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Editorial
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Volume 348:2251-2252 May 29, 2003 Number 22
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The Right Care
Stephen Jencks, M.D.

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The yawning chasm between what we know and what we do for patients is no longer news; indeed, the repeated evidence is somewhat numbing. We are far less sure what to do next.

In this light, two articles in this issue of the Journal take on a special interest. In one, Petersen et al.1 examine the relation between the presence of angiography facilities in individual Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals and whether patients with class I indications for angiography undergo the procedure. In brief, they find that rates of appropriate care in VA hospitals with angiography facilities are similar . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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From the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Baltimore.


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