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1 itals owned by Kaiser Permanente, a large US health maintenance organization.
2 ther a university student health center or a health maintenance organization.
3 revalence of asthma among members of a large health maintenance organization.
4 in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Health Maintenance Organization.
5 Paul, Minnesota, health maintenance organization.
6 care patients (aged 18-70 years) in a large health maintenance organization.
7 who visited free sigmoidoscopy clinics at a health maintenance organization.
8 1001 adult primary care patients in a large health maintenance organization.
9 d 12 to 56 years who were members of a large health maintenance organization.
10 zed heart disease and who received care at a health maintenance organization.
11 of surgeons and anesthesiologists in a large health maintenance organization.
12 ney, lungs, liver, heart) insured in a large health maintenance organization.
13 ified between 1996 and 1997 in a staff model health maintenance organization.
14 ained from the cost accounting system of the health maintenance organization.
15 Care Program of Northern California, a large health maintenance organization.
16 om enrollees of the Group Health Cooperative health maintenance organization.
17 er Permanente Colorado, a large, group-model health maintenance organization.
18 entage of Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in health maintenance organizations.
19 ulation ratio double that used on average by health maintenance organizations.
20 Internists (6%) and physicians practicing in health maintenance organizations (1%) were least likely
21 Small group practices (31%) and staff-model health maintenance organizations (25%) were the most com
22 ion, $5976 among those insured by a Medicare health maintenance organization, $5492 among those with
23 o 1999 were obtained from a Washington State health maintenance organization (66% of subjects) and re
26 g for chlamydial infection-in a Seattle-area health maintenance organization and a Danish school dist
28 ia were recruited from a Southern California health maintenance organization and evaluated according
29 ng adults was randomly selected from a large health maintenance organization and is representative of
30 CL) to 1225 female members of a metropolitan health maintenance organization and validated the instru
31 nagement strategy outperformed usual care in health maintenance organization and Veterans Administrat
32 , dental, and pharmaceutical coverage with a health maintenance organization and whose severity of de
33 his cohort study was conducted at four large health maintenance organizations and included reviews of
34 ly considered a model and template for other health maintenance organizations and managed health care
35 s urge clinicians, pharmaceutical companies, health maintenance organizations and the FDA to re-exami
36 practice patterns, pharmaceutical companies, health maintenance organizations and the Food and Drug A
37 y defined area through membership in a large health maintenance organization, and they resided in the
38 geographically defined regions, seven large health maintenance organizations, and 15 Veterans Affair
39 surance, Medicare, or Medicaid) with private/health maintenance organization as the reference group.
40 the United States, including the 10 largest health maintenance organizations, asking for their views
41 e >200,000 patients who were enrolled in the health maintenance organization between 1994 and 1997, a
42 ed of 109 218 members of a nonprofit Israeli health maintenance organization born between 1933 and 19
43 women (n = 592) who were admitted to a large health maintenance organization chemical dependency prog
44 A random sample of 1225 women members of a health maintenance organization completed a 22-page ques
45 rtion of Medicaid beneficiaries enrolling in health maintenance organizations continues to increase.
47 file, 44.1% (1.36 vs 0.76 daily events) in a health maintenance organization database, 11.1% (4.77 vs
49 on 50,000 patients enrolled in the DeanCare health maintenance organization for 2 consecutive years.
50 l insurance) coverage and no enrollment in a health maintenance organization for each year from 2002
51 rgeting less than 20% of the patients at one health maintenance organization for intensified therapy
52 n the medical utilization costs (paid by the health maintenance organization) for those 2 consecutive
55 nrolled in a Puget Sound region, Washington, health maintenance organization, Group Health Cooperativ
56 an 90% of all primary care physicians at the health maintenance organization had fewer than 60 patien
57 , along with those with point of service and health maintenance organization health plans, were more
59 one postpartum night plus a home visit) in a health maintenance organization (HMO) and a subsequent s
60 maternal battering) among adult members of a health maintenance organization (HMO) and explored the r
61 ew studies have compared patterns of care in health maintenance organization (HMO) and fee-for-servic
63 raception at a university health center or a health maintenance organization (HMO) and monitored them
66 rvey Household Component to compare rates of health maintenance organization (HMO) enrollment, by rac
67 mmunity-dwelling elderly members of one U.S. health maintenance organization (HMO) for 1990-1991 thro
68 survey to 1,233 primary care physicians in a health maintenance organization (HMO) in April 1997 to a
70 ngth of stay < or = 5 days) among 83,347 non-health maintenance organization (HMO) Medicare patients
72 abstraction and computer databases on 1,299 health maintenance organization (HMO) patients aged 30 t
75 ched to a market for which information about health maintenance organization (HMO) penetration in 199
76 hysicians at academic medical centers and in Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) practices were mor
77 The computerized pharmacy database of the health maintenance organization (HMO) was used to assess
78 Medicaid programs and a salaried group-model health maintenance organization (HMO) were used to perfo
79 study outpatient utilization by members of a health maintenance organization (HMO) who were subject t
80 taffing within a large (2.4 million members) health maintenance organization (HMO), a hospital referr
81 More than 50 million Americans belong to a health maintenance organization (HMO), and enrollment in
82 s measured on 5,181 adult members of a large health maintenance organization (HMO), as were various s
83 ng four payor groups: fee for service (FFS), health maintenance organization (HMO), Medicaid and unin
84 Healthcare Services, Israel's second-largest Health Maintenance Organization (HMO), were analyzed.
92 d computerized utilization data from a large health-maintenance organization (HMO) to predict asthma-
94 e with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and fee-for-serv
95 edicare beneficiaries have been enrolling in health maintenance organizations (HMOs) because HMO part
97 aracteristics of asthmatic patients in large health maintenance organizations (HMOs) is still lacking
99 medical records at three large US West Coast health maintenance organizations (HMOs) participating in
101 increasing enrollment of Medicaid clients in health maintenance organizations (HMOs) raise concerns a
105 ls to psychiatrists in staff and group model health maintenance organizations (HMOs), and to compare
111 years or older who were enrolled in a large health maintenance organization in California and who ha
112 94 among members of the Health Alliance Plan health maintenance organization in Detroit, Michigan.
