|
Volumn , Issue , 1996, Pages
|
Who should get liver transplants?: as demand far outpaces donors, federal officials may revamp rules.
a
a
NONE
|
Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
|
Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
CHRONIC DISEASE;
CRITICAL ILLNESS;
DIAGNOSIS;
DONOR;
GEOGRAPHY;
GOVERNMENT;
HEALTH CARE AND PUBLIC HEALTH;
HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATION;
HOSPITAL;
HUMAN;
LIVER;
ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION;
PATIENT SELECTION;
POLICY;
POLITICS;
POPULAR APPROACH/SOURCE;
PROGNOSIS;
RESOURCE ALLOCATION;
STANDARD;
TIME;
TRANSPLANTATION;
UNITED NETWORK FOR ORGAN SHARING;
UNITED STATES;
HEALTH CARE AND PUBLIC HEALTH;
POPULAR APPROACH/SOURCE;
UNITED NETWORK FOR ORGAN SHARING;
CHRONIC DISEASE;
CRITICAL ILLNESS;
DIAGNOSIS;
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT;
GEOGRAPHY;
GOVERNMENT;
HEALTH CARE RATIONING;
HOSPITALS;
HUMANS;
LIVER;
ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION;
ORGANIZATIONAL POLICY;
PATIENT SELECTION;
POLITICS;
PROGNOSIS;
PUBLIC POLICY;
REFERENCE STANDARDS;
RESOURCE ALLOCATION;
TIME FACTORS;
TISSUE AND ORGAN PROCUREMENT;
TISSUE DONORS;
TRANSPLANTATION;
UNITED STATES;
UNITED STATES DEPT. OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES;
|
EID: 0030577266
PISSN: 01908286
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: None Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (2)
|
References (0)
|