Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 II, 5. 15. 6| Community and Member States’ Incentive Measures to Aid the Research,
2 III, 10. 2. 1| policies and functions as an incentive to reach agreed targets.~ ~
3 III, 10. 4. 2| not be understood as an incentive not to use breast milk.
4 III, 10. 4. 5| Europe, there is an economic incentive to export hazardous waste.
5 III, 10. 6. 2| basis of two principles: incentive and peer pressure. The kindergarten
6 IV, 11. 1. 6| which is to be provided. The incentive is to provide the best service
7 IV, 11. 1. 6| Fee-for-service systems have an incentive to increase activity, and
8 IV, 11. 1. 6| activity, and could have an incentive to target the poor depending
9 IV, 11. 1. 6| control costs but provide an incentive to decrease activity, shift
10 IV, 11. 1. 6| providers fairly and with the incentive to improve efficiency. Both
11 IV, 11. 1. 6| Busse et al, 2006). A common incentive created by DRGs is ‘up-coding’,
12 IV, 11. 1. 6| up-coding’, which refers to the incentive to upgrade the severity
13 IV, 11. 1. 6| may arise because of the incentive to minimize costs within
14 IV, 11. 3. 2| payments may provide an incentive to dispense a lower-cost
15 IV, 12. 1 | protection of public health;~(c) incentive measures designed to protect
16 Key, Ap5. 0. 0| imposex~impotence~inactivity~incentive~incentives~incineration~