scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P2093 | author name string | Evan M Melhado | |
P2860 | cites work | Assuring the nation's health resources | Q28768168 |
Hospital costs relate to the supply of beds. | Q34245987 | ||
The invention of health law. | Q34308902 | ||
Profit-seeking, corporate control, and the trustworthiness of health care organizations: assessments of health plan performance by their affiliated physicians | Q34337322 | ||
Capital financing for health facilities | Q34524275 | ||
Regulatory and review functions of agencies created by the act | Q34524464 | ||
The Impact of Certificate-of Need Controls on Hospital Investment | Q35119034 | ||
Hospital bed needs, a review of developments in the United States | Q35255054 | ||
HEALTH FACILITIES PLANNING. A REVIEW OF THE MOVEMENT | Q35460508 | ||
Planning for the long-term care of the chronically ill | Q35654289 | ||
The formulation of Federal health care policy | Q35656646 | ||
Political evolution of federal health care regulation | Q35657941 | ||
Truths and consequences: writing the history of disease. [Review of: Gerald N. Grob. The Deadly truth: A history of disease in America. Cambridge, Mass, Harvard University Press, 2002]. | Q35773322 | ||
Partnership for planning | Q35893013 | ||
Regional planning in New York State for hospitals and mental health | Q35893280 | ||
Hospitals and the public interest | Q35907943 | ||
Public roles for the medical profession in the United States: beyond theories of decline and fall | Q37361693 | ||
The changing structure of the medical profession in urban and suburban settings | Q39217794 | ||
Sharing governmental authority: Blue Cross and hospital planning in New York City | Q39247719 | ||
Downtown hospitals need not go downhill | Q39339436 | ||
Urban hospitals face three choices: move, grow or change | Q39339456 | ||
Medicine and Public Affairs. Preparing for National Health Insurance, and other matters | Q39909407 | ||
Research in hospital use and expenditures | Q40011695 | ||
Common sense meets implementation: certificate-of-need regulation in the states | Q40233636 | ||
Federal policy on hospital capital investment: review and outlook. | Q40352905 | ||
Health Planning: Progress, Prospects, and Issues | Q40376830 | ||
Paradigms lost: the persisting search for community in U.S. health policy | Q40884634 | ||
Back to the future: partnerships and coordination for community health | Q40950071 | ||
Social research in health and the American sociopolitical context: the changing fortunes of medical sociology | Q41094314 | ||
Inward vision & outward glance: the shaping of the American hospital, 1880-1914 | Q41167810 | ||
The hospital as caretaker: the Almshouse past and the intensive care future. | Q41190394 | ||
Nonprofit and for-profit medical care: shifting roles and implications for health policy | Q41339995 | ||
Health capital policy in the United States: a strategic perspective | Q41404987 | ||
The doctor as businessman: the changing politics of a cultural icon | Q41477752 | ||
Comparative analysis of community health planning: transition from CHPs to HSAs | Q41524130 | ||
The process of areawide hospital planning: model for the future? | Q41542343 | ||
The hospital of the future: decentralized but integrated | Q41552648 | ||
Using depreciation to provide for future hospital financial needs | Q41557232 | ||
Economists, public provision, and the market: changing values in policy debate | Q41753282 | ||
The governance and management of effective community health partnerships: a typology for research, policy, and practice | Q41753806 | ||
Regionalization: an integrated effort of medical school, community, and practicing physician. | Q42944241 | ||
Financing hospital expansion. 3. Long term debts | Q72761708 | ||
Areawide planning: where it came from, where it's going | Q72815461 | ||
Modernization needs | Q72827173 | ||
Money shortage tightens noose around traditional capital financing sources | Q72940428 | ||
How hospitals could use tax-free bonds | Q72940430 | ||
Appraisal and priority standards for community hospital surveys | Q73578660 | ||
Economic theory, economists, and the formulation of health policy | Q73771862 | ||
Role of the community hospital in continuing education; the Hunterdon experiment | Q74455195 | ||
The consequences of consensus: American health policy in the twentieth century | Q74635147 | ||
Long-term care facilities. The vital framework of area-wide planning | Q76456743 | ||
Banker sees hospitals as good risks | Q76484518 | ||
PUBLIC WANTS VOICE IN HOSPITAL FINANCING | Q76509083 | ||
VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS IN MEDICAL CARE PLANNING. III. COMMUNITY HOSPITAL PLANNING ASSOCIATIONS | Q76757526 | ||
OBJECTIVES AND CRITERIA FOR AREA-WIDE PLANNING | Q76844623 | ||
HOW TO MEASURE METROPOLITAN BED NEEDS | Q76881510 | ||
MEDICINE TAKES WARY STAND ON PLANNING | Q76881561 | ||
HOW ARE THE PLANNING AGENCIES DOING? | Q76881563 | ||
AREAWIDE PLANNING IS HERE TO STAY | Q76881566 | ||
FLEXIBILITY--THE KEY TO HOLDING OFF OBSOLESCENCE | Q76974618 | ||
Capital needs of hospitals; how will they be met in the next 20 years | Q77069021 | ||
The national government's role in health planning: a political analysis | Q77467989 | ||
Present at the creation: health planning and the inevitable reorganization | Q77649993 | ||
Community health planning in the United States: a postmortem | Q77716541 | ||
Determining community health service needs | Q77846125 | ||
What hospitals can do about the underfinancing of hospital service | Q78380502 | ||
HOSPITAL CAPITAL FUNDS: CHANGING NEEDS AND SOURCES | Q78516272 | ||
Let's give the public the facts about costs | Q78669578 | ||
Let the public control utilization through planning | Q79175635 | ||
