The challenges of rising health care costs and Medicare premiums will not suddenly abate. |
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They were three times more likely to have been exposed to a certain health care worker when compared to uninfected patients. |
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Monthly pension and health care benefits were increased by an undisclosed amount. |
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Risks and benefits associated with the use of aspirin have to be weighed carefully in any recommendations made by health care professionals. |
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The NDP's so-called commitment to health care has lead to longer wait lists, lots of out-dated medical equipment, and a shortage of nurses. |
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Holistic health care is a perfect technique for the nourishment of mind, body and spirit. |
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People who exercise regularly generally have a lower rate of absenteeism and require less health care. |
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In addition, health care has heavily underinvested in information technology compared with other enterprises. |
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Intermediate measures of quality of health care remained unchanged or improved slightly. |
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That is the debate over whether illegal aliens should have access to health care and other benefits. |
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Dench and others believe the future doesn't bode well for health care consumers. |
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These sections entitle everyone to have access to health care services provided by the state within its available resources. |
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Nurses will notice this when a Korean enters into the health care system accompanied by their multigenerational family members. |
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The point of this letter is to highlight the fact that the management of our health care system is a complex and multifaceted issue. |
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That pretty thoroughly undercuts any support I might have had for nationalised health care. |
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A multidisciplinary health care team is needed to address the patient's holistic needs. |
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The managed care movement is one of the country's efforts to organize the fragmented, uncoordinated, and costly health care delivery system. |
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Of greater concern to health care practitioners is unpredictable and unanticipated toxicity. |
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This is the blowback from all those aggressive public health campaigns that tout the importance of mental health care. |
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But he leaves unaddressed the issue of health care and the fact that 43 million Americans do not have health care insurance. |
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The motivation for this rationalisation is, however, the serious fiscal crisis in the health care system. |
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At issue was an ultimatum issued for a crackdown on the privatization of health care. |
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A high maternal mortality rate automatically exposes the lack of universal and safe health care. |
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I wish he had gone a step further instead of continuing to silo the problems of health care, climate change and economic crisis. |
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After all, health care is not a public good or natural monopoly so one can't argue that government must provide it. |
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Our health care system so bewildering and impersonal that one often doesn't know where to turn or whom to trust. |
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It would seem that just as only they can be trusted to reform health care, only they have the moral authority to monkey with Crown corporations. |
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They paid out sums to meet losses of earnings and health care expenses arising from sickness or injury at work. |
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Most apparent in this regard is the absence of adequate sick leave, maternity provision, and child health care. |
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Mrs West said the Trust should encourage existing health care assistants to train as nurses. |
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The business of health care combined with staff turnover and being short-staffed can affect a perioperative nurse's morale. |
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The biomedical model of illness, which has dominated health care for the past century, cannot fully explain many forms of illness. |
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For years, the health care industry had calculated that transaction networks were the best way to trim spiraling administrative costs. |
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For 10 years, they will be followed through their national health care records, which will be copied into the Biobank. |
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The availability of blood for operations and transfusions is an essential part of our health care system. |
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At 17 she got a job as a health care assistant at Airedale Hospital, where advice from a ward sister encouraged her to start training as a nurse. |
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If you are selling a health care product, I think it is vital that you are able to respond to queries with an educated and informed answer. |
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And I think when the economic message sharpens on health care, the economy, job creation, you'll see the race tighten. |
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She is determined to help improve health care in developing nations, to prevent tragedies like her natural mother's early death. |
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This ratio provides a method of standardizing data for benchmarking clinical indicators across health care agencies. |
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Government doctors and health care officials abhor postings in rural areas. |
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The metropolitan grouping reflects urban areas and a fully functioning tiered health care system with ready access to tertiary care. |
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His belated embrace of the me-too politics of health care may have been prompted by political expediency. |
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He was a titan in America's steel, aluminum, and magnesium industries and was even involved in health care. |
