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... to pose a considerable burden on the health care management of individuals with multiple chronic co... health status outcomes in a cohort of elderly patients with an average of 2.8 chronic illnesses ...New England Journal of Medicine, 358, 1064-1071. . Buck, C. (2...
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... with unrealized potential, which requires careful and critical scrutiny. . On the basis of the democ... dynamics between service units targeting elderly people or people with disabilities and those targe...Brudney and England (1983) labeled this interdependency between the or...
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... disregarded if the household contains an elderly (aged 60 and over) or disabled member. In addition... important because policymakers may not care if BMI increases from 23 to 24, but they may be co...adults. The New England Journal of Medicine 341:1097-99. . Castro-Rodrigue...
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... work practice, and social workers in health care settings use it as a guiding principle in decision...New England Journal of Medicine, 347, 582-588. . Gilligan, C. ... practices about death and dying in the elderly. Gerontology and Geriatrics Education, 15, 101-116...
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...Acute Care Hospitals and the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospect...NECMA New England County Metropolitan Areas. NQF National Quality Fo...-care hospitals reduces the mortality of elderly patients. Journal of Infectious. Diseases 1997; 17...
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... in a wide range of areas such as child care, communication norms, death and burial rituals, di...Religion and spirituality. Lyme Regis, England: Russell House. . Musick, M.A., Traphagan, J. W., ... and fear of falling in the less robust elderly: An intervention study for preventing falls. Archi...
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Although accounts of how race (and class) punctuated the elimination of African American midwives are well documented,6 this article further explores how downplaying the racial privilege of white midwives, medical personnel, and other figures in African American midwives' narratives has problematic implications for a contemporary midwifery movement that prides itself on inclusivity and its benefit to all women. INFLUENCES ON THE CONTEMPORARY MOVEMENT FOR MIDWIVES The continued emphasis on the narrative accounts of African American midwives within the history of not only midwifery in the United States but also African American culture and life opens up possibilities for important discussions of race and the effects of a legacy of racism that still affects contemporary midwives in thei...
... closer look at the recent publication of elderly African American midwives' narratives, which have ... a midwife in rural eighteenth-century New England, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1991 and was adap... children increased access to the medical care that had been so long denied their race."10 In tha...
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...Second, the Court has required a "careful description" of the asserted fundamental liberty i... suicide, especially among the young, the elderly, and those suffering from untreated pain or from d...." 2 Bracton on Laws and Customs of England 423 (f. 150) (G. Woodbine ed., S. Thorne transl., ...
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...Medical costs for the elderly are paid for by the public, (13) private insurers,... in the United States and Canada." The New England Journal of Medicine 349, 8 (2003): 768-75. . Zalew...
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...Caregivers do not dare to make a decision and cut short these.... Institutions for the Elderly and the Chronically III. These institutions have b... seen in the days of the death penalty in England: before each execution excited crowds would gather...