurers whose plans employers purchase are implementing new ways to reconcile the strong demand for medical services with the means to pay for them. The changes fall short of a grand strategy, but they do underscore the emergence of a set of beliefs that ...
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Making health insurers insure.
Texas medicine, 2016A section of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requires health plans to maintain a minimum "medical loss ratio," or MLR, of between 80 percent and 85 percent. If they don't, they could be ordered to refund some premium dollars to their beneficiaries.
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