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Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1984) 9 (1): 181–184.
Published: 01 February 1984
..., unpersuaded. Wright State University Marshall B. Kapp Regina Markell Morantz, Cynthia Stodola Pomerleau, and Carol Hansen Fenichel, eds., In Her Own Words: Oral Histories of Women Physicians (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983), 284 pp., $29.95 In Her Own Words...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2015) 40 (3): 589–597.
Published: 01 June 2015
... their friends. Only here, they have no friends. Finally, Adler and Cannon trace the drafting history of the ACA in an effort to support their view that Congress meant that three-word phrase, “by the State,” to do important work. All they demonstrate, however, is that Congress kept using the phrase during...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2017) 42 (5): 841–863.
Published: 01 October 2017
... significance is denoted as follows: significant at * p  < .05; ** p  < .01; *** p  < .001. 5. All texts were pre-processed by removing punctuations, numbers, white spaces, and stop words, which are common words that are used so frequently that they have little informational value...
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Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law 10637708.
Published: 24 March 2023
... University Press 2023 sfhaeder@tamu.edu ssylvester@uvu.edu timcal@bu.edu callaghan@tamu.edu Medicaid public opinion health policy race partisanship MANUUNSECDRIITPETD Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law Haeder, Sylvester, and Callaghan More Than Words More Than Words? How...
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Published: 01 April 2020
Figure 1 Relative frequencies of words in the 1988–89 crack cocaine and 2016–17 opioid samples (unigrams). More
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Published: 01 April 2020
Figure 2 Relative frequencies of words in the 1988–89 crack cocaine and 2016–17 opioid samples (bigrams). More
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Published: 01 April 2020
Figure 3 Relative frequencies of words in the 1988–89 crack cocaine and 2016–17 opioid samples (trigrams). More
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Published: 01 April 2020
Figure 4 Relative frequencies of words in the 1988–89 and 2016–17 heroin samples (bigrams). More
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Published: 01 April 2020
Figure 5 Relative frequencies of words in the 1988–89 crack cocaine and heroin samples (trigrams). More
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Published: 01 April 2020
Figure 6 Relative frequencies of words in the 2016–17 heroin and opioid samples (trigrams). More
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2013) 38 (4): 683–708.
Published: 01 August 2013
... polarization and gubernatorial appointment power) are correlated with the degree of policy specificity in state contraceptive mandates. This finding reinforces previous law and policy scholarship that has shown that greater fragmentation promotes ambiguous statutory language because broad wording acts...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1984) 9 (3): 489–501.
Published: 01 June 1984
... to set such limits in an ethically acceptable manner, were outlined. It was argued that although the term “rationing” is appropriate to describe the process of setting equitable limits, the word generates so much controversy that it is avoided; this very avoidance is an obstacle to the development...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1982) 6 (4): 739–751.
Published: 01 August 1982
...Edmund J. McTernan; Alan M. Leiken In little more than a decade, the problems and issues relating to the supply of, and demand for, skilled health manpower in the United States have shifted dramatically. Where the key words in the late 1960s were “shortage,” “crisis,” and “expansion of training...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2016) 41 (5): 1033–1045.
Published: 01 October 2016
... possible cost. In other words, VBP schemes choose some number of “quality indicators” and financially incent providers to meet them (and not others). Process measures are usually based on clinical science that cannot determine the effects of a process on individual patients or patients with comorbidities...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (1988) 13 (4): 623–633.
Published: 01 August 1988
...Mark A. Hall State and federal prohibitions of referral fees have long plagued the health care sector because their broadly worded provisions threaten established and socially valuable business arrangements. Congress has recently instructed the Department of Health and Human Services to issue...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2019) 44 (3): 505–531.
Published: 01 June 2019
... of white residents, particularly those living in other parts of the state. In other words, health equity is not likely to be achieved without buy-in from leaders outside the area with the greatest need. What are the power dynamics within the Mississippi legislature today? Are the Delta's legislators able...
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Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2008) 33 (2): 225–247.
Published: 01 April 2008
... or sectors of the health care system. The economic and equity rationale for carrying out budget impact analyses is opportunity cost, or benefits forgone, measured in terms of utility or equitable distribution, by using resources in one way rather than another. In other words, by choosing to draw down...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (2): 211–239.
Published: 01 April 2020
...Figure 1 Relative frequencies of words in the 1988–89 crack cocaine and 2016–17 opioid samples (unigrams). ...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2022) 47 (2): 131–158.
Published: 01 April 2022
... of assumptions about the mechanisms that produce disparities—a story, in other words, about where racial health disparities come from. Discursive boundaries set the parameters for policy debate, determining what is and is not included in proposed solutions. How one sees racial health disparities...
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Published: 01 February 2014
on a five-point scale ranging from “Strongly disagree” (1) to “Strongly agree” (5). Full question wording is included in the appendix . All of the differences in the public's assessment of doctors compared to other professions are statistically significant at p <.05, two-tailed, with the exception More