Delivery of Health Care, Integrated -- trends : Quality through collaboration : the future of rural health / Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care, Board on Health Care Services, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
Delivery of Health Care -- trends -- United States : Guidance for the national healthcare disparities report / Elaine K. Swift, editor ; Committee on Guidance for Designing a National Healthcare Disparities Report, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
--subdivision Medical care under names of individual military services and under individual wars, classes of persons, ethnic groups, and occupational groups, e.g. United States. Air Force--Medical care; World War, 1939-1945--Medical care; Older people--Medical care; African Americans--Medical care; Construction industry--Employees--Medical care
Systems for the delivery of drugs to target sites of pharmacological actions. Technologies employed include those concerning drug preparation, route of administration, site targeting, metabolism, and toxicity
The introduction of functional (usually cloned) GENES into cells. A variety of techniques and naturally occurring processes are used for the gene transfer such as cell hybridization, LIPOSOMES or microcell-mediated gene transfer, ELECTROPORATION, chromosome-mediated gene transfer, TRANSFECTION, and GENETIC TRANSDUCTION. Gene transfer may result in genetically transformed cells and individual organisms
A health care system which combines physicians, hospitals, and other medical services with a health plan to provide the complete spectrum of medical care for its customers. In a fully integrated system, the three key elements - physicians, hospital, and health plan membership - are in balance in terms of matching medical resources with the needs of purchasers and patients. (Coddington et al., Integrated Health Care: Reorganizing the Physician, Hospital and Health Plan Relationship, 1994, p7)
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Delivery Systems. : Innovation and the City / Neil Kleiman, Adam Forman and Jae Ko
The introduction of functional (usually cloned) GENES into cells. A variety of techniques and naturally occurring processes are used for the gene transfer such as cell hybridization, LIPOSOMES or microcell-mediated gene transfer, ELECTROPORATION, chromosome-mediated gene transfer, TRANSFECTION, and GENETIC TRANSDUCTION. Gene transfer may result in genetically transformed cells and individual organisms
A health care system which combines physicians, hospitals, and other medical services with a health plan to provide the complete spectrum of medical care for its customers. In a fully integrated system, the three key elements - physicians, hospital, and health plan membership - are in balance in terms of matching medical resources with the needs of purchasers and patients. (Coddington et al., Integrated Health Care: Reorganizing the Physician, Hospital and Health Plan Relationship, 1994, p7)