نتایج جستجو برای: national health

تعداد نتایج: 1256822  

Journal: :Journal of Nepal Medical Association 1970

Journal: :The Nebraska medical journal 1972
C T Curtis

INSURANCE Health is described as a state of complete physical, social, and mental wellbeing. In order to ensure that the population of a given nation remains at or achieves a good health status, health expenditures must be financed. Health care expenditures are the total amount of spending for personal health care, administration, research, construction, and other expenses that are directly rel...

1991
Katharine R. Levit Helen C. Lazenby Cathy A. Cowan Suzanne W. Letsch

During 1990, health expenditures as a share of gross national product rose to 12.2 percent, up from 11.6 percent in 1989. This dramatic increase is the second largest increase in the past three decades. The national health expenditure estimates presented in this article document rapidly rising health care costs and provide a context for understanding the health care financing crisis facing the ...

1992
Suzanne W. Letsch Helen C. Lazenby Katharine R. Levit Cathy A. Cowan

Spending for health care rose to $751.8 billion in 1991, an increase of 11.4 percent from the 1990 level. National health expenditures as a share of gross domestic product increased to 13.2 percent, up from 12.2 percent in 1990. The health care sector exhibited strong growth, despite slow growth in the overall economy. This combination resulted in the largest increase in the share of the Nation...

Journal: :The Ulster Medical Journal 1939

1990
Helen C. Lazenby Suzanne W. Letsch

Spending for health care in the United States grew to $604.1 billion in 1989, an increase of 11.1 percent from the 1988 level. Growth in national health expenditures has been edging upward since 1986, when the annual growth in the health care bill was 7.7 percent. Health care spending continues to command a larger and larger proportion of the resources of the Nation: In 1989, 11.6 percent of th...

1984
Robert M. Gibson Katharine R. Levit Helen Lazenby Daniel R. Waldo

Although growing more slowly than in recent years, spending for health continued to account for an increasing share of the Nation's gross national product. In 1983, spending for health amounted to 10.8 percent of the gross national product, or $1,459 per person. Public programs financed 40 percent of all personal health care spending. Medicare and Medicaid expended $91 billion in benefits, 29 p...

Journal: :American Journal of Public Health 1921

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