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Overall, this is a timely and useful review of a topic that has assumed major importance in health care. |
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And it is surely the case that health care expenditures are often misallocated and wasteful. |
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Americans are no more self-indulgent in their purchases of health care than they are in their purchases of appliances or cars. |
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We wouldn't want to do anything to thwart the Campbell government's quest for the privatization of health care. |
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Always talk to your health care provider before using any medicated creams or ointments to treat skin problems. |
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This regulation is considered the most staggering health care law since Medicare. |
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First, Medicare wants to keep health care costs for its beneficiaries under control. |
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The costs included the direct medical costs of health care within the programme and elsewhere. |
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This would lead to reduction in medical costs and improvement in health care. |
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These people are not even afforded the very basics of health care, like vaccines or antibiotics. |
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Gaps themselves mark the areas of vulnerability and show the mechanism by which complexity flows through health care to individual patients. |
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On May 29 health care workers are expected to carry out a nine-hour strike and march on the health ministry. |
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It has shown me how to utilize a scientific approach in analyzing health care businesses. |
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Is now a bad time to ask how much you are spending on prenatal and pregnancy-related health care? |
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I was waiting for him to promise to create a national health care system for the Bactrian children. |
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Capitalism may work manifold miracles, but they don't include meeting essential social needs such as housing and health care. |
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New software for the state health care authority is being coded in part in India. |
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This pursuit of risk avoidance has become the mantra of health care and is now a political manifesto pledge. |
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Then individuals could protect themselves against the risk of needing health care by voluntary insurance schemes. |
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The UK multicentre teledermatology trial is evaluating the use of real time telemedicine for delivering dermatological health care. |
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We studied the role of outpatient testing in the health care system and the impact of managed care on such testing. |
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We must ask ourselves, however, whether managed care is a health care model or a payment model, she said. |
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The center also collaborates extensively with health care delivery systems and managed care companies. |
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Today's health care climate, managed care, is forcing us once again to try to halt burgeoning costs. |
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With a credulous press printing daily scare stories of impending health care chaos, the administration scaled back its bold plan. |
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The book will be useful to ancillary health care personnel, including nurses and laboratory technologists as well as physicians. |
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Both studies show a similar relationship between the trained health care professional and the expert vascular technician. |
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Most people suffer from malnutrition and do not have access to adequate health care. |
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It is clear that the maldistribution of public resources in health care cannot continue in the U.S. or other countries. |
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Typically, the supply of health care professionals in most states is either inadequate or maldistributed. |
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When it comes to health care, Klein seems to have a suit of armour that protects him from the critics' barbs. |
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They don't need to pay for diapers or baby food or their children's health care. |
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The court was told that the division between health care and personal care can be difficult if not impossible to draw. |
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Dr. Leier says the health care system will come under increased stress as the baby boomer population ages. |
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The aging of the baby boom generation is the major factor underlying the increasing need for health care workers. |
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The candidates, they suggested, should save their breath for the economy and health care. |
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A nursing auxiliary on ward 23 at Bradford Royal Infirmary, she joined the NHS in 1979 and is now a health care assistant in elderly care. |
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We thus have had a chance to sample the health diet available under two very different systems of health care. |
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Could relying entirely upon the parent's insurance possibly increase the costs for camper health care? |
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One of the takeaways is there is no crisis in health care in the United States. |
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This scene is familiar to some mental health care workers as they attend to trauma victims. |
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She was attended to by a nurse at the health care unit but was pronounced dead at 9.55 pm. |
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Yes, we had to slash into sacrosanct areas like health care to save the country. |
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He is also calling for a new national health exchange that is supposed to somehow offer low-cost, high-quality health care plans. |
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The growing concern about health care costs increases the risks presented by legalizing assisted suicide and euthanasia. |
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The rundown of essential services, particularly health care, have been a source of ongoing resentment and anger throughout the area. |
