Additionally,
national health care expenditures for treating babies with NAS grew from $ 731 million in 2009 to nearly $ 1.5 billion in 2012.
National health care expenditures for treating babies with NAS are estimated to be about $ 720 million a year, according to previous work done by the same researchers.
Intensive care costs about $ 10,000 for a typical stay and accounts for 4 percent of
national health care expenditures, according to research cited by Chang's team.
Intensive care costs about $ 10,000 for a typical stay and accounts for 4 percent of
national health care expenditures, according to research cited by Chang's team.
Not exact matches
By 2022
health care financed by federal, state, and local governments is projected to account for 49 percent of total
national health expenditures and reach a total of $ 2.4 trillion.
Three years ago, a U.S.
National Academies committee recommended (in the report The Gathering Storm) doubling federal investment in basic research in math, the physical sciences, and engineering while, at a minimum, protecting the
health sciences against inflation (the cost of which, in math, the physical sciences, and engineering, equals the amount by which the nation's
expenditure on
health care increases every 7 weeks).
To estimate these proportions, we used the
Health Care Financing Administration's November 1998 National Health Expenditure projections of state and local health expenditures as a percent of national health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward to
Health Care Financing Administration's November 1998
National Health Expenditure projections of state and local health expenditures as a percent of national health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward
National Health Expenditure projections of state and local health expenditures as a percent of national health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward to
Health Expenditure projections of state and local
health expenditures as a percent of national health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward to
health expenditures as a percent of
national health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward
national health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward to
health expenditures from 2003 through 2008, trended forward to 2012.
In particular, the
national effort to close the gap requires a shift from
expenditure on hospitals to that on primary
health care with its preventative emphasis, as well as preventative
health programs per se, and
health promotion activities.