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Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2007) 32 (3): 372–373.
Published: 01 June 2007
... symposium, six people remember Bruce as we knew and loved him — as colleague, provocateur, and loyal friend. When Bruce died, he had a manuscript in the JHPPL pipeline, already accepted and partially revised. We are publishing it here, with the help of several people who answered the many...
Image
Published: 01 October 2024
Figure 1 Conceptualization of metaregulation as a source of regulatory chill. Source : Adapted by authors from Schram and colleagues ( 2018 ). More
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2008) 33 (6): 1133–1167.
Published: 01 December 2008
... of administrative work, collegial relationships, and access to specialized technology. In the U.S. sample, job security, financial incentives, interaction with colleagues, and cooperative working relationships with colleagues and management were important predictors of overall job satisfaction. The implications...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2012) 37 (1): 141–147.
Published: 01 February 2012
...Douglas J. Opel; Douglas S. Diekema Lantos and colleagues (this issue) propose to eliminate personal belief exemptions from school vaccine mandates, particularly for those vaccines that target deadly contagious childhood disease. They argue that not doing so would be unjust. In this counterpoint...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1998) 23 (2): 215–263.
Published: 01 April 1998
... Newhouse and his colleagues at the Rand Corporation. In particular, it explores their role in transforming perceptions of health care from a set of special services into an ordinary commodity, in giving currency to apparently dispassionate as opposed to overtly value-laden analysis, and in according...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2024) 49 (3): 375–401.
Published: 01 June 2024
... and colleagues ( 2014 ) to demonstrate that respondents continued to have more positive views of doctors than other professionals and that public opinion was responsive to cues from a doctors’ group. Conclusions: What polarizes Democrats and Republicans today is not the question of whether medical scientists...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (4): 633–646.
Published: 01 August 2020
... of the president. Republican and Democratic presidents alike have employed an arsenal of administrative tools to pursue their policy goals: high-level appointments, administrative rule making, executive orders, proclamations, memoranda, guidance documents, directives, dear colleague letters, signing statements...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (6): 1023–1057.
Published: 01 December 2020
.... Physicians who do not share the political orientation of their colleagues are more likely to change workplaces within the same geographic area. Conclusions: Physicians are actively sorting along political lines. Younger physicians have trended sharply to the left and are increasingly drawn to urban areas...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1992) 17 (3): 463–482.
Published: 01 June 1992
... in the last ten years, factors influencing practice standards, and the costs of being sued and included these in the analysis. On average, physicians estimate that 19.5 out of one hundred of their colleagues will be sued in a given year, approximately three times the actual rate, with significant differences...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2002) 27 (1): 105–108.
Published: 01 February 2002
... with the memorable lines: “All happy families are happy in the same way. All miserable families are miserable in their own way.” In their insightful article on community-based part- nerships, Shortell and colleagues demonstrate that Tolstoy’s perception is equally valid when applied to the many initiatives...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2008) 33 (6): 1027–1029.
Published: 01 December 2008
... these problems? Perhaps surprisingly, a key factor is that Dutch policy- makers completely underestimated physician opposition and resistance to the new regime. Austin Frakt and colleagues then argue that the Veterans Health Admin- istration here in the United States ought to form a Medicare prescription...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2013) 38 (4): 629–643.
Published: 01 August 2013
... Burris and colleagues staked out the boundaries of PHLR. Writing only a couple of years after the field had begun to coalesce and had been recognized with a dedicated Program on Public Health Law Research from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), the authors described the contours of what had...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2016) 41 (4): 515–520.
Published: 01 August 2016
...David Mechanic; Margaret Marsh; Allan V. Horwitz Copyright © 2016 by Duke University Press 2016 Gerald N. Grob, a dear friend, colleague, and scholar, the Henry E. Sigerist Professor of the History of Medicine (Emeritus), and a founding member of the Rutgers University Institute...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1989) 14 (3): 621–625.
Published: 01 June 1989
...- sumers may receive too many services too intensively compared to a competitive market without insurance coverage. We accept this extension of our model. By introducing insurance into our set of equations, Wedig and colleagues show that the unregulated monopolist may produce too much quantity...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2008) 33 (2): 153–154.
Published: 01 April 2008
... the prevailing wisdom and focus on how things actually work. Jeffrey Alex- ander and colleagues, for example, consider the commonly accepted view that nonprofit hospitals are more likely to provide increased access to the underserved (and other “community benefits”) if the hospital’s...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2003) 28 (5): 781–788.
Published: 01 October 2003
...- ars of public opinion. As Brodie and her colleagues note, it is typically assumed in the public opinion literature that a politically disinterested public will pay greater attention to issues related to particular diseases than to other aspects of health policy, because diseases will seem...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1996) 21 (3): 617–624.
Published: 01 June 1996
... Tolley, Donald Kenkel, and Robert Fabian, and Global Comparative Assess- ments in the Health Sector: Disease Burden, Expenditures, and Interven- tion Packages, edited by C. L. Murray and A. D. Lopez, address COI analysis explicitly. Most of the sixteen chapters in Tolley and colleagues’ book touch...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2005) 30 (4): 555–562.
Published: 01 August 2005
.... In the essay by Susan Goold and colleagues on deliberative models for health plan enrollees, the authors make use of visual aides that look remarkably like a rather colorful pizza pie, albeit one sliced into a rather unusual confi guration of servings. The other two articles in this fi rst group...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1995) 20 (1): 175–190.
Published: 01 February 1995
... is not surprising. Bazzoli and colleagues do, however, raise a valid concern: Despite many speeches by the DOJ and FTC and their issuance of the 1993 and 1994 Statements of Antitrust Enforcement Policy in the Health Care Area The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and do...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1980) 5 (2): 192.
Published: 01 April 1980
.... To the members of the Board of Editors: It has been your collective effort which has in large part made the Journal an intellectual and profes- sional success. We have worked well as colleagues and I am immensely grateful for your personal support and for your consistently high level of professionalism. You...