December 1, 2011
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Journal Article
Since 2004 the United States has collected approximately $8 billion from fraud enforcement actions against pharmaceutical manufacturers accused under the federal False Claims Act of illegally promoting drugs for off-label uses.
March 1, 2004
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Journal Article
This paper considers law's impact on health system change. Federal courts and state regulators have remade the rules of the medical marketplace, restricting the methods available to managed care organizations to control costs. Legal conflict, howeve ...
April 16, 2013
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Report
The American Enterprise Insitute proposes solutions to address Medicare’s sustainability crisis and inefficiencies in the system.
June 1, 2007
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Journal Article
Explaining Variations in State Health Maintenance Organization Regulations
June 1, 2006
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Program Result Report
From 1992 through 2002, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) funded Building Health Systems for People With Chronic Illnesses.
April 1, 2000
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Program Result Report
Princeton University, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton, N.J., and the People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc. co-sponsored a 1994 conference on ensuring universal health coverage and published papers on the conference topics and findings.
June 1, 2000
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Program Result Report
In 1996, the editorial office of the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, organized a conference that covered three arenas.
January 1, 1999
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Program Result Report
The Council on the Economic Impact of Health System Change, Waltham, Mass., hosted a three-day conference, March 5-7, 1998 at Princeton University, Princeton, N.J., on the role of regulation in a market-oriented health care system.
May 1, 1999
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Program Result Report
From 1992 to 1997, South Carolina's Division of Research and Statistical Services developed a data systems improvement plan to link patient and program systems into a full patient-centered database extending across all health care settings over an extended period of time.
May 1, 1999
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Program Result Report
After reviewing Mississippi's health care information needs in Phase I, the state's Interagency Working Group (IWG) focused on several key areas for implementation in Phase II. These included: