Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

Do health expenditures catch-up? Evidence from OECD countries

Health Economics
Narayan, P.K., et al. - In this paper, we examine the catch-up hypothesis, that is, whether or not per capita health expenditures of the UK, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and Spain converge to the per capita health expenditures of the USA over the period 1960-2000. We propose a framework to examine convergence of health expenditures and use recent developments in unit root testing, namely the Lagrange multiplier univariate and panel approaches that allow for at most two structural breaks

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

Monday, September 24, 2007

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

We Can Do Better - Improving the Health of the American People

New England Journal of Medicine
Schroeder, S.A., et al. - The United States spends more on health care than any other nation in the world, yet it ranks poorly on nearly every measure of health status. How can this be? What explains this apparent paradox?...The two-part answer is deceptively simple — first, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Friday, September 21, 2007

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Factors Associated with the Income Distribution of Full-Time Physicians: A Quantile Regression Approach

Health Services Research
Shih, Y., et al. - Conclusions: The quantile regression technique offers an analytical tool to evaluate policy effects beyond the means. A longitudinal application of this approach may enable health policy makers to identify winners and losers among segments of the physician workforce and assess how market dynamics and health policy initiatives affect the overall physician income distribution over various time intervals

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Interventions to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Medical Care Research and Review
Chin, M.H., et al. - In 2005, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change, a program to identify, evaluate, and disseminate interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in the care and outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease, depression, and diabetes. In this introductory paper, we present a conceptual model for interventions that aim to reduce disparities. With this model as a framework, we summarize the key findings from the six other papers in this supplement on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, breast cancer, interventions using cultural leverage, and pay-for-performance and public reporting of performance measures

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Spillovers And Vulnerability: The Case Of Community Uninsurance

Health Affairs
Pauly, M.V., et al. - This paper studies the uninsured as a vulnerable population. We contend that reducing the size of the uninsured population yields important spillover benefits to the insured population, benefits that go beyond a lower charity care burden. Evidence presented in this paper reinforces studies in the literature that show that problems of health services quality and access facing insured people increase when the proportion of uninsured people in their local communities is greater

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Would Greater Transparency And Uniformity Of Health Care Prices Benefit Poor Patients?

Health Affairs
Kyle, M.K., et al. - President Bush, the World Health Organization, and leading scholars have called for greater price transparency in health care. Prices are transparent when the buyer knows his or her price or knows prices paid by others, in advance. Transparent prices inform consumers of expected costs and reveal when sellers are charging high prices to poor people

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Monday, September 17, 2007

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Making A Difference In Differences For The Health Inequalities Of Individuals

Health Affairs
Miller, T., et al. - Policy interventions should focus on the degree to which health conditions are persistent, avoidable, and treatable. Assistance should be targeted to people who are at greater risk for such conditions amid the most pronounced gaps between their available resources and likely economic needs. The highest-yield interventions should address prenatal and early childhood care and reformation of destructive lifestyle practices. Improving outreach, education, convenience of access, and service delivery represents a more important factor than expanding the level and scope of insurance coverage

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels:

Medicare And Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Time To Ask The Taxpayers

Health Affairs
Gold, M.R., et al. - Maintaining Medicare’s affordability for taxpayers and beneficiaries is becoming harder. Although cost containment strategies have been proposed, using cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to prioritize coverage decisions has not been among them. There is a widespread but largely untested perception that Americans are unwilling to accept limits in health care. We review existing evidence about the public’s willingness to accept constraints and set health care priorities

Labels: