Results 251 to 260 of about 1,399,894 (283)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Journal of the Indiana State Medical Association, 1977
Sir .—The January issue of theJournalcontained a well-writtenmarginal commentby Dr A. Frederick North (131:17, 1977) regarding the Javits and Scheuer proposals for national health insurance for mothers and children. This article explained the plans well and was generally fair and to the point.
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Sir .—The January issue of theJournalcontained a well-writtenmarginal commentby Dr A. Frederick North (131:17, 1977) regarding the Javits and Scheuer proposals for national health insurance for mothers and children. This article explained the plans well and was generally fair and to the point.
+15 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).
William K. Ghee +2 more
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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).
William K. Ghee +2 more
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The American Journal of Nursing, 1978
serve as a basis for the development of the legislation. These plans (see box, next page) differ considerably in their meaning, intent, purpose, and scope of services and benefits they would underwrite.) We met in Texas, Wisconsin, Connecticut, and California and spent two days in Canada studying that country's national health insurance system.
openaire +2 more sources
serve as a basis for the development of the legislation. These plans (see box, next page) differ considerably in their meaning, intent, purpose, and scope of services and benefits they would underwrite.) We met in Texas, Wisconsin, Connecticut, and California and spent two days in Canada studying that country's national health insurance system.
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National Health Insurance, National Health Policy, and the National Health
AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1971rangements for obtaining or delivering modem health services. The failures are apparent. The arrangements do not provide for easy access to treatment; they are impervious to preventive services. There is particularly a cruel lack of services that do exist, for the poor, for the minorities, for the disadvantaged in education or culturally different, for
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