Category: C
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Cost of insurance
The amount which a policyholder pays to the insurer minus what he gets back from it. This should be distinguished from the rate for a given unit of insurance ($10 for a $1000 life insurance policy). Such costs, which may be difficult to obtain and are rarely compared, are roughly approximated by the loading or…
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Cost center
Accounting device whereby all related costs attributable to some “center” within an institution, such as an activity, department, or Program (e.g., a hospital burn center), are segregated for accounting or reimbursement purposes. Contrasts with segregating costs of different types, such as nursing, drugs or laundry, regardless of which ”center” incurred them. An area of activity…
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Cosmetic surgery
Any operation directed at improving appearance, except when required for the prompt repair of accidental injury or for the improvement of the functioning of a malformed body member. The term would not apply to surgery in connection with treatment of severe burns or repair of the face following a serious automobile accident, or to surgery…
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Copayment
A type of cost sharing whereby insured or covered persons pay a specified flat amount per unit of service or unit of time (eg. $2 per visit, 810 per inpatient hospital day), their insurer paying the rest of the cost. The copayment is incurred at the time the service is used. The amount paid does…
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Coordination of benefits
Provisions and procedures used by insurers to avoid duplicate payment for losses insured under more than one Insurance policy. For example, some people have a duplication of benefits for their medical costs arising from an automobile accident, in their automobile and health insurance policies. A coordination of benefits or anti-duplication clause in one or the…
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Coordinating council on medical education
A supervisory body established in 1972 to coordinate policy matters and accreditation at all levels of medical education. Among its organizational members are the AMA, the American Board of Medical Specialties, the AAMC, the AHA, and the Council of Medical Specialty Societies. It also has public and Federal members.
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Coordinated transfer application system
A system begun in 1970 by the American Association of Medical Colleges in which the AAMC evaluates U.S. citizens receiving undergraduate medical education outside the United States and sponsors those it deems qualified for part one of the national board examinations. Students who take and pass the boards with this sponsorship may then apply to…
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Cooperative health statistics system
A program of the National Center for Health Statistics in which Federal, State, and local governments cooperate in collecting health statistics, so that any particular item of data is collected by that level which is best equipped to collect and distribute it to all levels. When in full operation, CHSS will collect data in the…
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Controllability
In the Federal budget, the ability of the Congress or the President under existing law to control outlays during a given fiscal year. Uncontrollable and relatively uncontrollable describe outlays, and the programs (such as Medicare) in which they occur, that cannot be increased or decreased without changes in existing substantive law. Such spending is usually…
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Contributory insurance
Group insurance in which all or part of the premium is paid by the employee, the remainder, if any, being paid by the employer or union. In this context, noncontributory insurance is insurance in which the employer pays all the premium. S0 called because the risk, or employee, contributes to the cost of the insurance…