Illegal Immigrants in Texas: Impact on Social Services and Related Considerations

1984 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 733-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sidney Weintraub

A survey conducted of undocumented aliens and providers of public services showed that the state of Texas receives more from taxes paid by undocumented persons than the cost of the state to provide them with public services, such as education, health care, corrections, and welfare. The same survey showed that six cities in the state (Austin, Dallas, El Paso, Houston, McAllen and San Antonio) together expended more to provide services to undocumented aliens than they received in taxes. The survey concentrated on undocumented persons not detained by the immigration authorities and found that this group constituted a distinct population from those in detention centers in that the former exhibited normal characteristics of settled families while the latter were predominantly the familiar young, single and peripatetic male.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 612-648
Author(s):  
Johannes Scherling

Abstract For a few decades now and most prominently promoted by the US, neoliberal economics have been on the rise, epitomized in recent austerity policies with regard to countries that have met financial trouble. In particular the drive for privatization of core public services relating to basic human needs, such as water, social services or pensions, has been increasingly criticized because of a perceived incompatibility between the profit motive and social solidarity. This article uses a corpus-based analysis of the discourse on privatization in the US of proponents supporting, respectively opposing it, with an overall corpus size of about 230,000 tokens. It examines how the two groups conceptualize privatization differently and which strategies are applied to fore- or background particular aspects of it.



2015 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 263-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rutger Claassen

There has been a remarkable shift in the relationship between market and state responsibilities for public services like health care and education. While these services continue to be financed publicly, they are now often provided through the market. The main argument for this new institutional division of labor is economic: while (public) ends stay the same, (private) means are more efficient. Markets function as ‘mere means’ under the continued responsibility of the state. This article investigates and rejects currently existing egalitarian liberal theories about this division of labor and it presents and defends a new theory of marketization, in which social rights and democratic decision-making occupy center-stage.



2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 421-437
Author(s):  
Margaret Stuart

Using Michel Foucault’s theories of biopolitics, about risk and security, I examine the welfare policies of the National Coalition Government in New Zealand (2008–2017). This government attempted to mitigate risk by projecting possible challenges and solutions to ‘vulnerable populations’. Welfare was re-defined in monetarist economic terms, as ways to ensure ‘small government’. Over the three terms of government they brought in changes across the education, and social services, with the intent of implementing new economic facets to reduce the cost to the state of beneficiaries and their dependent children.  Using cross-ministry data collection, they planned to identify the ‘job-shy’ parents and children deemed ‘vulnerable’. Social Investment aimed to change the behaviours of such populations, whom the National Coalition government deemed future potential liabilities for the state. Projecting costs over 20 or 30 years and modelling the costs of dysfunction would give the social agencies improved information. Early intervention would save the state welfare budget, and responsibilize the young children at risk of themselves becoming beneficiaries later in life.



1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Moran

Health Care Has Been Called ‘The World's Most successful industry’. That success is long-standing. In every nation for which we have reliable long-term evidence the proportion of Gross National Product devoted to health care is much higher than was the cast a generation ago. The state has been central to that expansion. In all advanced industrial nations it regulates health care industries; in many it pays most of the cost of care; and in some it directly employs those who do the caring. In the 1980s, however, most countries tried to slow down the growth of health care spending, or even to cut it absolutely. The ‘health care state’ is as a consequence being reshaped across the advanced capitalist world: its power structures are changing; the conditions under which it funds and delivers services are being altered; and its relations with the ‘consumers’ of care are being transformed.



2018 ◽  
pp. 21-29
Author(s):  
M. Ya. Sekh

Medical oxygen has been currently considered as a medication according to the Ukrainian and worldwide data. The WHO has included it into the list of the main medical agents. Moreover, medical oxygen has a broad application spectrum and here it may be the only remedy that cannot be replaced by the analogous one. The most common symptoms of respiratory problems are oxygenation disorder and hypoxemia which require the application of medical oxygen. This factor determined the target group of our research, namely, the patients with community-acquired pneumonia of moderate and severe course. The aim of the research was to study the state and expense of oxygen provision for patients with community-acquired pneumonia who were admitted to the internal unit of one of the health care institutions in Lviv. Medical documentation was the object of the research. It included: reporting/control documentation and medical prescriptions of patients diagnosed with community-acquired pneumonia. The study involved the application of systemic analysis, as well as analytical and comparative, information and search, clinical and economic, bibliographic of research methods. The paper describes the importance of oxygen therapy for hypoxia treatment in certain pathological conditions, in particular community-acquired pneumonia. We performed an analysis of the state and expense of oxygen provision in the Lviv Regional Clinical Hospital as well as the patients with community-acquired pneumonia. The study was carried out in two periods (2006 and 2017). It has been established that the total expenses associated with oxygen were increased by 10 times in the hryvnia and by 2 times in dollar equivalents for 11 years. In addition, from the cost of all medicines purchased by the hospital during 2017, 8% was spent on medical oxygen. In the course of our study, the need for oxygen for a single therapeutic patient with non-hospital pneumonia is about 25 m3. The total cost of providing them with this category of patients has also grown almost 10 times in hryvnia and 2 times in dollar equivalents – from 41.56 UAH (8.23 $)/patient) to 477.72 UAH (17.63 $)/patient in 2006 and 2017, respectively. This certainly leads to a significant increase in the costly pharmacotherapy of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Вeside this, the analysis has revealed a list of problems associated with outdated material and technical equipment, weariness of equipment, danger of explosion, and continuously growing expense of medical oxygen which forces the search for new and safer patient provision methods. Medical oxygen becomes a financial burden in clinical practice particularly under conditions of restricted financing in the branch of health care. Herein, it remains the main and compulsory component of pathogenic therapy in community-acquired pneumonia. The abovementioned problematic aspects require the urgent solution that, in our opinion, can be reached with the application of rational pharmaceutical management.