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He gave a rundown on how key services were provided on a regional basis, including health care, education and childcare. |
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A Republican assemblyman supported the bill, citing that half of California prisoners smoke and the development will cut health care costs. |
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Compare that with how much you might otherwise spend on health care benefits, and you'll probably just take two aspirins and sign up. |
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In the United States and more developed regions of the world, trained health care professionals can rapidly take steps to treat asphyxia. |
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The amount of money a country spends on health care does positively correlate with increased longevity. |
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We won't wait any longer for this country's children have health care and a quality education. |
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I believe that in mental health care however, we potentially hit a bigger snag in trying to creatively doubt what we do. |
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Do you have a living will or a durable power of attorney for health care, sometimes called an advanced directive? |
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And compensation, even when including room and board, often does not cover basic needs such as clothing and health care. |
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I'll live to fight another day on health care, environmental concerns and sensible gun legislation. |
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Standard precautions are applied to all patients being cared for in health care facilities, regardless of diagnoses. |
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The apathy and lack of compassion he describes, are also present in our own US health care system. |
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We should not get into the ideology of capitalism versus socialism in health care. |
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Emollients in alcohol-based hand antiseptics have been shown to reduce complaints of drying, irritation, and itching by health care workers. |
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That would be great, having a health care system patterned after the foster care system. |
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As health care professionals, we must see ourselves as social activists and community liaisons. |
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Second, when outside assistance is sought, family members frequently serve as liaisons between elderly relatives and health care systems. |
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We reviewed the literature that assesses the cost effectiveness of CPD interventions in health care. |
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Those who attack health care workers deserve nothing less than lengthy jail sentences. |
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Perhaps these crazy ideas are just his way of forcing the federal government to ante up more money to the provinces for health care. |
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Patients with anorexia nervosa often attempt to deceive health care professionals because they do not want treatment for their disorder. |
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In rural areas, women must contend with cultural and legal restrictions on health care. |
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Once things slowed down, retrenchment became a serious business just as health care and education expenses began to shoot upwards. |
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Skepticism and warnings were mainly expressed in medical journals, indicating a reserved attitude by many health care professionals. |
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I had learned a little about Marxism in a course on the economics of health care. |
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It created medical privacy laws that require health care providers to be careful how they release protected health care information. |
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The Bush administration and Republicans support the consumer-driven health care plans, McArdle said. |
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If you are anemic your health care provider may prescribe an iron supplement. |
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If tissue damage is severe, a health care provider may need to remove the tissue surgically or amputate the limb. |
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Concerns about latex protein allergy, however, have caused a number of health care facilities to seek alternatives. |
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In amniocentesis, the health care provider inserts a thin needle through the woman's abdomen. |
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The government has recently renewed its commitment to improving the health care of prisoners. |
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Is it any wonder that many in this community believe that we are very much poor relations in health care provision? |
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The Guild reinstituted a health care package during its annual membership meeting on December 2-4 in Austin, Texas. |
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The regulatory bodies cover most professionals who work in health care including nurses. |
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The subject of regression of human cirrhosis is extremely important in today's health care environment. |
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In 1993-94, the Klein government rolled back health care workers ' wages by 5 percent. |
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The WSWS does not propose that doctors, nurses and other health care workers not be paid. |
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The existing knowledge base lacks information on at least four key areas of mental health care and delivery. |
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There are two main routes by which aggrieved patients may seek redress for unsatisfactory health care. |
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One of the things your health care provider monitors is the size of your abdomen and the amount of amniotic fluid in your womb. |
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This costs us hundreds of millions of dollars annually in tax revenues which could be used for our ailing health care system. |
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The final source of health care law comes from the international agreements on human rights. |
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Indeed, one of the important values which health care professionals have to hold dear is great respect for human life. |
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Many of us earn an average wage and, as things stand now, would not be able to afford private health care. |
