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1.
Healthc Inform ; 9(11): 62-4, 66, 68, 1992 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10122400

RESUMO

America has benefited from decades of outstanding health services. However, the American health system now is in crisis--with runaway medical cost inflation, hospital closures, and unacceptably high and increasing numbers of uninsured people. Key solutions for bringing the health system into balance remain untapped in the potentials of health-oriented telecommunication, or HOT applications. HOT applications could rally the immense unused personal resources of the public for improving their own health, help upgrade the delivery and efficiency of healthcare and its administration, and improve public health's ability to deal with present and emerging system-level problems impacting health.


Assuntos
Redes de Comunicação de Computadores/tendências , Sistemas de Informação/tendências , Educação de Pacientes como Assunto/organização & administração , Redes de Comunicação de Computadores/economia , Controle de Custos/métodos , Difusão de Inovações , Sistemas de Informação/economia , Estados Unidos
3.
Am J Health Plann ; 3(3): 34-47, 1978 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10308625

RESUMO

Beginning in 1976 the Department of Health Education and Welfare of the United States Government (DHEW) and the Pan American Health Organization, which is the regional office of the World Health Organization (PAHO-WHO), jointly developed a study of health planning as currently practiced around the world. This thrust to extend our understanding and capability of application of health planning was recognized at PAHO-WHO and DHEW as being long overdue, given the diversity of health planning efforts, the thinness of theory and the frequently unsatisfactory results of health sector planning in so many countries. In 1976 a series of descriptive-analytical studies were commissioned from 17 countries representing nearly every continent and every stage of development. These studies were further analyzed and abstracted and became the basis for a 5-day discussion in Copenhagen in 1977 among 35 practicing and academic health planners gathered from 16 countries, WHO, and DHEW. The thrust of the first assembly was to identify the determinants of (1) the establishment of formal health planning machinery, (2) the scope and content of concerns assigned to health planning, (3) the participants in the process, and (4) the relationships of planners to policy makers and implementors. In 1978 the second 5-day meeting was held in New Orleans to analyze the methodologies of health planning and to determine what could be generalized and disseminated as guidance to all countries. This was based on a new series of methodologically focused case studies which were abstracted and made available to each of the 53 health planning participants from 22 countries, PAHO-WHO, and DHEW. The four major foci of this conference were (1) the state of the art in health planning methodology, (2) how methods are being developed and adapted, (3) identification of major methodological shortcomings or constraints, and (4) surmounting the difficulties facing health planning in affecting major health-influencing forces which lie outside the territory traditionally considered to be part of the health sector. This article is a report on some of the things the author learned from participating in what he considers the two most informative planning meetings he ever attended.


Assuntos
Planejamento em Saúde , Programas Nacionais de Saúde , Política Pública , Mudança Social
5.
Am J Public Health ; 65(10): 1046-7, 1975 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1163698

RESUMO

PIP: The term "health planning" is defined as the attempt to determine the health needs and wants of a population and to design and implement the means of meeting them. The tragedy of Latin American health planning has been that the wisdom of their approach, which seeks to concern health consumers first rather than cater to the avarice of health producers as is done in the U.S., has not been matchable by the level of technological and political sophistication needed to bring it off. Thus, whenever a Latin American country sought unilateral assistan ce, their own farsighted goals of health for their people have often bee n forced into a secondary place by guidance from shortsighted but technically proficient spokesmen of ultrasophisticated medical care. A huge portion of all health dollars currently serve a small portion of the populace in many countries assisted by the U.S. American health professionals would be well advised to participate actively in the studies and deliberations of Latin American planners, whose wisdom has been ignored for too long.^ieng


Assuntos
Planejamento em Saúde , Cooperação Internacional , Organização do Financiamento , América Latina , América do Norte , Organização Pan-Americana da Saúde , Universidades , Venezuela , Organização Mundial da Saúde
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