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1

Illinois. Dept. on Aging. Choices for Care in Illinois: A program that helps families discover their options for long-term care. Springfield, Ill: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2009.

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2

B, Joseph Lawrence, and University of Chicago. Center for Urban Research and Policy., eds. Paying for health care: Public policy choices for Illinois. Chicago, IL: Center for Urban Research and Policy Studies, The University of Chicago, 1992.

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3

Aging, Illinois Dept on. Long Term Care Ombudsman Program: Protecting, defending, advocating. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2002.

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4

Illinois. Dept. on Aging. Long Term Care Ombudsman Program: Protecting, defending, advocating. 8th ed. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 1999.

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5

Illinois. Department on Aging. Long term care ombudsman program: Protecting, defending, advocating. 9th ed. Springfield, IL: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 1991.

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6

Illinois. Dept. on Aging. Stanowy Urzed Zaz alen do Spraw Domo w Opieki nad Osobami Starszymi i Niepelnosprawnymi: Ochrania prawa, broni intereso w, doradza. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2002.

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7

Aging, Illinois Department on. Cuidados a Largo Plazo Pragrama de Mediación "Ombudsman": Protejer, defender, abogar. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2001.

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8

Illinois. Department on Aging. Family councils in long-term care facilities. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2005.

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9

Illinois. Dept. on Aging. Shed the light of truth on quality care: A brochure for facility staff. Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2002.

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10

Illinois. Dept. on Aging. Family councils for families of long term care facility residents: Get involved! Springfield, Ill.]: Illinois Dept. on Aging, 2002.

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11

1949-, Berliner Howard S., and Ostow Miriam, eds. Changing U.S. health care: A study of four metropolitan areas. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993.

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12

Illinois. Dept. of Children and Family Services. Center for Law and Social Work. Final report to the majority leader, Illinois House of Representatives: DCFS Family Matters Pilot Program : permanency and stability for children in the care of elderly/frail adoptive parents and subsidized guardians. Chicago, Ill: [Illinois Dept. of Children and Family Services], Center for Law and Social Work, Family Matters Advisory Committee, 2007.

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13

Joseph, Lawrence B. Paying for Health Care: Public Policy Choices for Illinois. Center for Urban Research, 1992.

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14

Choices for the new generation: A follow-up report on New York's senior day program demonstrations. Albany, NY: New York State Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 1991.

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15

Hao, Chung-Jen. THE IMPACT OF THE ASSESSMENT PROGRAM ON THE NURSING HOME MARKET: THE LESSON FROM THE STATE OF ILLINOIS (MEDICAID). 1996.

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16

Fousekis, Natalie M. Californians Secure Wartime Child Care. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036255.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the Lanham Act program, which was established by the federal government during World War II. Rather than looking at public policy from the perspective of Washington D.C., it focuses on the main centers of war industry in California: Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area, and San Diego. The move to establish child care during the war was fueled by the grassroots political activism of local child care committees and political organizations, many of which were dominated by women. Ultimately, it was the initiative of people far removed from Washington that resulted in the planning, implementation, and promotion of Lanham Act centers.
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17

Hendrickson, Brett. Catholic Social Policy and Resistance to the Bracero Program. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039997.003.0009.

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This chapter illustrates how Catholic social doctrine sanctioned the activities of American Catholic clergy to provide pastoral care to braceros even while militating against the bracero program itself. While the priests who protested against the injustices of the program were in the ecclesiastical minority and occasionally clashed with their clerical brethren, they nevertheless benefited from and were supported by papal teaching. In a sense, this story of Catholic clergy and lay opposition to the bracero program can be understood as a prequel to Catholic collaboration with the United Farm Workers (UFW) and its various tactics and labor-organizing efforts. The chapter also highlights the legacy of Catholic critiques of the bracero program.
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18

Berliner, Howard S., Eli Ginzberg, and Miriam Ostow. Changing U.S. Health Care: A Study of Four Metropolitan Areas (Eisenhower Center Studies in Health Policy). Westview Pr (Short Disc), 1992.

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19

Ramey, Jessie B. Raising Orphans. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036903.003.0003.

