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Assuring Quality of Care for the Elderly
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 April 2021
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Health, Health Care, and the Elderly
Health means different things to different people, but all people want access to essential health care services of high quality—not too much (the likelihood of benefit should outweigh the likelihood of harm), not too little (necessary and appropriate services must be available, and equitably so), and of a satisfactory technical and interpersonal character. The object of organized quality assurance programs in the private and the public sectors is to ensure that practitioners and institutions deliver care of high caliber.
Many developments in health care are drawing attention to its quality. Health care costs conrinue to rise, both for the elderly out-of-pocket and for the Medicare program. In 1987, health care expenditures stood at $500.3 billion, or 11.1 percent of the nation's gross national product, and will be an estimated $647 billion in 1990.
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- Copyright © 1990 American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics
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