Page values for "The Next ObamaCare Mirage"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
"_pageData" values
1 row is stored for this pageField | Field type | Value |
---|---|---|
_creationDate | Datetime | November 26, 2013 8:26:32 PM |
_modificationDate | Datetime | November 26, 2013 8:26:32 PM |
_creator | String | Yaron Koren |
_fullText | Searchtext | {{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. ... |
_categories | List of String, delimiter: | | Items |
_numRevisions | Integer | 1 |
_isRedirect | Boolean | No |
_pageNameOrRedirect | String | The Next ObamaCare Mirage |
_pageIDOrRedirect | Integer | 8,740 |
_lastEditor | String | Yaron Koren |
_pageID | Integer | 8,740 |
_pageName | Page | The Next ObamaCare Mirage |
_pageTitle | String | The Next ObamaCare Mirage |
_pageNamespace | Integer | 0 |
"Opinions" values
1 row is stored for this pageField | Field type | Allowed values | Value |
---|---|---|---|
Topic | Page | Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act | |
Position_fragment | String | Act should not have been passed | |
Position | Page | Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act / Act should not have been passed | |
Position_link | Wikitext | ||
Stance | String | for · mixed · against | for |
"Items" values
1 row is stored for this pageField | Field type | Value |
---|---|---|
Author | List of Page, delimiter: , | Thomas Miller • Abby McCloskey |
Source | Page | The Wall Street Journal |
Date | Date | November 26, 2013 |
URL | URL | http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303653004579213841747969928 |
Quote | Text | The 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. |
Summary | Wikitext | The Next ObamaCare Mirage by Thomas Miller, Abby McCloskey (The Wall Street Journal, November 26, 2013) (view) |