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This chapter analyzes how poor families' own demands helped shape the institutional landscape of child welfare in turn-of-the century Pittsburgh, as they made choices based on religious preferences as well as location and reputation. Significantly, racial prejudice limited African American families' choices and led the black community to found its own child care institutions in this period. A demographic analysis of these families who chose orphanage care for their children reveals the often multiple, overlapping crises they faced—from the loss of a spouse to disrupted support networks and inadequate housing. As parents attempted to combine wage labor and child care responsibilities, they used orphanages as a strategy for family survival.
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20

Fousekis, Natalie M. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036255.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter provides an overview of women's activism for child care in California. The efforts of mothers and educators to save child care in California put them at the center of state and local politics, and their struggle illuminates the nationwide contest after World War II over the contours of the social welfare state. The women conducted letter-writing campaigns, traveled to the capital to lobby their representatives and public officials, and coordinated statewide political action. Meanwhile, the female educators spoke passionately in defense of the program, emphasizing the benefits of education-based care to the children of working mothers and to society at large. Eventually, their political actions and claims for child care played a critical role in the shaping of public debate, the building of the modern welfare state, and the expansion of American democracy.
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21

Fousekis, Natalie M. Postwar Hopes. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036255.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the protests that erupted in California when the federal government threatened to close the Lanham Act centers and the broad-based coalition that pushed for a permanent program in California. That year, 1946, marked a moment of possibility for advocates of state-supported child care for working mothers. Many in the progressive coalition insisted that wartime child care should be the basis for a universal nursery school program on the state level. While these citizens saw child care as social service the government should provide, political leaders had a different view. In the eyes of most politicians, the centers represented a temporary service only for the state's neediest residents.
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22

Fousekis, Natalie M. “We Need to Stand Together”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036255.003.0005.

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This chapter focuses on two women leaders, Theresa Mahler and Mary Young, and describes how they helped the coalition navigate female networks, create alliances with men inside and outside the legislature, and finally secure a permanent public child care program, even if only for California's low-income working mothers. As legislative chair for the Northern California Association for Nursery Education (NCANE), Mahler served as the key spokeswoman for nursery school educators and child care supervisors throughout the postwar struggles to secure permanent, publicly funded child care. A soft-spoken, unassuming woman who became president and later legislative chairman of the California Parents' Association for Child Care (CPACC), Young spoke on behalf of California's low-income working families, particularly single mothers.
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23

Fousekis, Natalie M. Conclusion. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036255.003.0008.

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This concluding chapter argues that California's low-income working mothers and educators saved public child care as it vanished across the nation, leaving a one-of-a-kind program between World War II and the War on Poverty. While California's child care centers provided women with a valuable service, they also produced a few generations of active democratic subjects, women who realized a need beyond their own and took political action. Indeed, whether for a year or two, women who participated in the movement learned how to express their political rights. Some of the women were leftists or members of labor unions but for most, joining parents' councils or the statewide association was their first foray into the world of politics.
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24

Ness, Immanuel. The Migration of Low-Wage Jamaican Guest Workers. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036279.003.0006.

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This chapter examines the process and effects of low-wage migration in Jamaica to reveal the growing importance of hospitality and domestic services in the global economy and the specific effect of U.S. guest worker programs on guest workers and their families. Though multilateral agencies extol the benefit that migration has had on the Jamaican economy through remittances, the chapter shows that in reality the guest worker program does not appreciably improve living standards of most guest workers, their families, and communities. While some development economists may argue that remittances from abroad are essential to support the basic needs of Jamaica's poor, they neglect to demonstrate how poverty is generated by the IMF and other multilateral institutions that have applied onerous terms on the country's economy which contribute to the shortage of jobs, education, health care, and adequate housing.
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25

Berger, Robert H., Robyn J. Wahl, and M. Paul Chaplin. Formulary management/pharmacy and therapeutics committees. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0028.

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While the cost of health care rises in all public healthcare organizations, budgets for that care have remained the same or have decreased. This is most certainly true in correctional settings. Because pharmaceutical expenditures are a substantial percentage of a health care organization’s budget, medication utilization is closely scrutinized. Clinicians must consider the appropriateness, effectiveness, and safety of medications prescribed to incarcerated patients. The abundance of available drugs and the complex issues with respect to their safe and effective use make a sound program for maximizing rational drug use critical. This is a challenging task in jails and prisons that requires a reexamination of the treatments provided. This is not a process of arbitrarily limiting prescriber choices or their decision-making authority solely based on cost-saving incentives. Evidence-based, best practices that inform the development of, and adherence to, disease management guidelines and a preferred, restricted medication formulary enhances the quality, safety, and effectiveness of the care provided. This chapter details the process and procedures to develop, implement, and monitor prescription practice change by establishing an effective Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee (P & TC). The chapter further addresses: the roles and responsibilities of a P & TC; P & TC decision-making processes; formulary development and modification; formulary process decision-making; medication therapy management guidelines; prescriber education; and data analytics to assist in monitoring outcomes, medication use, and prescriber adherence to P & TC policies.
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