United Medical Administration: Hearing Before the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, House of Representatives, Eighty-first Congress, Second Session, on H. R. 5182, a Bill to Consolidate Certain Hospital, Medical and Public Health Functions of the Government in a United Medical AdministrationU.S. Government Printing Office, 1950 - 216 pages |
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Page 8
... capacity as Administrator of Veterans ' Affairs , that he submitted to the President's Advisory Committee on Management Improvement , on January 17 , 1950 , wherein he stated : " Many practical reasons exist to support the conclusion ...
... capacity as Administrator of Veterans ' Affairs , that he submitted to the President's Advisory Committee on Management Improvement , on January 17 , 1950 , wherein he stated : " Many practical reasons exist to support the conclusion ...
Page 12
... capacity of 11,000 beds , and reduced the size of 14 additional hospitals by an aggregate of about 5,000 beds . * This will be done without reducing the quality and extent of medical service to veterans . * The Commission on ...
... capacity of 11,000 beds , and reduced the size of 14 additional hospitals by an aggregate of about 5,000 beds . * This will be done without reducing the quality and extent of medical service to veterans . * The Commission on ...
Page 16
... capacity of 255,000 . Yet , despite the President's recent action reducing its building program by 16,000 beds , the Veterans ' Administration alone is planning or has already contracted for 38,000 additional beds , of which 15,000 are ...
... capacity of 255,000 . Yet , despite the President's recent action reducing its building program by 16,000 beds , the Veterans ' Administration alone is planning or has already contracted for 38,000 additional beds , of which 15,000 are ...
Page 21
... capacity of Government hospitals at 255,000 beds and the occupancy as only 155,000 . It seems to me that you burden your statement when you go ahead and try to apply a statement which clearly refers to the total over - all Government ...
... capacity of Government hospitals at 255,000 beds and the occupancy as only 155,000 . It seems to me that you burden your statement when you go ahead and try to apply a statement which clearly refers to the total over - all Government ...
Page 23
... capacity , based on 8 - foot centers , or 100 square feet per patient , or 41,276 beds . This pro- vides an expansion factor of 72 square feet per patient on the so - called 6 - foot center , or 51,654 beds . The patient load in these ...
... capacity , based on 8 - foot centers , or 100 square feet per patient , or 41,276 beds . This pro- vides an expansion factor of 72 square feet per patient on the so - called 6 - foot center , or 51,654 beds . The patient load in these ...
Expressions et termes fréquents
ADAMY Admin advisory agency Air Force American Legion AMVETS Armed Forces armed services Army bed utili believe benefits bill Bureau capacity zation capacity CHAIRMAN Citizens Committee civilian CLARKE Colonel IJAMS CONGRESS THE LIBRARY consolidation CRAIG daily structed daily disabled veterans doctors DONOHUE economy efficiency establishment facilities Federal Board Federal Government Federal medical services Federal Security Agency functions GINZBERG give HARVEY Health and Medical HINSHAW HOFFMAN HOLIFIELD Hoover Commission hospital system istration KARSTEN legislation MAYO Mayo Clinic MCCORMICK medical program medical schools Medicine and Surgery ment military Navy nurses officers organization over-all patients percent personnel pitals present President problem Public Health Service question recommendations RICH Risk Insurance ROOSEVELT ROWNTREE Secretary of Defense service-connected shortage specialists statement Surgeon task force thing tion Total transfer tuberculosis United Health United Medical Administration Veterans VOORHEES World War II
Fréquemment cités
Page 73 - Treasury as ex officio members, and of the Surgeon General of the Army, the Surgeon General of the Navy, and the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service...
Page 71 - Congress—are the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Disabled American Veterans, and the American Veterans of World War II and Korea.
Page 146 - It is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress to promote economy, efficiency, and improved service in the transaction of the public business...
Page 60 - ... the Bureau of War Risk Insurance, the Rehabilitation Division of the Federal Board for Vocational Education, and the United States Public Health Service. The result is that the ex-service person finds its extremely difficult to obtain the prompt, generous, and sympathetic treatment which the Congress and the country intended he should receive.
Page 206 - The Surgeon General shall conduct in the Service, and encourage, cooperate with, and render assistance to other appropriate public authorities, scientific institutions, and scientists in the conduct of, and promote the coordination of, research, investigations, experiments, demonstrations, and studies relating to the causes, diagnosis, treatment, control, and prevention of physical and mental diseases and impairments of man, including water purification, sewage treatment, and pollution of lakes and...
Page 80 - I was very glad to read that this was merely a proposed plan and it had not yet received your approval. In an effort to be helpful to you in reaching a decision as to whether the proposed plan should be approved, I should like to give you a brief outline of the situation which existed in the old Bureau of War Risk Insurance at the time I came here in 1919.
Page 72 - Gray said : This proposal would limit the use by veterans of the Nation's hospital plant established for them by making these facilities available to additional groups, principally Armed Forces personnel and their dependents and merchant seamen. It would also impede the efficient handling of claims for compensation, pension, insurance, and other benefits where a physical examination is necessary.