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Regional health promotion planning and monitoring
Health Education Journal, 1987HEALTH promotion has become the focus of much interest in the field of health service planning. Related to this, expectations have developed in terms of the performance of health education/pro motion services. There has been an ominous tend ency for these expectations to fail to recognise important developments in health promotion theory and practice,
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Occupational health in the negev: A model for regional planning
American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1989AbstractIn the Negev region of Israel, I tested a model approach to occupational health planning. This model included components assessing exposures, measuring adverse health outcomes, and evaluating health services.I analyzed employment survey data, compiled an exposure data base, and carried out site visits covering 10,707 employees (over 50% of the ...
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A Multiobjective Model for Regional Planning of Health Facilities
Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1979Presented herein is a multiobjective planning model for a regional health-facility system. The system consists of a regional center, intermediate and local hospitals, and health centers. This planning model is based on the maximization of the system effectiveness.
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The Committed Perspective — Policy Principles for Regional Health Plans
New England Journal of Medicine, 2017As lawmakers debate the dismantling of the Affordable Care Act, regional, nonprofit health plans that are committed to their communities — particularly ones closely aligned with provider organizations — must ask “What comes next?” and “How do we make it work?”
Ceci Connolly, Thomas H. Lee
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Regional planning in rural Manitoba: a study of the ‘health’ of a prairie region
Applied Geography, 1992Abstract Regional planning has commonly been concerned with large units at the expense of small, and often treats these areas as more or less homogeneous entities, rather than as regions that might vary internally, in their economic and social well-being.
Kenneth C. Bessant, John Everitt
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Feasibility of input/output analysis for regional health planning
Social Science & Medicine. Part C: Medical Economics, 1978Abstract Input/output analysis can provide an economic model of the health care system which is capable of characterizing financial flows, describing health system interrelationships and predicting the impacts of policy alternatives on the entire health care system.
Gary L. Gaumer+2 more
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Journal of Interprofessional Care, 2019
Following a history of the Australian health system and funding models, we outline workforce issues, in particular, the lack of health professionals in regional locations.
J. Thistlethwaite+2 more
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Following a history of the Australian health system and funding models, we outline workforce issues, in particular, the lack of health professionals in regional locations.
J. Thistlethwaite+2 more
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Estimating the Health Benefits of a Proposed Regional Transportation Plan
Journal of Transport & Health, 2018Highest Scoring Abstract: Practitioner Background The population of the Greater Toronto-Hamilton Area (GTHA) is projected to grow from 6.2 million people in 2001 to 9.6 million in 2031. Existing commute times are the country's highest with annual costs of congestion to reach $15 billion.
David L. Mowat+3 more
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Information Systems Planning for a Regional Health Board
1982In 1979, the North Western Health Board prepared an administrative organisation and computer systems development plan, setting out the objectives, priorities and resource requirements for the development of a practical range of manual and computer systems in the areas of finance, personnel, patient administration and community care management.
Donal O’Shea, Terry Neill
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Formula Funding and Regional Planning of Health Services in Australia
The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society, 1985groups and communities within Australia's scattered population has been problematic for more than a century. When modern scientific medicine was developing its present form, in the 1880s, Australia was composed of six self-governing colonies of the United Kingdom. Half of the population was dispersed in an agricultural and extractive economy supporting
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