114 ology specialists during 17 years in a large health maintenance organization in Israel were collected
118 nal study of adults enrolled in a commercial health maintenance organization in Michigan included 1 2
119 tients with CKD who were enrolled in a large health maintenance organization in New Mexico were analy
121 e Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, a health maintenance organization in Seattle, Washington.
122 rs conducted a case-control study at a large health maintenance organization in Seattle, Washington.
123 he sample was randomly selected from a large health maintenance organization in Southeast Michigan, r
124 50-75 years who underwent sigmoidoscopy at a health maintenance organization in southern California.
126 Medical Care Program, the largest and oldest health maintenance organization in the United States, is
127 d from the records of 854 subjects born at a health maintenance organization in Washington State betw
128 ases and 757 age-matched controls in a large health maintenance organization in Washington State.
129 to 1999 in Group Health Cooperative, a large health maintenance organization in Washington state.
130 aged 40 to 96 years and enrolled in a large health maintenance organization in western Washington St
132 dult male patients enrolled in a staff-model health maintenance organization in whom first AIDS-defin
133 Solo practices, multispecialty groups, and health maintenance organizations in Boston, Chicago, and
134 of influenza diagnosis from the two largest Health Maintenance Organizations in Israel, together cov
135 during 1 January 2006-31 December 2010 at 7 health maintenance organizations in the United States.
137 ts have at least 100,000 persons enrolled in health maintenance organizations, include approximately
138 the automated cost-accounting system of the health maintenance organization, including total costs,
139 y use was also more likely in women with non-health maintenance organization insurance (OR, 1.81; 95%
140 were similar, except for less commercial or health maintenance organization insurance in the linked
141 ital days within the first 3 mo included non-health maintenance organization insurance, ischemic hear
143 mptions based on data from a large nonprofit health maintenance organization (Kaiser Permanente).
146 ographic residence, health insurance status, health maintenance organization market penetration, seve
147 he authors conducted a case-control study of health maintenance organization members in western Washi
149 ed black race, lack of health insurance, and health maintenance organization membership, each of whic
150 In multivariate analyses, physicians in a health maintenance organization, multispecialty group, o
151 ars in primary care clinics of a staff-model health maintenance organization (N = 1,962) were screene
152 approximately 91% of individuals enrolled in health maintenance organizations nationally, and represe
153 rouped on the basis of payer status (private/health maintenance organization, no insurance, Medicare,
154 Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound and Health Maintenance Organization of Washington between 19
156 edical schools or their universities owned a health maintenance organization or other managed care or
157 ed to those MA plans that were identified as health maintenance organization or preferred provider or
158 ary heart disease (CHD) patients enrolled in health maintenance organization or Veterans Administrati
161 lly lower service utilization and costs, and health maintenance organization patients had lower drug
164 ployers mandated a switch from a traditional health maintenance organization plan to a high-deductibl
165 udy of adults enrolled in a large commercial health maintenance organization plan, the COVID-19 pande
166 an database who were continually enrolled in health maintenance organization plans, preferred provide
168 he United States, especially rural areas and health maintenance organization populations, where scree
169 367 patients with type 1 and 2 diabetes in a health maintenance organization primary care setting.
170 (black, Asian, Hispanic, and other) and have health maintenance organization/private insurance, diabe
171 o insurers (private, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, health maintenance organizations, programs for Children
172 ysicians from New York and those employed by health maintenance organizations rated angiography as le
173 za vaccine-naive 5-8-year-olds enrolled in a health maintenance organization received 2 doses of TIV
174 995, children (n = 307) in a rural Wisconsin health maintenance organization received MMR2 at age 4-6
175 -1995, children (n=308) in a rural Wisconsin health maintenance organization received MMR2 at age 4-6
176 e from Medicare Parts A and B; enrolled in a health maintenance organization; received a diagnosis of
177 vial changes in estimates were observed when health maintenance organization records alone were used
179 nd health care costs were assessed using the health maintenance organization's computerized data.
180 is clinical practice intervention in a large health maintenance organization system is feasible, and
182 ort study was carried out in a large Israeli health maintenance organization to determine vaccine eff
183 data systems of a large U.S. group-practice health maintenance organization to identify 13,442 pregn
184 ers also varied by plan type (range, 31% for health maintenance organizations to 49% for preferred pr
185 from August 2003 through February 2006 at a health maintenance organization, university medical cent
186 rial fibrillation who received care within a health maintenance organization, warfarin use was consid
188 By using the cost accounting system of the health maintenance organization, we examined differences
189 women) acquired during 21 months in a large health maintenance organization were categorized (catego
192 e multivariate analysis, patients covered by health maintenance organizations were more likely to be
194 tionnaire mailed to all women enrollees in a health maintenance organization who were 18 to 34 years
195 ng implemented at Kaiser Permanente, a large health maintenance organization with 16 hospitals in nor
197 women aged 50-80 years who were members of a health maintenance organization with centralized automat
198 s (> or =18 years of age) of a Massachusetts health maintenance organization with documentation of at
199 2 nonobstetric procedures among members of a health maintenance organization with extensive automated