Page values for "The Next ObamaCare Mirage"

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"_pageData" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
_creationDateDatetimeNovember 26, 2013 8:26:32 PM
_modificationDateDatetimeNovember 26, 2013 8:26:32 PM
_creatorStringYaron Koren
_fullTextSearchtext{{Item |author=Thomas Miller, Abby McCloskey |source=The Wall Street Journal |date=November 26, 2013 |url=http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303653004579213841747969928 |quote=The only apparent bright spot is that the average annual rate of health-care spending increases has slowed. ...
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_pageNameOrRedirectStringThe Next ObamaCare Mirage
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_lastEditorStringYaron Koren
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_pageNamePageThe Next ObamaCare Mirage
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The Next ObamaCare Mirage

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"Opinions" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeAllowed valuesValue
TopicPagePatient Protection and Affordable Care Act
Position_fragmentStringAct should not have been passed
PositionPagePatient Protection and Affordable Care Act / Act should not have been passed
Position_linkWikitext

Act should not have been passed

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"Items" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
AuthorList of Page, delimiter: ,Thomas Miller Abby McCloskey
SourcePageThe Wall Street Journal
DateDateNovember 26, 2013
URLURLhttp://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303653004579213841747969928
QuoteTextThe only apparent bright spot is that the average annual rate of health-care spending increases has slowed. Over the past three years, growth in health-care spending averaged 3.9% year-over-year, considerably slower than the historical average. However, annual health-spending growth rates began to decline a decade ago. In 2002, health-care spending grew by nearly 10% in a single year. The growth rate dropped to 7.1% in 2004, 6.2% in 2007, and bottomed out at 3.9% in 2009—the worst year of the Great Recession, where it has stayed ever since. ObamaCare was enacted in 2010.
SummaryWikitext

The Next ObamaCare Mirage by Thomas Miller, Abby McCloskey (The Wall Street Journal, November 26, 2013) (view)