Advertising and Hospital Referrals
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Dynamic change characterizes the American health care environment in the 1990s (Hammonds, 1994, pp. 48-57). The changes in the health care environment result from a combination of factorsùincreasing costs of health care, changing societal values, advances in treatment therapies, technological innovation, changing demographics, and many others (Nichols & Stevens, 1992, pp. 86-95). Cost is a major factor involved in changes in the delivery of health care delivery services. According to some observers, the United States health care system is "in crisis", with many of the problems directly related to the cost of care (Congressional Budget Office, 1995, p. 4). For many years, health care has been a growing component in the federal budget. The Medicare and Medicaid programs are now major elements in federal and state expenditures. In addition, a number of public and private organizations have been created to monitor the quality of health care, to plan the allocation of health resources, and to foster efficiency in the provision of health care. The increasing costs associated with health care also are major concerns of private industry in the United States, which funds in part health care for tens of millions of Americans. Hospitals frequently take the brunt of efforts to reform the health care system. In response, hospitals across the country are seeking to develop new strategies and tactics that will allow the institutions to remain viable ent
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s generally refused to recognize any federal responsibility for the funding of health care services for the working poor. The Clinton Administration appears to be more willing to recognize a federal responsibility in this area (Clinton, 1993, p. 1).
The important outcomes of the combination of delaying needed health care services and then obtaining those services through a hospital emergency department relate to patient health, health care costs, and the efficient functioning of the health care system (Adler, Boyce, & Chesney, 1993, 3140-3145). First, the health of individuals exhibiting such behaviors is compromised (Franks, Clancy, Gold, & Nutting, 1993, pp. 1295-1299). Second, the costs for the health care services provided are far higher than they otherwise would have been (Lee, 1993, p. 2784). Third, hospital emergency departments are overwhelmed with a consequent deterioration in the quality of care delivered (Rubin, Gendek, & Rodgers, 1993, pp. 835-840). Any one of these outcomes supports the consideration of health care reform. The combined effects of these outcomes demands health care reform in the United States.
In the United States, health care insurance is unattainable for some people and unaffordable for milli
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Some common words found in the essay are:
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Approximate Word count = 7658
Approximate Pages = 31 (250 words per page)
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