Results List
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N.C. special licensing program rewards long-term care providers who maintain high-quality workforce
Source: North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services
For release: Immediate Date: August 21, 2006 Contact: Jim Jones (919) 733-9190 RALEIGH North Carolina has created a first-in-the-nation program to help reduce the turnover of nurse aides and other direct care workers who provide hands-on care to hundreds of thousands of the state's elderly…
Resource type: News
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Alliances In Health Debate Splinter; Once-Friendly Groups Split as Details Emerge
Source: The Washington Post
Health Care for America Now and the AARP are Atlantic grantees. by Dan Eggen and Perry Bacon Jr. Months of relative cooperation among disparate interest groups in the heath-care reform debate appear to be coming to an end, as the major political parties and their…
Resource type: News
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Under Age and Alone, Immigrants See a Softer Side of Detention
Source: The New York Times
by ANN FARMER Jose was 14 when he left his home in Oaxaca, Mexico, and paid a smuggler $1,200 to sneak him across the border. He made it to Phoenix and started on a long and familiar odyssey as he scratched out a living, first…
Resource type: News
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Hospital trauma units under threat
Source: Cape Times
by Melanie Gosling Radical changes to the treatment of emergency patients in the Western Cape will damage the province's world-class trauma centres and compromise patient care, doctors say. The provincial Health Department's plan is designed to merge the overloaded casualty sections at tertiary hospitals with…
Resource type: News
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Asia's economic transformation puts region's health at risk, warns leading academic
Source: Intellasia interactive
Despite extraordinary progress which has lifted 600 million people out of poverty in Asia since 1990, the basic right to health is under threat and the future looks more uncertain, says University of New South Wales professor of Health and Human Rights, Daniel Tarantola. "The…
Resource type: News
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Execution method OK'd
Source: The Arizona Republic (Phoenix)
by Michael Kiefer A federal judge Wednesday removed a major obstacle to executions in Arizona, ruling that the state's lethal-injection procedure is similar to one approved by the U.S. Supreme Court. Executions have been on hold in Arizona since November 2007, when the Arizona Supreme…
Resource type: News
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South Africa: Total Hospital Shutdown in Five Provinces
Source: Business Day
by Luphert Chilwane Johannesburg — FIVE of the nine provinces experienced a complete shutdown of public hospitals yesterday as the doctors' strike for a 50% wage increase intensified. Doctors interviewed by telephone said public hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal, the Eastern Cape, the Western Cape, Mpumalanga, Limpopo…
Resource type: News
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Doctors offered R1bn package
Source: Pretoria News (South Africa)
by Mogomotsi Magome and SAPA The Department of Health has offered to increase some doctors' salaries by up to 60 percent from next month, in a bid to avert a nationwide strike that could cripple the public health system. The increases proposed by the department…
Resource type: News
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Instead of retiring, seniors are REWIRING
Source: Journal of Business-Spokane
by Mike McLean A job-skills program called Plus 50 that's geared toward retirement-aged people wishing to remain in the work force is achieving early success at Community Colleges of Spokane and has been named as a model training program for other community colleges. CCS's Institute…
Resource type: News
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Detained immigrants often face harsh, unfair treatment in U.S. hands, study says
Source: The San Francisco Chronicle (California)
by Tyche Hendricks More than 400,000 people a year are detained by immigration officials in the United States - including undocumented immigrants, legal immigrants who run afoul of the law and asylum seekers who come fleeing persecution - but according to a report released today…
Resource type: News