Задать вопрос / Благотворительный Фонд “ЗООзащита”
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Вопрос: Lilydale santas coming to tasmanian town to celebrate tuesday, 19 April in Tasman. — <Jill>Jackson] In an incident that is not uncommon in Tasmania, the house of Lord Thomas of Hinton had to pay £5,000 to one of the proprietors of a mill who claimed they had been wrongfully sold his machine. According to the court papers, the mill was set up in 1853 on an estate on Greenmount Road which was owned by a Mr A. Davenport, a farmer, who was the owner of a mill in Kent. Mr Davenport became ill and was unable to pay the bills and was forced to sell the property.
The family of the proprietor, Thomas Davenport of Hinton, settled in Somerset and Mr Davenport died there in 1904.
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Rural doctors budget concerns
Health officials are concerned about the cost and efficiency of many rural rural healthcare clinics, many of which are run by the federal government, and are worried about the federal government's budget demands, said Tom Krawczyk, president of Health Impact Watch.
"The rural medicine community, which is probably the largest medical provider group in the country, has the highest number of uncompensated care visits in rural areas. And they pay out very little. We really don't understand this," he said.
Federal budget deficits have also slowed the growth of the rural health care sector, which will be particularly difficult in rural areas because of rising unemployment and lack of job-training programs, Krawczyk said.
Dr. Robert Gieradzewicz said the growth rate in the rural health care industry has been slow, too. It has more than doubled over the past two years, from less than 1 percent of GDP in 2009 to more than 3 percent this year.
"We've added almost one million new workers <in>rural areas] since 2009," he said.
Dr. Tom Peltier, chief of gastroenterology and hepatology at the Mount Sinai Medical Center, said the rising need for rural healthcare providers is the result of the recent Affordable Care Act. He has a family physician who now serves a part of that rural healthcare population.
Peltier said he and his colleagues are currently recruiting. And, he said, if a doctor is going to take on a role, the physician will want to be able to work in rural areas, as rural healthcare can be expensive, and it can be difficult for a doctor to maintain a rural healthcare practice.
Peltier said he could not comment on specific patient circumstances but noted that the increased need for care in rural areas has led many physicians to stop or cut back on family practice practice, and he expects physician training programs there to shrink.
Peltier added that, while it's difficult to estimate how many rural physicians will move back into the area to provide healthcare there, there could be as many as 2,000 rural doctors who would shift over to perform primary care in rural areas.
"There's a tremendous interest in health care in our country, and they're all ready to go," Peltier said. "When you look at how much money we're spending in rural and rural-related health care and it's being wasted, that's a serious problem."
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