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Page "Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act" ¶ 2
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uncompensated and are
All others are considered uncompensated.
However, because of the recent influence of managed care and other cost control initiatives by insurance companies, hospitals are less able to shift costs, and end up writing off more in uncompensated care.
The designs described above, which measure the rate of change of altitude by automatically detecting the change in static pressure as the aircraft changes altitude are referred to as " uncompensated " variometers.
The shantytown where the tailors live is knocked down in a government " beautification " program, and the residents are uncompensated and forced to move into the streets.
The state of New Jersey has a program to provide reimbursements to hospitals and other health-care institutions which provide uncompensated or undercompensated health care to patients lacking private health insurance whose income falls below a certain amount but is too high to qualify them for Medicaid and are not old enough to be eligible for Medicare ( New Jersey's situation is somewhat unique among American states in that the state has no county or municipal hospitals ).
The uncompensated ions are positive on the N side and negative on the P side.
They are considered uncompensated employees, and when called to emergency state active duty, they become compensated employees.

uncompensated and thus
When the pilot chooses to pull up to enter a thermal or to dive to exit a sink area, an uncompensated variometer will include the change in altitude due to the change in velocity in its read-out, thus marring the airmass ' climb or sink rate.

uncompensated and unpaid
When medical bills go unpaid, health care providers must either shift the costs onto those who can pay or go uncompensated.

uncompensated and also
In the United States, charity care ( also known as uncompensated care ) is health care provided for free or at reduced prices to low income patients.
He used it to generate his 1969 free-form solo Electronic Sound album for Apple Records ' spinoff label Zapple, with the first side of the disc consisting of not only Krause's composition, but also his performance – one that remained completely unacknowledged and uncompensated for.

uncompensated and for
According to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 55 % of U. S. emergency care now goes uncompensated.
In contrast, for a feedback apparatus used to control a dynamical system, the objective is to give the closed-loop system improved response as compared to the uncompensated system.
Reparations for slavery is a proposal that some type of compensation should be provided to the descendants of enslaved people in the United States, in consideration of the coerced and uncompensated labor their ancestors performed over centuries.
Radicals pushed for the uncompensated abolition of slavery, while Lincoln wanted to pay loyal owners.
They wanted their own land to farm and believed they had already paid for land by their years of uncompensated labor and the trials of slavery.
One estimate put the cost of uncompensated care for 2004 at $ 41 billion, of which $ 34. 6 billion was funded through a patchwork of government programs.
Over half of all government reimbursement for uncompensated care comes from the federal government ; most of that is provided through Medicare and Medicaid.
Proponents of alternative education countered that expanding the student body so drastically would destroy the school's intimate ethos, and that the higher per-pupil spending resulted from CHS offering many classroom places, uncompensated, to students from other high schools who commuted for one or two classes.
The central cube is made of fused silica and has a two-lobe Far Field Diffraction Pattern ( FFDP ) providing nearly equal intensities for compensated and uncompensated velocity aberration.

uncompensated and average
Workers in the mills worked an average of 54 hours a week at an average rate of just over 20 cents per hour and were threatened with a loss of income through an uncompensated cut of working hours.

uncompensated and dollar
In April 2011, The Huffington Post was targeted with a multimillion dollar lawsuit filed in United States District Court in New York by Jonathan Tasini on behalf of thousands of uncompensated bloggers.

uncompensated and .
The principal drawback of the one way time transfer system is that propagation delays of the communication channel remain uncompensated except in some advanced systems.
The amount of uncompensated care delivered by nonfederal community hospitals grew from $ 6. 1 billion in 1983 to $ 40. 7 billion in 2004, according to a 2004 report from the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, but it is unclear what percentage of this was emergency care and therefore attributable to EMTALA.
Environmental economists define subsidies as uncompensated environmental damage arising from any flow of goods and services.
As the sport developed, however, it was found that these very simple " uncompensated " instruments had their limitations.
Therefore an uncompensated variometer can only accurately indicate the vertical speed of the airmass when flying at constant speed.
Δh is the compensation to apply to the uncompensated variometer reading.
As a result of these " uncompensated exports ", inflation in Romania skyrocketed, causing widespread discontent among the Romanian population, even among groups and individuals who had once enthusiastically supported the Germans and the war.
Depending on the cost of the school, this is often seen as an unethical practice, as it requires students to exchange paid-for and often limited tuition credits in order to work an uncompensated job.
Rent-seeking implies extraction of uncompensated value from others without making any contribution to productivity.
However, the extent of the uncompensated fraud victim issue is unknown, as a result of China's censored media.