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The nurse replied, flipping through some paperwork and scribbling in that unreadable language of health care providers. |
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This is unfortunate because, as we have been slow to learn, the various sectors of health care are critically interdependent. |
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Accurate daily record keeping is useful for both your health care team and family to assist you with managing your diabetes. |
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Millions of middle-class families like these are working hard and trying to get ahead, but they just can't keep up with the health care costs. |
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Lefties think that stupid westies are too stupid to make a sensible decision about their health care needs. |
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This boiled down to trained nurses being available to administer to the health care needs of prison inmates. |
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Thailand's beloved elephants need health care and skilled people to administer to the animals. |
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This book is a valuable reference that belongs in every student nurse's book bag, health care provider library, and hospital unit. |
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Because of their large rural populations these areas generally lack health care services needed to screen and treat radiogenic diseases. |
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Managed clinical networks are in keeping with the increasingly important role primary care has in acute health care. |
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Although medical care was free, many health care professionals moonlighted to make extra money because official health care usually involved long lines and waiting lists. |
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He has proposed a new system designed to remove inequalities in health care. |
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And the medications were sold to the government at huge mark-ups that drained the health care budget. |
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One of the major goals of the Affordable Care Act was to achieve universal access to health care. |
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Maybe instead of mandatory health care, we should make it mandatory that each American carry at least one assault weapon? |
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Still, attitudinal barriers about the value of mental health care seemed to be be the biggest obstacle. |
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A public health-care option, or a Medicare buy-in will solve the problem of unaffordable health care in this country? |
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The opinion of virtually every health care economist I have ever met is that those two things are causally related. |
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Starting with the really big health care agreement, the dynamic duo will be using big wads of money to lure the provinces into joining their new programs. |
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But not all health care providers agree that charcoal should be used outside of a medical setting. |
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Treatment must be left to qualified health care professionals. |
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Except, of course, health care isn't easily accessible to all. |
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High utilizers of medical services comprise a small proportion of all patients, yet they account for a disproportionate amount of expenses in the health care system. |
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Paul Krugman and others keep harping on the fact that the United States spends more on health care than other industrial countries, yet our longevity statistics are no better. |
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Wouldn't it be great if health care emerged as the ultimate wedge issue? |
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Thailand combined the introduction of universal access to subsidised health care with a radical shift in funding away from urban hospitals to primary care. |
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Because it has, in the past, been a tool of racism and colonialism, and in the present, is a means of rationing health care. |
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And of course we have health care coming down the pike, and all its subsidies to families up to 188 percent of the poverty line. |
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Indeed, it is understandable why health care staff dealing with anxious patients should employ friendly forms of address in order to put them at ease. |
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They need things like contraception, health care, and they love to talk about equal pay. |
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He also described how kangaroo care fits this original paradigm and the role that health care technology should play in the care of premature infants. |
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However, progress had been more limited in improving the efficiency of the public administration, and in rationalising the health care and education systems. |
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But our employer-based system already delivers the costliest health care on the planet. |
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You have Baby Boomers aging, a lot of them tremendous health care bills. |
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The grade two listed main hospital building has been designated for use for health care, which could see a doctors surgery or small hospital created inside. |
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All patients can do is trust that the strangers on their health care team are competent and caring enough to do their best to help correct whatever ails the patient. |
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After law school, she joined daub full-time, working as his legislative assistant on issues like health care and Social Security. |
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In the recent birthday honours only one of the 25 new knights bachelor was from health care, and he was a chairman of a regional office of the NHS Executive. |
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My own view, for what it is worth, is that where national governments fund health care they have a legitimate interest in properly funding research into treatment. |
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Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell tried to save health care by devising a compromise in early August. |
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Here is a holistic health care wrap-up that offers a few hours of relaxation as well as a complete rejuvenating experience for mothers of all ages. |
