You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Follow the fun and crazy adventure of Ales San, when she finds the planner of her favorite entertainer in the world, Hoon HaDo. She, along with her best friend Song Jin Seong, head to South Korea—traveling from city-to-city trying to join the planner with its owner. They not only invade his personal life, but also the show he stars in—Tribal Loco—and the lives of other Korean entertainers. My Adventures with Hoon HaDo is a parody based upon the popular South Korean show Running Man. The uniqueness and familiarity of that goofball variety show is inside.
A biographical listing of physicians practicing in Canada. Data includes name, address, university, graduation date, degrees, specialist certificates, and field of practice. Includes information pertaining to the practice of medicine in Canada including organizations, boards, and a listing of hospitals and universities.
The Canadian Almanac & Directory is the most complete source of Canadian information available - cultural, professional and financial institutions, legislative, governmental, judicial and educational organizations. Canada's authoritative sourcebook for almost 160 years, the Canadian Almanac & Directory gives you access to almost 100,000 names and addresses of contacts throughout the network of Canadian institutions.
These Chung-Hua Lectures, given at the Academia Sinica in Taiwan in December 2000, summarize work that has been done by myself and others on biases in medical care price indices. I begin by reviewing various uses of price indices and therefore why biases in the overall indices - and changes in those biases - matter. I then describe briefly the assumptions and theory underlying the official price indices. I next turn to the problems of measuring medical prices, assuming the basic applicability of the theory upon which the official indices are based. Finally I take up the potential inapplicability of the assumptions made by that theory and the resulting issues for measuring medical price changes. I describe an alternative theory and its implications for the measurement of medical prices. I conclude that the biases in the official medical care index, while substantially reduced by recent improvements, likely remain substantial enough to affect the overall official indices in the United States, especially the GDP deflator, where the weight of medical care is around 13 percent.