Literature DB >> 6341838

Academic health centers.

R H Ebert, S S Brown.   

Abstract

There are 123 academic health centers in the United States, and they are markedly diverse in organization and function. Some have large research programs, others emphasize the education of nurses and allied health professionals, but all have one characteristic in common--namely, the dominant role of the medical school-teaching hospital combination. Their evolution has been shaped to a great degree by four federal initiatives: funding of research and research training by the National Institutes of Health, legislation that permitted close relations between Veterans Administration hospitals and medical schools, health-manpower legislation, and Medicare and Medicaid. Although academic health centers were created to foster the integration of structure and function, federal funding has always been categorical in support of research, teaching, or patient care. No federal funding was ever intended to stabilize the overall academic health center as an institution. This mattered little during a period of expansion, but the future of academic health centers is now uncertain in a period of federal cutbacks, rising health-care costs, and worry about an oversupply of physicians. Academic health centers must enter a new phase of institutional planning for which they are ill equipped. Special interests must be submerged for the good of the whole, diversity must be encouraged, and each center should exploit its own special strengths.

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Mesh:

Year:  1983        PMID: 6341838     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM198305193082006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  5 in total

1.  Specialty networking in pediatric surgery: a paradigm for the future of academic surgery.

Authors:  A G Coran; P M Blackman; C Sikina; C M Harmon; J L Lelli; J D Geiger; R B Hirschl; D H Teitelbaum; T Z Polley; E S Golladay; E Austin; S H Adelman
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 12.969

2.  Health sciences libraries: strategies in an era of changing economics.

Authors:  J Messerle
Journal:  Bull Med Libr Assoc       Date:  1987-01

Review 3.  The costs and financing of ambulatory medical education.

Authors:  T L Delbanco; D R Calkins
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1988 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  Too many applicants for available graduate medical education positions--are we on a collision course?

Authors:  R J Reitemeier
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  1984 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.792

5.  Resource use in treating alcohol- and drug-related diagnoses.

Authors:  James D Bramble; Henry Sakowski; Eugene C Rich; Dennis Esterbrooks
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 5.128

  5 in total

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