Results 201 to 210 of about 37,253 (248)

Health-Manpower Needs

New England Journal of Medicine, 1978
Congress has temporarily settled the health-manpower controversy with its compromised, but still controversial, legislation. As a condition for federal capitation support of medical schools, the new law requires a 5 per cent increase in third-year medical-school classes from defined new pools of potential applicants.
B, Lown   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Health Manpower

New England Journal of Medicine, 1975
exaly   +4 more sources

Trends in Health Manpower

Health Affairs, 1985
Health Affairs inaugurated in its last issue a new feature that will provide readers on a continuing basis data on the most important trends of the burgeoning medical industry. Once a year, the trends of a significant quarter of the total health sphere will be reported, thus giving readers the opportunity to track this information over time.
L, LeRoy, J K, Iglehart, D A, Ellwood
openaire   +2 more sources

HEALTH MANPOWER REEXAMINED

Pediatrics, 1971
As the "health care crisis" becomes this year's "in" issue, a whole host of "solutions" are unveiled, rivalling the promotion of new model cars, breakfast cereals, and X-rated movies. Common features of these proposals are: flashy titles like "Medicredit," "Ameriplan," "HMO's," and so forth, mind-boggling complexity, benefits slanted to the advantage ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Health Manpower in Transition

The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly, 1967
Doctor Michael M. Davis, one of the pioneers in the study of medical care and health policy in the United States, identified the basic elements of medical services as 1. people, 2. professionals, 3. facilities, 4. organization and 5. finances.1 In his opinion, finances represented the foundation that supported professionals, facilities and ...
openaire   +3 more sources

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