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Recent years have seen an increase in private sector health care, to, inevitably, the relief of some and discomfiture of others. |
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Several stubborn ideas have steered much of the discourse around health care. |
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According to the advocates of the holistic system, an integrative health care package would include facets from allopathy, Ayurveda, Homoeopathy, Yoga, Siddha and naturopathy. |
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I was just surprised at the level of divisiveness and immaturity... and I think it's the same thing with health care. |
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Acquiring knowledge about animal behavior, as well as general animal health care, prior to acquiring a pet could prevent relinquishments of this type. |
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The details of each candidate's health care platform will matter a lot less than the candidate's eagerness for the fight. |
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What is the reproductive health care system like in Australia? |
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His son, 38, works as an electrician, and his daughter, 22, works in health care at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. |
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Now we have self injury awareness campaigns, which often describe cutters as a permanently isolated minority, misunderstood by the public and health care professionals alike. |
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The ministry responsible for health care in prisons is usually not the ministry of health for example, the ministry of justice or the ministry of interior. |
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This perception of blindness in terms of social exclusion appears in some passages of the Israelite literature that presuppose the Levitical health care system. |
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The monograph classifies health care antiseptics in the following manner. |
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The account of a former Congress employee would suggest that management of the health care organisation is riddled with nepotism, corruption and incompetence. |
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Since a miraculous cure to fix the ills of American health care is unlikely to happen quickly, to help you stay healthy to a ripe old age, what are your options? |
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Instead of contacting their line manager, an employee calling in sick must now speak to a nurse from private health care organisation Active Health. |
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I doubt health care workers, telephone linesmen, or auto painters have the same kind of increased mortality risk, but this bill lumps them all in together. |
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While both state and federal governments continue to pay lip service to supporting the public hospital system, they are speeding up the process of privatising health care. |
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The franchising company points out on its website that the president's health care law included measures to help support that. |
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As nurses, we need to be knowledgeable about the legal implications of advance directives, living wills, health care agent, and conservator of person. |
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Not to mention the revenue that will be generated by this, which then can be used to fund education and health care. |
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Create a public jobs program that funnels the unemployed to fast growing areas such as at-home health care and child care. |
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It helps ghanaian families travel into town for jobs or basic services, such as educational training and health care. |
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He also said health care providers should not gloss over possible or suspect cases. |
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So now we have a decision that hastens the day when this country will have single-payer health care. |
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The sanctions behind some rules may be only indirect, but they are nevertheless important in understanding the legal framework in which health care operates. |
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But medical experts say being able to take advantage of American health care almost certainly prolonged his life. |
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On a side note, if you want to know why health care costs keep going up, these sorts of tradeoffs are why. |
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Troops and their families count on high-quality education and responsive universal health care. |
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And I have a sneaking suspicion that you're not being all that helpful with health care implementation. |
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By soft power, he means building infrastructure and providing health care and economic development. |
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Instead of admitting our own mistakes in not providing the taxes to maintain and improve health care, we want a scapegoat to take the blame away from ourselves. |
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When implemented well, telemedicine may allow developing countries to leapfrog over their developed neighbours in successful health care delivery. |
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The cost of support and health care and insurance without SSI or Medicaid is prohibitive even for very wealthy families. |
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In an impassioned call to action, he urged American doctors, nurses, and health care professionals to join Africa in its fight. |
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So, we can be inactive in ordinary markets in a way we cannot be for health care, where illness thrusts activity upon us. |
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He has left millions of homeowners to fend for themselves, and even his health care plan is really only a stopgap measure. |
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He was primarily concerned with the inequity of our trade policies, our tax policies, our health care policies. |
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By that I mean providing education, providing health care, daily living, subsistence and so on. |
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Many of the poor either self-medicate or get whatever remedies they can from local pharmacists who are the only health care providers in some rural areas. |
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The defenders of our health care system have asserted themselves strongly, and the advocates of the two-tier system are for the moment, in retreat. |
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The new health care ads are designed to jack up sentiments to the kindling point. |
