Skip to main content

Systems for Action

Primary menu
  • About Us
    • Systems Alignment Innovation Hub
    • RWJF Signature Programs
    • Staff
      • S4A Team
      • SAIH Team
      • National Advisory Committee
      • RWJF Program Officers
    • Contact Us
  • Funding
    • Funding Opportunities
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Applicant Resources
  • Research and Findings
    • Grantee Research
      • Research by Topic
      • Impact Studies
      • Pilot Studies
      • Collaborating Research Centers
      • SAIH Studies
    • Findings
      • Journal Articles
      • Evidence Briefs
      • Research Agenda
    • NALSYS
      • FAQ
      • NALSYS Findings
      • Request Data Set
  • News and Events
    • Webinars
    • National Conferences
  • Search
  1. Home
  2. Public Health Spending and Medicare Resource Use: A Longitudinal Analysis of U.S. Communities

Public Health Spending and Medicare Resource Use: A Longitudinal Analysis of U.S. Communities

Mays, Glen P., and Cezar B. Mamaril. “Public Health Spending and Medicare Resource Use: A Longitudinal Analysis of U.S. Communities.” Health Services Research, vol. 52 Suppl 2, no. Suppl 2, Dec. 2017, pp. 2357–77, https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.12785.


Details

Resource: Article

Nalsys Related: Project

Related Content

  • ResProg Webinar: Economics of Aligning Medical, Social, and Public Health Delivery Systems: Implications for Medicare Spending
  • Aligning Health and Social Systems to Improve Population Health: Networks, Governance and Information (IAPHS 2018)
  • Using Economic Analysis to Understand the Value of Population Health Improvement Strategies (MS Dept. of Health)
  • Using Economic Evaluation to Understand the Value of Environmental Health Services (ASTHO SHED)
  • Public Health Spending and Medicare Resource Use: A Longitudinal Analysis of U.S. Communities
  • Webinar: Comprehensiveness in the Delivery Systems for Population Health Activities: Longitudinal Variation
  • Financial and Economic Analysis for Population Health
  • Evolution in Public Health Systems and their Contributions to Population Health
  • Public Health Expenditures and their Contributions to the Total Spend on Health

CONTACT

  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
Powered byOpenScholar®Admin Login