Challenges of the sixties: hospitals in the public eye | Q79178067 | ||
Progress report on research program | Q79207183 | ||
"DPF concept" helps predict bed needs | Q79352871 | ||
The case for coordinated hospital planning. 2. The issues | Q79362734 | ||
The case for coordinated hospital planning. I. The need | Q79362738 | ||
Ray E. Brown: prototype hospital administrator | Q79368471 | ||
Public health in the metropolitan setting | Q79378725 | ||
Area-wide planning gains momentum | Q79403919 | ||
Patient care facilities: construction needs and Hill-Burton accomplishments | Q79431127 | ||
The stages of a medical career | Q79569379 | ||
Patient care planning as experienced by hospital councils | Q79667480 | ||
Hospital obsolescence in a metropolitan area | Q79703767 | ||
Planning for the Chronically Ill : Joint Statement of Recommendations by the American Hospital Association, American Medical Association, American Public Health Association, and American Public Welfare Association | Q79881171 | ||
Basic Factors in Planning for the Coordination of Health Services-Part I | Q79885842 | ||
Basic Factors in Planning for the Coordination of Health Services-Part II | Q79885876 | ||
Health care providers and facilities issue brief: certificate of need: year end report-2004 | Q81523756 | ||
Changing needs are dictating new capital approaches | Q93773698 | ||
A coordinated hospital system | Q94312103 | ||
Hospital Relations-A Symposium: Hospital Planning in New York State | Q95816606 | ||
The politics of managed competition: public abuse of the private interest | Q45188793 | ||
Health policy and the politics of research in the United States. | Q45927966 | ||
Trends in state certificate of need and moratoria programs for long term care providers. | Q46021878 | ||
Comprehensive health planning: dreams and realities | Q47702610 | ||
The commodification of medical and health care: the moral consequences of a paradigm shift from a professional to a market ethic | Q47704545 | ||
What will it cost to modernize the nation's older hospitals? | Q47813197 | ||
Columbia/HCA and the resurgence of the for-profit hospital business. (2) | Q47824291 | ||
Power to the people? Restoring citizen participation | Q48589133 | ||
Implications of Blue Cross hearings for hospitals. | Q50703509 | ||
Annual administrative reviews: hospital planning. | Q50728940 | ||
The Public Presentation of Blue Cross, 1935–1965 | Q50875742 | ||
Capture and culture: organizational identity in New York Blue Cross. | Q50875748 | ||
Between Public and Private: A Half Century of Blue Cross and Blue Shield in New York | Q50875756 | ||
Capital financing: origins and dimensions of the current dilemma. | Q51338111 | ||
Community control in a world of regional delivery systems. | Q52527533 | ||
Intergovernmental issues raised by the national health planning program. | Q52962147 | ||
How hospitals finance construction | Q53000540 | ||
The politics of health planning. IV. Effective planning through political influence | Q53005218 | ||
Seven ways to meet seven hospital goals. | Q53016054 | ||
Preserving community in health care. | Q53604745 | ||
Here are the goals for health construction. | Q53853240 | ||
THE RISE OF THE AREAWIDE PLANNING AGENCY: A SURVEY REPORT | Q53888652 | ||
Hospital care is still a bargain. | Q54709460 | ||
Problems and prospects for comprehensive health planning | Q54726639 | ||
Reconsidering Community-Based Health Promotion: Promise, Performance, and Potential | Q56482522 | ||
Addressing Urban Health in Detroit, New York City, and Seattle Through Community-Based Participatory Research Partnerships | Q64134490 | ||
The Politics of Health Care Regulation: The Case of the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act | Q67318507 | ||
Interest-group representation and the HSAs: health planning and political theory | Q67539256 | ||
Health planning: a comment | Q67826545 | ||
Transformation of defeat: the changing objectives of national health insurance, 1915-1980 | Q70200446 | ||
Certification of need. Status of state legislation | Q70641222 | ||
Health planning--demise or reformation? | Q70701867 | ||
Death of a paradigm: the challenge of competition | Q70735313 | ||
Health Planning in the United States: The 1980s–A Protagonist's View | Q70877159 | ||
Capital cost reimbursement to community hospitals under Federal health insurance programs | Q71491255 | ||
Health planning agencies | Q71552461 | ||
Elements of comprehensive health planning | Q71554208 | ||
New dimensions of health planning | Q72030981 | ||
Symposium on health services. I. Comprehensive planning for health | Q72035422 | ||
Implications of the AHA's statement on financial requirements | Q72117371 | ||
Philanthropy attracts other capital sources | Q72117374 | ||
Comprehensive health planning. I. Creative federalism | Q72133660 | ||
'Medical service centers' envisioned in plan for modernizing New York City hospitals | Q72328319 | ||
Process or outcome planning--which concept will dominate? | Q72415600 | ||
The politics of health planning. II. The myth of planning without politics | Q72503167 | ||
The politics of health planning. 3. The changing political character of health planning | Q72503175 | ||
Comprehensive health planning: a study in creative federalism | Q72522277 | ||
Some technical problems in areawide planning for hospital care | Q72691955 | ||
P433 | issue | 2 | |
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P921 | main subject | United States of America | Q30 |
P304 | page(s) | 359-440 | |
P577 | publication date | 2006-01-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Milbank Quarterly | Q6850820 |
P1476 | title | Health planning in the United States and the decline of public-interest policymaking | |
P478 | volume | 84 |