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Unfortunately, according to the present dogma health care is not a matter of health, merely a matter of political demagogy and media sensationalism. |
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As a health board with responsibility for the delivery of health care for 400,000 people in the south east, it behoves us to make our position crystal clear. |
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Nonetheless, at a time when health care organizations are under intense pressure to do more with less, employee morale is one of management's topmost concerns. |
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From tax relief to gay rights to health care, Romney has been all over the political map. |
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Speaking of health, in what kind of shape is public health care? |
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First, the normal saline and sterile gauze pads needed for the dressings usually are inexpensive and readily accessible in health care facilities. |
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The agreement reportedly includes salary increase, improvements to shift work and weekend work benefits, and improvements to extended health care benefits. |
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He is almost as passionate about universal health care as he is about mass transit. |
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As health care changes come into play in our society, bioethical needs, decisions, and guidelines will change to meet the new requirements of the societal ambience. |
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Those who need the health care system the most often mistrust it, and rightfully so. |
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Not only does the Turkana's lifestyle provide a challenge for health care, but the region's poor roads and bridges also hamper healthcare delivery. |
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Many health care occupancies are installing voice communications systems with both public address and two-way radio communications, according to Carrigan. |
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There has been a health care crisis since we were bloodletting. |
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We Brits are under no illusions that our NHS is the last word in health care. |
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As the entire public health care system in Poland is notoriously underfinanced, the rather costly methadone maintenance does not constitute a priority concern. |
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Yet despite attempts to reduce adverse events through multilevel interventions and information technology, widespread change in the culture of health care remains elusive. |
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Many other families with health insurance are still considered underinsured and vulnerable since their coverage does not include preventive health care services. |
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The initiative was established in March 1994 as a multiphase project investigating the effect of the health care environment on the safety and quality of patient care. |
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Now multiply their problems tenfold and one gets the idea of what a national health care system would be like in the United States with a population of 300 million people. |
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Vermont is the only state that requires purchase of any individual health care insurance policies through the state exchange. |
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Finland has universal low-cost or free government-provided health care, daycare, and nursery school. |
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Mandatory health coverage will drive down health care costs, and its universalist dimension and market-based orientation should appeal to the left as well as the right. |
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Alex, 72, West Palm Beach, FL Alex, a retired lawyer, gets his health care through Medicare. |
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The downtown contract, unlike the strip contract, gives the union bureaucracy the flexibility to adjust how much of the negotiated amount goes to wages and health care. |
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The prices paid for health care continues to outpace the prices paid for everything else. |
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We willingly give our health care providers a wealth of data about ourselves. |
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Not only is this a fiscal travesty but, more importantly, our health care decisions are being made by unqualified persons with purely fiscally based agendas. |
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By overreaching on health care, he has managed to achieve precisely the opposite effect. |
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And these are two overriding drivers of health care costs, according to a 2007 McKinsey and Company study. |
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They increased the numbers of health professionals working in the public sector, improved health care infrastructure, and extended care to formerly unserved areas. |
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The Hippocratic Corpus, popularly attributed to an ancient Greek practitioner known as Hippocrates, lays out the basic approach to health care. |
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Cherry picking is a metaphoric term used in many industries, including health care and health and wellness. |
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Polling suggests the British public overwhelmingly support increased funding for mental health care. |
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Most recruiters and seasoned health care executives use prior track record as a predictor of success in the selection of physician executives. |
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In the field of health care, funds were allocated to modernisation and extension schemes aimed at improving administrative efficiency. |
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This means that most health care provision is free at the point of delivery for all residents. |
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This has been attributed to the country's highly regarded education and health care systems, and its low level of income inequality. |
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Women religious engage in a variety of occupations, from contemplative prayer, to teaching, to providing health care, to working as missionaries. |
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One of the major cost drivers in the delivery of health care are these junk and frivolous lawsuits. |
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In contemporary mental health care, triage has become a necessity, as only the most at-risk people can access inpatient treatment. |
