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Learn how to improve care transitions and prevent avoidable hospital readmissions, and pick up nursing and medical education con-ed credits.
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To mark the 10th anniversary issue of The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Anthology series, the editors wanted to take a retrospective look at how health and health care have changed in the decade between 1996 and 2006 and how the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s approach to the issues has evolved during the same time period. We decided to undertake the task ourselves, in collaboration with David Morse, the Foundation’s vice president for communications. Morse has been an active participant in the development, editing, production and distribution of the Anthology series. In addition to investigating how health, health care, and the nation’s fourth largest foundation have changed during the decade, we also were curious to find out whether external events had influenced the Foundation’s policy agenda, and if so, how.
Biennial book series to disseminate what we have learned from various aspects of our grantmaking.
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