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Trust in government and healthcare workers decreases, influencing attitudes on vaccines
Press Releases
Communications Team
Trusting health advice from governments and health workers and feeling positively about vaccines are strongly associated with trust in institutions, according to a peer-reviewed study from UCLA researchers published in the August edition of the journal Health Affairs
January 11, 2022
Trust in government and healthcare workers decreases, influencing attitudes on vaccines
Press Releases
Communications Team
Trusting health advice from governments and health workers and feeling positively about vaccines are strongly associated with trust in institutions, according to a peer-reviewed study from UCLA researchers published in the August edition of the journal Health Affairs
January 11, 2022
Public money accounts for more than two-thirds of health care spending in California
Press Releases
Communications Team
​Contrary to the notion that the country’s health care is primarily a privately funded system, 71 percent of health care expenditures in California are paid for with public funds, according to a new analysis by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.
August 31, 2016
Public money accounts for more than two-thirds of health care spending in California
Press Releases
Communications Team
​Contrary to the notion that the country’s health care is primarily a privately funded system, 71 percent of health care expenditures in California are paid for with public funds, according to a new analysis by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.
August 31, 2016
Not enough doctors for California's sick kids
Press Releases
Communications Team
​California faces a shortage of medical specialists for the state's estimated 1 million children with serious medical conditions. According to a new Center policy note and related April 25 webinar, although pediatric subspecialists who care for the sickest children require additional training, they are generally paid less than physicians who care for adults. 
April 22, 2013
Not enough doctors for California's sick kids
Press Releases
Communications Team
​California faces a shortage of medical specialists for the state's estimated 1 million children with serious medical conditions. According to a new Center policy note and related April 25 webinar, although pediatric subspecialists who care for the sickest children require additional training, they are generally paid less than physicians who care for adults. 
April 22, 2013