December 1, 2006
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Program Result Report
The American Medical Student Association conducted a survey of medical students that revealed that a majority believe that the U.S. health care system treats people unfairly.
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.
March 1, 2012
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Issue Brief
This profile details Oregon’s innovative health care transformation process and the critical role of the state’s Medicaid director Judy Mohr Peterson in the statewide restructuring.
March 1, 2012
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Issue Brief
This profile details Tennessee’s innovative health care transformation process and the critical role of the state’s Medicaid director Darin Gordon in the statewide restructuring.
February 1, 2012
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Report
Examine well-functioning safety nets that provide low-income patients affordable access to comprehensive care.
February 1, 2012
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Report
Resources on the health care safety net, serving unique local networks that are attuned to the needs of the populations they serve.
October 21, 2011
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Program Result Report
Changes in Health Care Financing and Organization (HCFO) began in 1989 is the nation's largest source of private funding for investigator-initiated health policy research on financing and organization.
September 17, 2012
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Program Result Report
The FRESH-Thinking project at Stanford University, directed by Victor Fuchs and Ezekiel Emanuel, sponsored a series of meetings in 2007–10 that addressed policy options essential to all health reform proposals.
January 1, 2009
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Report
This paper examines the current role of health insurance regulation and the role that it could play in a reformed health care system. It begins by exploring the nature of health insurance and alternative approaches to regulation. It next considers the current status of state and federal health insurance regulation, both describing the development of health insurance regulation and examining arguments in support of and in opposition to regulatory interventions. Finally, it considers the kind of insurance regulation that will be needed in a reformed health care system, as well as the question of whether authority for insurance regulation should be placed at the federal or state level. The author concludes that the best approach would be to develop national standards for health insurance enforced primarily at the state level.
April 16, 2010
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Program Result Report
In September 2008, Families USA, a national nonprofit organization advocating for high-quality health care, convened 20 interest groups for a dialogue on the possible contours of health care reform.