non-reimbursed and .
" The NFPA slang is typically used in smaller fire departments, where such a purchase is a non-reimbursed out of pocket personal expense.

amounts and are
All payments authorized under Section 7 of this Title shall be disbursed from the proper fund, as the case may be, and all amounts covered into the Treasury to the credit of the aforesaid funds are hereby permanently appropriated for the making of the payments authorized by Section 7 of this Title.
Calcium, phosphorus and iron are present in worthwhile amounts, and eleven other minerals also have been found in varying trace amounts.
Thus, during any given year ( A ) if the revenues from the residential service are $7,000,000, ( B ) if the operating expenses imputed to this class of service come to $5,000,000, and ( C ) if the net investment in ( or value of ) the plant and equipment deemed devoted to this service amounts to $30,000,000, the cost analyst will report that residential service, in the aggregate, has yielded a return of $2,000,000 or 6-2/3 per cent.
The school finds that the children are satisfied with smaller amounts of food since all of it is high in quality.
The following amounts of water are needed per day for livestock and domestic uses.
Sizable amounts of soybean, coconut, and palm kernel oil -- seed oils that are produced primarily for food purposes -- also are used to make soaps, detergents, and paint resins.
Under this law annual grants are given to systems in substantial amounts.
Expressions like or contain symbols and in equal amounts ; they are ambiguous and should be avoided in serious deduction.
Adobe had been in use by indigenous peoples of the Americas in the Southwestern United States, Mesoamerica, and the Andean region of South America for several thousand years, although often substantial amounts of stone are used in the walls of Pueblo buildings.
The reactions involved are normally tested with dilute solutions of astatine mixed with larger amounts of iodine.
Sometimes alloys may exhibit marked differences in behavior even when small amounts of one element are present.
The lake absorbs huge amounts of eroded gravel and snowmelt that the river brings from the Alps, and the former swamps have become fruitful plains: they are known as the " vegetable garden of Switzerland ".
The peoples of the Tarim Basin in northern China are now known to be Caucasian and there were widespread attempts to keep western archeologists from testing samples such as deliberately replacing the mummies or decapitating them, even defacing ancient cave painting depictions of these people with large amounts of body hair and features such as red colored hair and blue eyes.
A person who has mastered great amounts of knowledge of the grammars, rules, & language of an art-form are adepts ( Daksha ), whereas those who have worked through the whole system and journeyed ahead of these to become a law unto themselves is called a Mahana.
The A. D. Police are offered a great deal of leeway in their activities, often blockading large sections of the city and causing great amounts of property damage in the course of fulfilling their duty.
The wastes of a single family are usually insufficient to produce enough methane for anything more than small amounts of cooking.
While they can synthesize arginine and histidine, they cannot produce it in sufficient amounts for young, growing animals, and so these are often considered essential amino acids.
They are made up mostly of compact bone, with lesser amounts of marrow, located within the medullary cavity, and spongy bone.
Bioinformatics is very much involved in making sense of protein microarray and HT MS data ; the former approach faces similar problems as with microarrays targeted at mRNA, the latter involves the problem of matching large amounts of mass data against predicted masses from protein sequence databases, and the complicated statistical analysis of samples where multiple, but incomplete peptides from each protein are detected.
New methodological breakthroughs in sequencing, genomics, proteomics, bioinformatics and imaging are producing vast amounts of information.
German research in 2003 showed significant benefits in reducing breast cancer risk when large amounts of raw vegetable matter are included in the diet.
Similarly, relatively little energy is used in producing and combining the raw materials ( although large amounts of CO < sub > 2 </ sub > are produced by the chemical reactions in cement manufacture ).
As chives are usually served in small amounts and never as the main dish, negative effects are rarely encountered, although digestive problems may occur following overconsumption.

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