When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Healthcare in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healthcare_in_Russia

    A mobile clinic used to provide health care to people at remote railway stations. The new Russia has changed to a mixed model of health care with private financing and provision running alongside state financing and provision. Article 41 of the 1993 constitution confirmed a citizen's right to healthcare and medical assistance free of charge. [32]

  3. Welfare in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_in_Japan

    Medical insurance, health care for the elderly, and public health expenses constituted about 60% of social welfare and social security costs in 1975, while government pensions accounted for 20%. By the early 1980s, pensions accounted for nearly 50% of social welfare and social security expenditures because people were living longer after ...

  4. Semashko model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semashko_model

    However, the model was less effective against non-communicable diseases and as such failed to advance the population health further. [5] In the 1970s, with the availability of new medical technologies and popular demand for better care, the Soviet Union put greater emphasis on specialization in outpatient care, moving away from the Semashko model.

  5. Elderly people in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elderly_people_in_Japan

    This article focuses on the situation of elderly people in Japan and the recent changes in society. Japan's population is aging. During the 1950s, the percentage of the population in the 65-and-over group remained steady at around 5%. Throughout subsequent decades, however, that age group expanded, and by 1989 it had grown to 11.6% of the ...

  6. Japan’s loneliness epidemic is so bad that elderly women are ...

    www.aol.com/finance/japan-loneliness-epidemic...

    Japan’s largest women’s prison has become home to a growing number of seniors. CNN reported the number of prisoners aged 65 or older nearly quadrupled from 2003 to 2022.

  7. Health care systems by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_systems_by_country

    Supplementary private health insurance is available only to cover the co-payments or non-covered costs, and usually makes a fixed payment per days in hospital or per surgery performed, rather than per actual expenditure. In 2005, Japan spent 8.2% of GDP on health care, or US$2,908 per capita. Of that, approximately 83% was government ...

  8. Japan’s elderly are lonely and struggling. Some women ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/japan-elderly-lonely-struggling...

    The elderly population is ballooning so fast that Japan will require 2.72 million care workers by 2040, according to the government – which is now scrambling to encourage more people to enter ...

  9. Elderly care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elderly_care

    An old man at a nursing home in Norway. Elderly care, or simply eldercare (also known in parts of the English-speaking world as aged care), serves the needs of old adults.It encompasses assisted living, adult daycare, long-term care, nursing homes (often called residential care), hospice care, and home care.