On September 29, 2008, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) promulgated new regulations streamlining the travel authorization process for people living with HIV wishing to enter the United States as non-immigrants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOn 2 April 2008, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill (H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHIV AIDS Policy Law Rev
May 2007
Representative Barbara Lee (D-CA) is reintroducing legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives that would require federal correctional facilities to allow community organizations to distribute condoms and provide voluntary counselling and testing for HIV and STDs for inmates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychoanal Study Child
November 2005
This paper has two purposes: to study a central psychological feature of anorexia nervosa, the disturbed sense of self, and to demonstrate the utility of an empirical research method to explore a psychoanalytic concept such as self-representation. The aim of the study was to distinguish the sense of self of anorexia-nervosa patients from that of other psychiatric patients, as well as from non-patients. We obtained open-ended self-descriptions, which provide access to self-representations, from 77 young women between the ages of 14 and 24 who made up three groups-anorexia-nervosa patients (n = 15), control psychiatric patients (n = 15), and control non-patients (n = 48).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCulturally based values are known to influence consumer purchase decisions, but little is known about how those values affect health care choices. To rectify that situation and provide health care marketers with a framework for developing culturally based segmentation strategies, the authors undertook an exploratory research project in which Hispanic-, African-, and Anglo-Americans were asked to rate the importance of 16 different health care attributes. Those attributes can be grouped under five categories: quality of physician, quality of nurses and other medical staff, economic issues, access to health care, and nonmedically related experiential aspects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report on a study of patient-therapist match in 50 psychodynamic psychotherapy dyads. Sixty-six percent of patients and therapists agreed about the quality of the match, with 58% of patients and 56% of therapists reporting that the match was positive. Positive match correlated with positive patient and therapist assessments about the progress and process of therapy, but not with perceived similarity of personal characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors investigate the influence of various psychographic characteristics in distinguishing between those elderly patients who complain about dissatisfying experiences with health care providers and those who do not. Discriminant analysis results suggest that patients who are low in trust in their physicians and who are younger in terms of cognitive age are more likely to complain than are patients who are high in trust and older in terms of cognitive age. In light of these findings, the authors propose a number of managerially-relevant courses of action for health care providers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Care Manage Rev
June 1997
This article profiles the determinants of elderly patients' satisfaction with the outcome of their health care complaints. Type of provider response, severity of complaint, and the individual characteristics of age and cognitive age were found to be significant in effecting satisfaction. Related strategies for managing elderly health care complaints are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe author extends his Complaint Intensity Outcome Framework by including a customer-need component and applying the model to a sample of elderly health care consumers. The results indicate that immediate action should be taken to improve complaint mechanisms and performance related to the quality of physicians. Other attributes require less dramatic action, and some require none at all.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Care Mark
March 1991
The author extends importance-performance analysis by including competitors' performance. He demonstrates its value by applying it to a national sample of HMO members. Findings indicate that inappropriate strategies may result if a competition dimension is not included in the analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Care Manage Rev
April 1991
This study investigated those factors that influenced employers' experiences with health maintenance organizations (HMOs). It examined a national cross-sectional sample of chief executive officers (CEOs) and benefits managers. Findings revealed that different administrative issues such as the volume of paperwork, confusion about benefits, and educating employees about HMO benefits were of primary importance in affecting management's experiences with HMOs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study uses data from the 1984 Kaiser Foundation national health care survey to assess the viability of HMOs for the economically disadvantaged in light of important health care attributes. To achieve this, the paper examines their satisfaction with different health care attributes and their preferences for alternative health care systems with respect to these same attributes. These data are used to assess overall health care system preference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study introduced an extension of importance-performance analysis by further including the performance of competitors. It demonstrated its value by applying it to a national sample of fee-for-service health care users. This study found that inappropriate strategies may result from importance-performance analysis that excludes a dimension of competition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors investigate the influence of demographic characteristics and health care attributes on overall health care satisfaction. They use a national cross-section sample of HMO members and another of non-HMO members. Demographic characteristics are treated as antecedent to satisfaction with the health care attributes in the determination of overall health care satisfaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA two-stage epidemiologic strategy was used to estimate the lifetime prevalence of selected DSM-III-defined psychiatric disorders in a county-wide secondary school population (N = 5596). Screening tests used in the first stage included items based on DSM-III criteria for eating disorders and panic disorder, as well as the Leyton Obsessional Inventory-Child Version and the Beck Depression Inventory. Based on interviews (n = 356) by clinicians in the second stage, the lifetime prevalence of anorexia nervosa was 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study employed a national sample to investigate the determinants of consumers' intentions to join HMOs by considering different health care attributes. It employed two models, a performance model and a satisfaction model. The study found that the robustness of the performance model was substantially stronger in explaining intentions to join HMOs than the satisfaction model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examines the extent to which different health care attributes determine health care satisfaction. It employed two national cross-sectional samples, one of HMO members and the other of NON-HMO health care users. The comparative analysis revealed that the pattern of results for both samples were similar.
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