Author(s):  
Leigh Hancher ◽  
Wolf Sauter

This chapter discusses EU law on public services. It begins by explaining the meaning of the term ‘public services’ and the related term used by the EU, ‘services of general economic interest’ (SGEIs). It then considers the rules on commercial monopolies set out in Article 37 TFEU and the rules on state aid in Articles 107 and 108 TFEU. This is followed by case studies on the following public services: utilities, social services, and health care.



2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 61-65
Author(s):  
Viktoriya Annenkova ◽  
Alexander Naryzhny ◽  
Lyubov' Petrova

The relevance and novelty of the work. In modern conditions, the increase in the level of threats to the enterprise is accompanied by an increasing role of economic security of the economic entity and management accounting in the system of economic security. Organization of managerial accounting system to provide public services to virtually any public institutions providing public services. The program allows you to calculate the costs and value of the State normative services (works) in view of the calculation of direct and expense costs, allowing reporting at the level of State and municipal institutions provides consolidating information in the desired volume at the level of ministries with the ability to provide various management reports. The purpose of the work. Providing primary information collection and processing municipal and regional institutions with a view to optimal planning of payroll staff, calculating the cost of State services (works), get detailed information about the costs in terms of expenditures throughout the State (municipal) institution, and any group of institutions. The materials and methods of research. Program management decision public service allows you to create accountability at the level of State and municipal institutions. Program configuration management decision "State service" has a two-tiered system, built on the client-server technology. The results of the work. "Public service" program was implemented and works in the city of Saratov, in the Ministry of social development of the region.



2019 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 905-915 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leigh Hale ◽  
Elizabeth Mayland ◽  
Matthew Jenkins ◽  
Yvette Buttery ◽  
Pauline Norris ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Objectives: People with dementia are critically dependent on their carers when accessing and utilizing health care. To inform health care development and delivery, we aimed to explore carers’ perceptions of their role in caring for a family member with dementia and to identify carers’ skills and attributes and factors impacting on care. Research Design and Methods: We used semistructured interviews to collect data from 25 carers supporting older adults with dementia. Data were thematically analyzed and the paradigm model was used to guide theory development. Results: “Constructing normalcy” was central to all carers did, impacted by stage of life and relationship status and driven by a holistic focus on their care-recipient’s quality of life. Goals guiding care were: keeping the peace; facilitating participation, happiness and independence; and ensuring safety. Enablers included: social contact; knowledge; and quality social services. Barriers included health and legal issues; symptoms of dementia; and reduced knowledge. These goals kept the peace and reduced stress for the cared-for person, but often at the cost of unrelenting responsibility and loss of carers’ original roles. Discussion and Implications: As carers are so critical to the access and uptake of health care of those with dementia, health professionals and services need to support carers in their quest to construct normalcy. Our findings provide guidance to assist in ensuring appropriate support and understanding of carers work in order to optimize dementia health care delivery.



2014 ◽  
Vol 43 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 24
Author(s):  
K S H De Silva ◽  
H Wijesundera ◽  
J A A M Dilhani ◽  
H D P Premarathne ◽  
N S Gunawardena


Heart ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 286-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Stewart ◽  
N Murphy ◽  
A Walker ◽  
A McGuire ◽  
J J V McMurray

Objective: To evaluate the cost of atrial fibrillation (AF) to health and social services in the UK in 1995 and, based on epidemiological trends, to project this estimate to 2000.Design, setting, and main outcome measures: Contemporary estimates of health care activity related to AF were applied to the whole population of the UK on an age and sex specific basis for the year 1995. The activities considered (and costs calculated) were hospital admissions, outpatient consultations, general practice consultations, and drug treatment (including the cost of monitoring anticoagulant treatment). By adjusting for the progressive aging of the British population and related increases in hospital admissions, the cost of AF was also projected to the year 2000.Results: There were 534 000 people with AF in the UK during 1995. The “direct” cost of health care for these patients was £244 million (~€350 million) or 0.62% of total National Health Service (NHS) expenditure. Hospitalisations and drug prescriptions accounted for 50% and 20% of this expenditure, respectively. Long term nursing home care after hospital admission cost an additional £46.4 million (~€66 million). The direct cost of AF rose to £459 million (~€655 million) in 2000, equivalent to 0.97% of total NHS expenditure based on 1995 figures. Nursing home costs rose to £111 million (~€160 million).Conclusions: AF is an extremely costly public health problem.



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