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1.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 26(suppl 1): 79-108, 2020.
Article in Portuguese, English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31994682

ABSTRACT

This article investigates how the santas casas de misericórdia charitable associations in the state of São Paulo were subsidized by the municipal, provincial, and state governments at the turn of the twentieth century. Budget appropriations from 1838 to 1915 were examined to evaluate these charitable grants as well as the growth in funding during this period. While a care network created with strong state backing, it was put into action by philanthropic assistance. This network of hospital care retained the same format until at least the first third of the twentieth century, and included misericórdia establishments created within the interior of the state of São Paulo.


O artigo analisa como as santas casas de misericórdia do estado de São Paulo foram subvencionadas pelos governos municipais, provincial e estadual na passagem do século XIX para o XX. Para tanto, são discutidas as dotações orçamentárias realizadas de 1838 a 1915, com o fim de avaliar o repasse e a ampliação de verbas nesse ínterim. É possível notar que foi criada uma rede de assistência fortemente apoiada pelo Estado, mas efetivada pela assistência filantrópica. Essa rede de atendimento hospitalar permanece com o mesmo formato até pelo menos o primeiro terço do século XX, contexto em que se incluíam as misericórdias criadas pelo interior do estado paulista.


Subject(s)
Charities/history , Health Policy/history , Hospitals/history , Brazil , Budgets/history , Charities/economics , Charities/legislation & jurisprudence , Economics, Hospital/history , Financing, Government/history , Government/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans
2.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 26(supl.1): 79-108, out.-dez. 2019. tab, graf
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-1056285

ABSTRACT

Resumo O artigo analisa como as santas casas de misericórdia do estado de São Paulo foram subvencionadas pelos governos municipais, provincial e estadual na passagem do século XIX para o XX. Para tanto, são discutidas as dotações orçamentárias realizadas de 1838 a 1915, com o fim de avaliar o repasse e a ampliação de verbas nesse ínterim. É possível notar que foi criada uma rede de assistência fortemente apoiada pelo Estado, mas efetivada pela assistência filantrópica. Essa rede de atendimento hospitalar permanece com o mesmo formato até pelo menos o primeiro terço do século XX, contexto em que se incluíam as misericórdias criadas pelo interior do estado paulista.


Abstract This article investigates how the santas casas de misericórdia charitable associations in the state of São Paulo were subsidized by the municipal, provincial, and state governments at the turn of the twentieth century. Budget appropriations from 1838 to 1915 were examined to evaluate these charitable grants as well as the growth in funding during this period. While a care network created with strong state backing, it was put into action by philanthropic assistance. This network of hospital care retained the same format until at least the first third of the twentieth century, and included misericórdia establishments created within the interior of the state of São Paulo.


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Charities/history , Health Policy/history , Hospitals/history , Brazil , Budgets/history , Charities/economics , Charities/legislation & jurisprudence , Economics, Hospital/history , Financing, Government/history , Government/history
3.
Med Hist (Barc) ; (3): 26-38, 2015.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26710567

ABSTRACT

The XVIIIth century was an era of reforms in multiple fields, including healthcare. To advance in its study, the present article delves into the knowledge about the hospital network in the middle of said century within the territories which integrate the current province of Zamora. Accordingly, the type of establishment, its funding, organisation and operation are analysed. As a result, a panorama dotted with numerous rural refuges and some hospitals in the centre of certain built-up areas is drawn, dedicated, basically, to the reception and religious assistance of poor vagrants. Such establishments were funded, above all, by agricultural income and by census rents. They counted , moreover, on a notable, ecclesiastic presence.


Subject(s)
Hospitals/history , Economics, Hospital/history , History, 18th Century , Hospital Administration/history , Spain
4.
Med. hist ; 35(3): 26-38, 2015.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-143968

ABSTRACT

El siglo XVIII fue un periodo de reformas en múltiples campos, también en el asistencial. Para avanzar en su estudio, el presente artículo profundiza en el conocimiento de la red hospitalaria a mediados de dicha centuria en los territorios que integran la actual provincia de Zamora. En este sentido, se analiza el tipo de establecimientos, su financiación, organización y funcionamiento. Como resultado, se nos dibuja un panorama salpicado de numerosos albergues rurales y algunos hospitales de curación en núcleos de cierta entidad urbana, consagrados, fundamentalmente, al acogimiento y atención religiosa de pobres transeúntes. Tales establecimientos se nutrían, sobre todo, de rentas agrarias y del producto de censos. Contaban, además, con una notable presencia eclesiástica (AU)


The XVIIIth century was an era of reforms in multiple fields, including healthcare. To advance in its study, the present article delves into the knowledge about the hospital network in the middle of said century within the territories which integrate the current province of Zamora. Accordingly, the type of establishment, its funding, organisation and operation are analysed. As a result, a panorama dotted with numerous rual refuge sand some hospitals in the centre of certain built-up areas is drawn, dedicated, basically, to the reception and religious assistance of poor vagrants, Scuh establishments were funded, above all, by agricultural income and by census rents. They counted, moreover, on a notable, ecclesiastic presence (AU)


