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There is not, and has never been, a single Canadian health system.
Part of a series on the health systems of Canada’s provinces and
territories, Newfoundland and Labrador: A Health System Profile
provides a critical analysis of how the single-payer health care
system has been implemented in the country’s youngest province.
Examining the way the province’s health services are organized,
funded, and delivered, the authors focus on the challenges involved
in providing effective health care in a setting characterized by a
large, decentralized territory; a small population, much of which
is widely distributed in a large number of rural communities and
small towns; and comparatively limited fiscal capacity and health
human resources. Drawing on maps, figures, and collected data, this
book documents the hesitant and limited ways in which Newfoundland
and Labrador has sought to deal with the challenges and
difficulties that the system has experienced in responding to
recent changes in demography, economics, and medical technology.
If you are a software developer working with data visualizations
and want to build complex data visualizations, this book is for
you. Basic knowledge of D3 framework is expected. With real-world
examples, you will learn how to structure your applications to
create enterprise-level charts and interactive dashboards.
There is not, and has never been, a single Canadian health system.
Part of a series on the health systems of Canada's provinces and
territories, Newfoundland and Labrador: A Health System Profile
provides a critical analysis of how the single-payer health care
system has been implemented in the country's youngest province.
Examining the way the province's health services are organized,
funded, and delivered, the authors focus on the challenges involved
in providing effective health care in a setting characterized by a
large, decentralized territory; a small population, much of which
is widely distributed in a large number of rural communities and
small towns; and comparatively limited fiscal capacity and health
human resources. Drawing on maps, figures, and collected data, this
book documents the hesitant and limited ways in which Newfoundland
and Labrador has sought to deal with the challenges and
difficulties that the system has experienced in responding to
recent changes in demography, economics, and medical technology.
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