Medical Groups in the United States, 1959: Results of Questionnaire Survey, Including Comparison with Findings of 1946 Study

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U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963 - Group medical practice - 172 pages

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Page 119 - New England, Middle Atlantic, South Atlantic, East South Central, West South Central, East North Central, West North Central, Mountain, Pacific.
Page 147 - South Atlantic Delaware District of Columbia... Florida Georgia Maryland North Carolina South Carolina Virginia. West Virginia East South Central Alabama Kentucky Mississippi Tennessee West South Central Arkansas Louisiana Oklahoma Texas...
Page xvi - Clinics in the mid-1950s conducted a special survey of the experience, philosophy, and operation of 103 selected medical groups in various parts of the United States (6) . In 1956, two out of five senior medical students expressed interest in group practice as their future mode of practice (7). In order to document trends in the development of group practice since 1946 and provide an up-to-date description of medical groups as they currently existed, the Division of Public Health Methods of the Public...
Page 167 - Klotz, Walter C. Group Clinics: A Study of Organized Medical Practice. New York, The Committee on Dispensary Development of the United Hospital Fund of New York, March 1927. 32 pp. (2) Rorem, C. Rufus. Private Group Clinics. The Committee on the Costs of Medical Care, Pub. No. 8. Washington, The Committee, 1931. 125 pp. (3) Private Group Practice. Journal of the American Medical Association 100: 1605-1608, 1693-1699, 1773-1778, May-June 1933. (4) American Medical Association, Bureau of Medical Economics....
Page 167 - Pomrinse, S. David, and Marcus S. Goldstein. The 1959 Survey of Group Practice.
Page 118 - ... of the American Medical Association, the American Association of Medical Clinics, and the National Association of Clinic Managers.
Page xviii - Groups providing services in more than one field or specialty, with three or more full-time physicians. (Comparable to the groups covered in the 1946 survey.) 2. Groups providing services in more than one field or specialty, with less than three full-time physicians, but a total of at least three fullplus part-time physicians. 3. Single specialty groups with three or more full-time physicians. 4. Single specialty groups with less than three full-time physicians but a total of at least three full-...

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