YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Crisis in Health Care and the HMO Model
Essays 151 - 180
There is a need for neighborhood health centers to provide greater access to health care. This essay discusses a marketing plan fo...
This essay discusses the health information technology economic and clinical health act, which addresses using technology in healt...
This research paper discusses ten different topics that pertain to advanced practice nursing. The topics discussed include Watson'...
This essay discusses the Health Reform Act of 2010, the Patient Protection And Affordable Health Care Act. The essay identifies th...
The writer looks at a scenario where a home care health organization wants to introduce an electronic patient records system. The ...
In fifteen pages this paper discusses the importance of quality management in long term health care in a consideration that includ...
getting needed referrals, going through red tape, being told they need to submit forms for approval and things of that nature. The...
to focus more upon running smooth production rather than customer needs. By skewing the focus in this way, health care organizati...
In five pages this paper considers an evaluation of HMOs and how integrated systems and hospitals can go about becoming more aggre...
In this five page paper the writer presents a causal model for the publication by Linda Flynn. The focus of the publication is ob...
In three pages this paper examines how HMOs can be improved in order to ensure better care quality. Three sources are cited in th...
In eleven pages this paper discuses PPOs and HMOs in an evaluation of these managed care system's pros and cons. Twelve sources a...
majority group in the United States. When considering other population groups, the disparities are even greater. The purpose her...
a total of more than $4,000 for every citizen of the country (Grumbach and Bodenheimer, 1994). Plagued by overspending for years,...
offer a whole-life support system. This serves managers and employees alike. Myths about Human Motivation...
chemicals throughout our lives and some ill effects do not happen until years later (NIEHS, 2003). Most physicians have limited ...
a list of advantages for patients, which include: * Greater coordination of services leads to higher quality care for the patient ...
advance at the time, but it created the scenario in which those receiving health care were not those paying for health care. As c...
In this way, Buddhism became accessible to all, and was able to develop the concept of community which...
expanding market share now and then maintaining that share as the target market increases in size. Situation Analysis BHH...
took place mainly in acute-care facilities; in other words, hospitals. Much of health care was delivered in these hospitals by doc...
level of education, the impact of traditional culture is also highly influential. The concepts of health are based on the cultural...
and they want guidance to improve their conditions and diseases Canton (2007) reminds the reader that technology has changed eve...
is how the people who are in treatment, or receiving care, should participate in that care. The Planetree model for example takes...
(Maier-Lorentz, 2008). Male doctors, for instance, may not be allowed to touch female Arab patients in certain parts of the body a...
stability, while the goal of tertiary prevention "is to help the patient return to wellness following treatment" (Torakis and Smig...
driving distance, visiting with friends, and participating in a variety of church activities. Also, both children play sports whic...
can only be expected to escalate in the near future. Therefore, issues of affordability, in relation to equitable healthcare servi...
In eleven pages drug price control as it relates to healthcare and specifically HMOs are examined in terms of the impact of health...
This research paper describes Patricia Benner's Humanistic Model, Kathryn E. Barnard's Parent Child Interaction Model and Nola Pen...