Subject(s)
Female , History, 18th Century , Humans , Male , Hospital Departments/history , Hospital Distribution Systems/history , Hospitals/history , Economics, Hospital/history , Hospital Administration/history , Hospital Planning/history , Hospital Restructuring/history , Hospitals/classification , Financial Management, Hospital/history , Food Service, Hospital/ethics , Food Service, Hospital/history , Psychiatric Department, Hospital/history
7.
Am Surg ; 78(6): 627-34, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22643255

ABSTRACT

Much has been written about public hospitals relative to their mission to care for the underserved, their role in medical education, and the continuous financial challenges that they encounter. But, despite doubts about their viability, public hospitals have not only withstood the test of time, but have thrived and have evolved into a new entity, i.e., the safety net hospital. Like with any long-standing institution, the development of public hospitals holds valuable lessons that provide insight into how they will continue to evolve and potentially strengthen, even in the face of adversity. Their rich heritage includes many medical "firsts" in the United States such as the first municipal ambulance service, first blood bank, first trauma center(s), first cardiac catherization, and first civilian burn center. If safety net hospitals care for their communities and continue in their educational mission, they will thrive in the tradition of service.


Subject(s)
Economics, Hospital/history , Hospitals, Public/history , Trauma Centers/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hospitals, Public/organization & administration , Humans , Trauma Centers/organization & administration , United States
8.
Econ Inq ; 49(4): 1054-69, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22165419

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we compare potential and realized cost savings from hospital mergers. Our approach isolates changes in realized cost savings due to different output mixes from systematic changes due to time and also provides a measure of the potential cost savings due to scale economies. Our findings suggest that economies of scale are present for merging hospitals and they realize these cost savings immediately following a merger. However, we also show that over time, cost savings from the merger decrease and the proportion of hospitals experiencing positive cost savings declines.


Subject(s)
Cost Savings , Economics, Hospital , Health Care Costs , Health Facility Merger , Cost Savings/economics , Cost Savings/history , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/ethnology , Delivery of Health Care/history , Economics, Hospital/history , Health Care Costs/history , Health Facility Merger/economics , Health Facility Merger/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hospitals/history
14.
20 Century Br Hist ; 16(2): 170-92, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16075492

ABSTRACT

This article considers the discussion and rejection of social insurance model of funding for the British National Health Service. Specifically it asks why the hospital contributory scheme movement had so little impact on policy debates in the 1940s. We argue that at the start of the policy-making process serious consideration was given to the incorporation of this mode of funding, not least because the contributory schemes, with some ten million members, played a major role in financing existing voluntary hospital provision. Early sections describe the growth and nature of the schemes, noting that, despite their large working-class constituency and the presence of labour movement representatives amongst their leadership, they remained peripheral to discussion of reform in the interwar period. We then trace the emergence of the proposal for an insurance-based 'hotel-charge' in civil servants' discussions about hospital funding the Beveridge Report. Officials, however, remained sceptical about the contributory schemes' capacity to deliver a comprehensive and efficient funding mechanism, given their lack of uniformity, the gaps in their coverage, and the limited progress of reciprocal arrangements between them. Finally, we note the ineffectiveness of the British Hospital Contributory Schemes Association as a player in the policy community. Its leadership had no clear strategy for influencing events and was reluctant to deploy pressure group tactics such as lobbying through the press or parliament. Crucially, the movement was divided internally between those members who supported the voluntary system and others who welcomed a publicly funded health service.


Subject(s)
Economics, Hospital/history , Social Security/history , State Medicine/history , History, 20th Century , Hospitals/history , State Medicine/economics , United Kingdom
17.
Int Hist Nurs J ; 7(1): 23-8, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12096645

ABSTRACT

The Hospital Saturday Fund was established as a means of providing much-needed contributions to the voluntary hospitals. Subscribing to the Fund ensured the contributor's care, but, additionally, they could sponsor a 'deserving object'. The annual reports of the Fund provide a number of insights in relation to the social, economic and political history of Liverpool. The reports also provide some insights into nursing in the city during the period 1888-1927. Following documentary analysis, the paper discusses some of these findings, namely district nursing, services for women and convalescence, and evaluates how useful this source may be to nursing history.


Subject(s)
Economics, Hospital/history , Hospitals, Voluntary/history , Nursing Service, Hospital/history , England , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hospitals, Voluntary/economics
19.
Cah Sociol Demogr Med ; 40(1): 113-46, 2000.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10965434

ABSTRACT

This article is an inquiry about growth of hospitals expenses. The analysis is founded on the long term construction of monetary series. These series show evidence of three characteristics: growth of hospitals expenses between 1815 and 1993, development trough a succession of stages, existence of long term cyclic fluctuations contrary to the Kondratieff's movements.


Subject(s)
Economics, Hospital/history , Economics, Hospital/trends , Hospitals/history , Hospitals/trends , Adult , Budgets , Child , Costs and Cost Analysis , France , Health Services Accessibility , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hospitalization/economics , Hospitals/standards , Humans , Insurance, Health/economics , Insurance, Health/history , Insurance, Hospitalization/economics , Insurance, Hospitalization/history , Length of Stay/economics , Quality of Health Care , Social Security
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