Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 II, 5. 5. 3| hospital.~ ~Data on the outpatient sector and on rehabilitation
2 II, 5. 5. 3| morbidity databases with data on outpatient care.~Disability adjusted
3 II, 5. 5. 3| 2.5 times as high as for outpatient care (see Table 5.5.3.3.
4 II, 5. 5. 3| restrictive assignment to outpatient care and rehabilitative
5 II, 5. 5. 3| healthcare costs [inpatient care, outpatient care, drug costs and tests],
6 II, 5. 8. 3| mortality, hospitalization,and outpatient utilization in people with
7 II, 5. 9. 3| access to and the quality of outpatient health care.~ ~Deaths due
8 II, 5. 9. 3| direct costs are related to outpatient and ambulatory care (€ 3.
9 II, 5. 15. 1| benefits, hospitalisation and outpatient care.~ ~Most rare diseases
10 II, 6. 3. 2| antibiotic usage in hospitals and outpatient settings. It has been shown
11 II, 9. 1. 2| health service episodes on an outpatient basis. In some countries,
12 II, 9. 4. 3| investigations, therapy input and outpatient review (Bhalla et al, 2004).~ ~
13 III, 10. 2. 1| triggered the development of outpatient substitution treatment and
14 III, 10. 2. 1| abstinence oriented inpatient and outpatient treatment and detoxification.
15 IV, 11. 1. 5| the hospital to service outpatient care. The role of hospital
16 IV, 11. 1. 6| privately delivered primary and outpatient care. Several studies have
17 IV, 11. 2. 1| significantly higher users of outpatient care than in the rest of
18 IV, 11. 2. 1| Table 11.4. Number of outpatient contacts per person, 1990-
19 IV, 13. 6. 2| and accident units and in outpatient departments. No available
20 IV, 13. 6. 2| children – inpatient and outpatient – should also have dedicated