|
Women athletes still need Title IX Profiling still wrong If the shoe fits . . . Immigration's ills Health care cuts hurt Their loss is our gain
|
In June 1972, when Title IX was introduced, women's sports were
merely a mirage in the vast landscape that was college athletics. Men
dominated playing fields, and women, who were both athletically
gifted and eager to participate, were denied equal opportunity.
As our country observes the 30th anniversary of Title IX, the
amendment has come under fire because of some blatant untruths and
unsupported claims regarding the nature of the law. Critics claim
that Title IX is based on quotas ...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Health care in the new millennium: Implications for executives and managers
Public Administration Quarterly
; ABSTRACT Our nation's health care system has experienced tremendous upheavals since the turn of the previous century.1 Provision of care-- including availability--payment mechanisms, education and training, and methods of delivery, including structure, have all been influenced by changes in funding
|
|
Health Care Entrepreneurship in the Nashville Region: Societal Linkages, Change Dynamics, and Entrepreneurial Responses
Journal of Applied Management and Entrepreneurship
; Executive Summary This research argues that societal demands and expectations have created transformational change in the health care industry, thus providing the environment for entrepreneurship to thrive. As a result, new and innovative organizational forms have flourished, particularly when
|
|
Women athletes still need Title IX Profiling still wrong If the shoe fits . . . Immigration's ills Health care cuts hurt Their loss is our gain
Chicago Sun-Times
; ... At that time I received 25 cents per hour as a secretary working my way through college. Lillian M. Snyder, Nauvoo Continued news reports keep reminding us that our state is in a fiscal crisis. Controlling the state's purse strings is an awesome responsibility ...
|
|
Paying for Patients: Choice of Law, Conflicting Interests, and Evolving Standards of Health Care Remuneration
Texas International Law Journal
; I. INTRODUCTION As the health care industry becomes increasingly globalized, hospitals around the world are finding themselves under mounting legal and political scrutiny over rising costs and decreasing profits.1 In an effort to offset declining profit margins and ever-growing competition,
|
|
Health care evolution: New roles for family and consumer professionals
Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences
; ABSTRACT The health care evolution affects families in how they use and pay for health care. Communities face changes in the types of providers available as well as how community members make choices to use the health care system. The purpose of this paper is to describe the current health care
|
|
The rising cost of health care: strategic and societal considerations for employers.(2004 SHRM[R] Research Quarterly)
HRMagazine
; ... capgemini.com/DownloadLibrary/files/HEALTH_Toplssues2004.pdf. Bates, S. (2003). Medicare bill creates health savings accounts. HR News. Retrieved November 6, 2003, from www.shrm.org/hrnews_published/archives/CMS_006426.asp. Burke, Mary Elizabeth. (2004). SHRM ...
|
|
Sacrament and solidarity: Catholic social thought and health care policy reform.
Journal of Church and State
; The religion and politics border occupied by Catholic social thought and American health care policy contains rich material for reflection. Religious institutions, particularly Catholic, are deeply embedded in both health care delivery and health care lobbying. Each activity is consciously driven
|
|
Consumer access to health care: basic right 21st century challenge. (Colston E. Warne Lecture)
Journal of Consumer Affairs
; ... International Conference on Research in the Consumer Interest, R. N. Mayer (ed.), Columbia, MO: ACCI: 229-238. Senior Citizen News (1988), (January): 5. Talbert, R. and B. N. Davidson (1991), Consumer Awareness of Medigap Insurance: Enhancing Consumer Choices ...
|
|
Reforming Health Care in Europe.
West European Politics
; Health care policy has been a crucible of welfare reform in Europe for a quarter of a century and for good reason: there is a tremendous amount at stake. We argue that the 'epidemic' of reform -- to use Rudolf Klein's word [1] -- has been driven by three linked forces. The first arises from what
|
|
Can we have too much health care?(Health and Wealth)
Daedalus
; THE HEALTH-CARE INDUSTRY USES resources, and large amounts of them in most industrialized nations. Recently, health-care expenditures have increased at rates greater than the rates of economic growth in many of these nations. This creates economic and political pressures for governments concerned
|