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Volumn 74, Issue 14, 1997, Pages
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Too many primary-care doctors? It could happen.
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
CLINICAL PRACTICE;
GENERAL PRACTITIONER;
HEALTH CARE PLANNING;
HEALTH INSURANCE;
HEALTH SERVICE;
MANPOWER;
MEDICINE;
NURSE PRACTITIONER;
ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT;
PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT;
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT;
PRIMARY HEALTH CARE;
SALARY AND FRINGE BENEFIT;
STANDARD;
UNITED STATES;
UTILIZATION REVIEW;
HEALTH SERVICES NEEDS AND DEMAND;
MANAGED CARE PROGRAMS;
MEDICALLY UNDERSERVED AREA;
NURSE PRACTITIONERS;
PERSONNEL SELECTION;
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS;
PHYSICIAN'S PRACTICE PATTERNS;
PHYSICIANS, FAMILY;
PRIMARY HEALTH CARE;
SALARIES AND FRINGE BENEFITS;
SPECIALTIES, MEDICAL;
UNITED STATES;
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EID: 0031567534
PISSN: 00257206
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: None Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (1)
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References (0)
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