Does advanced medical technology encourage hospitalist use and their direct employment by hospitals?

scientific article published on February 2009

Does advanced medical technology encourage hospitalist use and their direct employment by hospitals? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1002/HEC.1360
P698PubMed publication ID18470953

P2093author name stringLorens A Helmchen
Robert A Henderson
Guy David
P2860cites workHealth care market trends and the evolution of hospitalist use and rolesQ28768492
The hospitalist movement 5 years laterQ30799875
Effects of physician experience on costs and outcomes on an academic general medicine service: results of a trial of hospitalistsQ34161785
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy, protons, and the risk of second cancersQ36450877
Does certificate of need affect cardiac outcomes and costs?Q43620858
Cost accounting the Gamma KnifeQ48385195
The gamma knife. Neurosurgery without an incisionQ49039386
Coronary angiography with multi-slice computed tomographyQ74517268
Competition among hospitalsQ77630728
Estimating probit models with self-selected treatmentsQ82108448
Moving the Goalposts: Addressing Limited Overlap in the Estimation of Average Treatment Effects by Changing the EstimandQ105839044
P433issue2
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P304page(s)237-247
P577publication date2009-02-01
P1433published inHealth EconomicsQ15679024
P1476titleDoes advanced medical technology encourage hospitalist use and their direct employment by hospitals?
P478volume18

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cites work (P2860)
Q57634222Determinants of Hospitalist Efficiency
Q43721313Evaluation of trends in the use of intensity-modulated radiotherapy for head and neck cancer from 2000 through 2005: socioeconomic disparity and geographic variation in a large population-based cohort

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