Results 221 to 230 of about 2,598,681 (268)
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Managing the Health of the Seafloor

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2003
With the oceans covering almost two-thirds of our planet, it is important that we be able to measure whether the seafloor ecosystem is healthy. One way to do this is to create a framework that could reduce the problems of applying “objective based” management to seafloor systems.
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Feedlot Health and Management

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 1998
Health programs based solely on vaccination and treatment regimens are often short-lived and unrewarding. The basis of any successful ongoing health program is a working health management system. The key to the success of the system is a functioning record system that generates information meaningful to management.
K F, Lechtenberg   +2 more
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Health Applications for Corporate Health Management

Telemedicine and e-Health, 2017
Many corporate organizations around the world are looking at new ways to improve the health and well-being of their employees. Many have begun to use m-health approaches and unique applications (apps) to provide assistance. In Germany, both m-health and occupational health management (OHM) are growing quickly.
Guido, Steigner   +4 more
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Managed health care

American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 1989
The fundamental components of managed-care plans are described; the development of managed-care programs is discussed; and the impact of managed care on pharmacy services and the price, quality, and accessibility of health care are reviewed. Health care can be considered to be managed when at least one of the following fundamental components is present:
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Virtual Health Management

2014 11th International Conference on Information Technology: New Generations, 2014
By 2030, 49% of the US population are projected to have a chronic condition, accounting for 78% of total healthcare costs. Despite significant investments in healthcare and information technology, healthcare costs continue to rise and errors still persist.
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Managing for Health: Why Health Care?

Health Care Management Science, 2002
Health and health care are increasingly big business. The challenge is to apply our knowledge and skills to meet people's needs, if not their demands as efficiently, effectively and beneficially as possible. "Value for money" is the slogan. For those who deliver the goods as required, the converse.
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Health Care Management with KeepCare

2012
Wireless sensing is part of our lives; major technological breakthroughs in the areas of sensors, integrated circuits, and also on wireless communications, led to the creation of wireless sensor networks (WSNs). Such networks have multiple uses, from monitoring and tracking of people and goods, to the coordination and processing of activities in ...
Raquel Sousa   +2 more
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Books for health care managers

Health Care Management Review, 1981
The selection of books reviewed here is a potpourri with something to interest almost everyone in the health care professions. The books cover computing in health care, an historical analysis of health care statistics, industrial ownership of hospitals, the formation of state health policies, hospice care and nursing homes; and there is a text on ...
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Change Management in Health Care

The Health Care Manager, 2008
This article introduces health care managers to the theories and philosophies of John Kotter and William Bridges, 2 leaders in the evolving field of change management. For Kotter, change has both an emotional and situational component, and methods for managing each are expressed in his 8-step model (developing urgency, building a guiding team, creating
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