National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Analysis of the U.S. Health Care System
Kožušková, Kateřina ; Loužek, Marek (advisor) ; Durdisová, Jaroslava (referee)
The thesis is dealing with financial aspects of the U.S. health care system. The main reasons are excessively high costs and less beneficial outputs of the system compared to other developed countries. The topic is more than up to date especially with regard to the latest changes in American health care and the neverending discussion about the necessity of further reforms aiming especially at fiscal sustainability of the system.The introduction is devoted to a brief description of basic models of health care system. It also introduces the approach of the United States to health care and provides an overview of the structure and participants of American health care. Moreover, the thesis provides details about the latest reform of the system. The main objective of the thesis is analysis of main factors that contributes to high growth of health care costs. Technological development, consolidation of markets and ineffective setting of health care reimbursement are identified as some of the main contributors to high cost in the U.S. health care system.
What are the costs and benefits of daylight saving time?
Kožušková, Kateřina ; Bartoň, Petr (advisor) ; Schwarz, Jiří (referee)
Daylight saving time (DST) was implemented with purpose to maximize use of daylight and thereby reduce electricity consumption used for lighting. This policy would primarily affect energetics, however its influence was shown in many other areas. The thesis contains general assumptions of daylight saving time impact on electricity consumption and the main goal of the thesis is to identify with the natural experiment whether the extension of daylight saving time till the end of October occuring in Czech republic in 1996, led to savings of electricity consumption. Observed period is September and October between years 1993 and 1998. First, the difference in consumption between days with DST and without DST is investigated. On days with DST the consumption was lower than on days without DST. The two other regression analysis are devoted to the effect of the introduction of DST in October. First, the analysis included both observed months, the effect of extending daylight saving time however was not demonstrated. Further, October as itself is analyzed. October consumption was reduced by approximately 2,4 % in three years after the introducion of DST, compared with three previous years, when DST was not implement in this month.

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.