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But digitizing health care offers a wide array of opportunities to improve both quality and productivity. |
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Kilpatrick tried a similar approach, focusing on health care for veterans. |
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Healthcare in Scotland is mainly provided by NHS Scotland, Scotland's public health care system. |
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Economic analysis can be applied throughout society, as in business, finance, health care, and government. |
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For clinicians and therapists treating patients with multiple sclerosis, and neurophysiologists and health care advisors, Kesselring et al. |
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The CNS role was created to meet the multifaceted needs of patients, nursing staff, and entire health care organizations. |
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When providing support, health care providers must be aware of their own empathy fatigue. |
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This legislation is meant to provide more Nevadans with access to high-quality health care. |
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This report shows the importance of ensuring health care access to all Coloradans, regardless of income. |
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Improving the healthspan of older adults could dramatically lessen the impact of an aging population on the health care industry. |
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Economist Milton Friedman said the role of the government in health care should be restricted to financing hard cases. |
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I don't think we'll ever commoditize health care to the point that it'll be like buying cars. |
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One of the goals of socialized medicine systems is ensuring universal access to health care. |
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What percentage of the national wealth is spent on health care? |
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In England, a survey for the British Medical Association of the general public showed overwhelming support for the tax funding of health care. |
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The current CON law was designed to restrain the overbuilding of health care facilities for acute care provided to local residents. |
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They were health care priority, access to care, undiagnosed illnesses, classification of Gulf War I records, outreach and timeliness. |
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Under chapter 74, nonsuiting no longer works, as the health care filing of the original petition initiates the 120 days, not the suit. |
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Others contend that health care consumption is not like other consumer consumption. |
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Poverty and procreation among women an an anthropologic study with implications for health care providers. |
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The Service has issued an industry director directive on contractual allowance issues in the health care industry. |
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In October, Lally received the AstraZeneca Spirit of Humanity Award for providing health care to underserved communities. |
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Resulting in increased availability for the delivery of oral health care to underserved areas. |
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When the government covers the cost of health care, there is no need for individuals or their employers to pay for private insurance. |
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In the delivery of health care, there is both overuse and underuse of resources. |
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Army Medical Department, the surgeon general provides advice and assistance to the Army secretary and chief of staff on health care matters. |
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Some residents, furthermore, joined and served as officers of a regional health care co-op. |
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Give him wodges of money saved from the defence budget to build a decent health care system. |
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They all represent important concepts, and of course there are many more acronyms in today's health care equally deserving of respect. |
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Patients in the United States are paying more for their health care, in part through additional or higher copayments. |
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Presently Medicare requires copayments for many of its services, but until now home health care has been the exception rather than the rule. |
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They see that health care is not just doctors, but also nurses, perfusionists and other specialists. |
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Participants also identified dependence on health care professionals to initiate ACP conversations as another important barrier to hope. |
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Aa HCAC has become the third health care accreditation organization in the world to gain all three international accreditations set by ISQua. |
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Nevertheless, glass ceilings are found in all health care organizations and not just in academic medical centers. |
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They will sacrifice women, children and refuse to give either access to affordable health care with their talibangelical ideology. |
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The UK's NHS provided publicly funded health care to all UK permanent residents free at the point of need, being paid for from general taxation. |
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We can have a social safety net that protects our retired citizens from poverty and makes sure they can afford adequate health care. |
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Recognition of DO refractions would be a major retrograde step for the profession and a disservice to the health care of the nation. |
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Canadians are happy to tell anyone who will listen what makes this country great is our safe streets, health care and social safety net. |
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Unfortunately, reimporting drugs at lower prices could produce disastrous results for our health care system in the long run. |
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Medicare and Medicaid are forms of publicly funded health care, which fits the looser definition of socialized medicine. |
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However, from the early 2000s, the overall economy of the area has diversified to include health care, transportation and telecommunications. |
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