2 results match your criteria: "Virginia2Johns Hopkins School of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The study highlights the critical role of medical and health service research in advancing clinical practices and improving health care delivery, yet notes a lack of comparative analysis between the U.S. and other developed nations.
  • It reveals that while U.S. funding for medical research grew initially, the growth rate has significantly slowed down in recent years and that there is an imbalance in funding where certain diseases receive disproportionately high support compared to others.
  • Additionally, it points out an alarming underfunding of health service innovation compared to scientific research, indicating that investment from both private insurers and health systems is notably low, with suggestions for substantial increases in annual funding to improve service innovation.
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Health care in the United States includes a vast array of complex interrelationships among those who receive, provide, and finance care. In this article, publicly available data were used to identify trends in health care, principally from 1980 to 2011, in the source and use of funds ("economic anatomy"), the people receiving and organizations providing care, and the resulting value created and health outcomes. In 2011, US health care employed 15.

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