A system for classifying patient care by relating common characteristics such as diagnosis, treatment, and age to an expected consumption of hospital resources and length of stay. Its purpose is to provide a framework for specifying case mix and to reduce hospital costs and reimbursements and it forms the cornerstone of the prospective payment system
A system for classifying patient care by relating common characteristics such as diagnosis, treatment, and age to an expected consumption of hospital resources and length of stay. Its purpose is to provide a framework for specifying case mix and to reduce hospital costs and reimbursements and it forms the cornerstone of the prospective payment system
Lifestyle change -- group education : How to facilitate lifestyle change : applying group education in healthcare / Amanda Avery, Kirsten Whitehead and Vanessa Halliday
A group of people who meet in an unstructured setting to learn about themselves, interpersonal relationships, and group processes and about larger social systems
Group facilitation -- Australia. : Cancer support groups : a guide to setting up peer facilitated supports / [developed by the Health Issues Centre for Cancer Australia]
A method of data collection and a QUALITATIVE RESEARCH tool in which a small group of individuals are brought together and allowed to interact in a discussion of their opinions about topics, issues, or questions
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Group for Contemporary Music. / http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81149887 : Identity and diversity in new music : the new complexities / Marilyn Nonken
Organized systems for providing comprehensive prepaid health care that have five basic attributes: (1) provide care in a defined geographic area; (2) provide or ensure delivery of an agreed-upon set of basic and supplemental health maintenance and treatment services; (3) provide care to a voluntarily enrolled group of persons; (4) require their enrollees to use the services of designated providers; and (5) receive reimbursement through a predetermined, fixed, periodic prepayment made by the enrollee without regard to the degree of services provided. (From Facts on File Dictionary of Health Care Management, 1988)
Housing for groups of patients, children, or others who need or desire emotional or physical support. They are usually established as planned, single housekeeping units in residential dwellings that provide care and supervision for small groups of residents, who, although unrelated, live together as a family
Group homes -- Administration. : The social work supervisor : supervision in community, day care, and residential settings / Allan Brown and Iain Bourne
1996
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Group homes -- Australia -- Case studies. : Changing places : case studies of innovations in housing for older people / Ann Forsyth ; a report prepared for the Mid-Term Review of the Aged Care Reform Strategy, Stage Two