Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) are presently becoming a more viable option for seekers of long-term care for the elderly. CCRCs have been recognized for their unique strategy of combining various levels of health care within one community setting, as well as their potential for providing cost-effective care.
Age, Gender & Gender Identities
Reports
Displaying 891 - 900 of 988. 10 per page. Page 90.
Advanced SearchFamily Members' Views: What is Quality in Assisted Living Facilities Providing Care to People with Dementia? Executive Summary
Catherine Hawes, Angela Greene, Merry Wood, and Cynthia Woodsong
Alcohol and Other Drug Treatment for Parents and Welfare Recepients: Outcomes, Costs and Benefits
Final report
Prepared under Contract HHS-100-95-0036
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Disability, Aging and Long-Term Care Policy Research: 1992 1996
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Developing Integrated Managed Care Systems for Children with Disabilities: The State of the Art
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
A National Strategy to Prevent Teen Pregnancy
Despite the recent decline in the teen birth rate, teen pregnancy remains a significant problem in this country. Most teen pregnancies are unintended. Each year, about 200,000 teens aged 17 and younger have children. Their babies are often low birth weight and have disproportionately high infant mortality rates. They are also far more likely to be poor.
Service Utilization and the Individual, Family, and Neighborhood Characteristics of Children with Disabilities in Illinois
Robert Goerge, Lucy Mackey-Bilaver, Bong Joo Lee, David Koepke and Allison Harris University of Chicago, Chapin Hall Center for Children
Service Utilization and the Individual, Family, and Neighborhood Characteristics of Children with Disabilities in Illinois
Robert Goerge, Lucy Mackey-Bilaver, Bong Joo Lee, David Koepke and Allison Harris
Cost of Care for Medicaid-Enrolled Children with Selected Disabilities
The purpose of this study is to estimate and compare costs of care for children with 11 selected chronic conditions, to compare these costs with costs of care for children without any of these conditions, and to identify whether selected demographic variables are associated with cost variation.
Core Dataset Project: Child Welfare Service Histories
By Robert Goerge, John Van Voorhis, Lisa Sanfilippo, and Allen Harden Chapin Hall Center for Children at the University of Chicago April 8, 1996