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In: Canadian public policy: a journal for the discussion of social and economic policy in Canada = Analyse de politiques, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 167-178
ISSN: 0317-0861
In: Health Care Issues, Costs and Access
Intro -- PHYSICIAN PRACTICES: CHANGES, TRENDS, AND IMPLICATIONS -- PHYSICIAN PRACTICES: CHANGES, TRENDS, AND IMPLICATIONS -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- Chapter 1 PHYSICIAN PRACTICES: BACKGROUND, ORGANIZATION, AND MARKET CONSOLIDATION -- SUMMARY -- INTRODUCTION -- PHYSICIAN SUPPLY -- Supporting Practitioners -- PRACTICE CONSOLIDATION -- Market Trends -- Larger Group Practices and Physician Organizations -- Hospital Affiliation and Employment -- Affiliation with Insurers and Other Payers -- Delivery Reforms -- Concierge Practices -- LEGAL ISSUES -- ISSUES FOR CONGRESS -- Medical Spending -- Access -- Coordinated Care/Quality -- APPENDIX. PHYSICIAN INCOME AND PRACTICE COSTS -- Federal Policies Affecting Compensation -- End Notes -- Chapter 2 PHYSICIAN SUPPLY AND THE PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT -- SUMMARY -- INTRODUCTION -- SIZE OF THE PHYSICIAN POPULATION -- Measuring the Physician Population -- Determining the Appropriate Size of the Physician Population -- PPACA and the Size of the Physician Population -- PPACA Provisions Targeting the Number of Physicians Trained -- PPACA Provisions Targeting Physician Productivity -- COMPOSITION OF THE PHYSICIAN POPULATION -- Primary Care Supply and Factors Influencing Primary Care Supply -- PPACA and the Composition of the Physician Population -- PPACA Provisions Targeting Primary Care Supply -- Primary Care Content in Physician Training -- Primary Care Physician Payment -- Care Coordination by Primary Care Physicians -- PPACA Provisions Targeting Shortages in Specialties -- GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF THE PHYSICIAN POPULATION -- Health Professional Shortage Areas and Medically Underserved Areas/Populations -- Why Geographic Shortages May Exist -- PPACA and the Geographic Distribution of the Physician Population -- PPACA Provisions Targeting the NHSC
In: Annual review of anthropology, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 187-205
ISSN: 1545-4290
Physician anthropologists have contributed extensively to the anthropology of biomedicine, as well as to other aspects of medical anthropology. Their use of detailed clinical case narratives allows elucidation of what is at stake for individuals and communities in the course of any given illness. Biomedically informed observations of bodies illustrate the connections between microscopic harm and macrosocial arrangements, while observations of clinical spaces and medical knowledge production contribute to current debates over evidence, metrics, migration, and humanitarianism. In moving away from culturalist explanations for illness, physician anthropologists have drawn attention to the manifold workings of structural violence—and have often sacrificed the possibility of deep epistemological challenges to biomedicine. While raising a note of caution about the moral authority of physician anthropologists, I recognize that much of this scholarship has laid the intellectual groundwork for a movement toward equity that refuses to justify poor-quality health care for poor people.
In: Environmental policy and law, Band 3, Heft 3-4, S. 165-165
ISSN: 1878-5395
In: Medical Care Review, Band 34, Heft 1, S. 19-32
In: Medical Care Review, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 22-22
In: Medical care research and review, Band 75, Heft 1, S. 88-99
ISSN: 1552-6801
Although there has been significant interest from health services researchers and policy makers about recent trends in hospitals' ownership of physician practices, few studies have investigated the strengths and weaknesses of available data sources. In this article, we compare results from two national surveys that have been used to assess ownership patterns, one of hospitals (the American Hospital Association survey) and one of physicians (the SK&A survey). We find some areas of agreement, but also some disagreement, between the two surveys. We conclude that full understanding of the causes and consequences of hospital ownership of physicians requires data collected at the both the hospital and the physician level. The appropriate measure of integration depends on the research question being investigated.
In: Metascience: an international review journal for the history, philosophy and social studies of science, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 157-160
ISSN: 1467-9981
• Columbia: On complaint of Sumter police authorities, W.S. Penn was arrested for representing himself as a physician and for selling influenza "cure" he said the government authorized him to sell; it is alleged he sold his "physic" to negroes in Sumter Co. ; Newspaper article ; 1
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Malpractice insurance premiums for physicians have increased at an average rate of over 30 percent per year. This rate is significantly higher than health care cost inflation and the increase in physician costs. Trends indicate that malpractice related costs, both liability insurance and defensive medicine costs, will continue to increase for the near future. Pressures to limit physician costs under Medicare raise a concern about how malpractice costs can be controlled. This paper presents an overview of the problem, reviews options that are available to policymakers, and discusses State and legislative efforts to address the issue.
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