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Health
Affairs Online SUBSCRIBER HELP & SERVICES:
Frequently
Asked Questions
about Institutional Subscriptions
- My library subscribes to the print edition of Health Affairs,
but I can't get access to Health Affairs Online at my institution.
Why?
Your institution may not have activated its access to Health
Affairs Online. Notify your administrator or IT department that
you would like access to Health Affairs Online and refer him
or her to the Administrator's page for Libraries and Institutions
from the Health Affairs
home page.
- My institution has a print subscription to Health Affairs
and access to Health Affairs Online, but I'm not able to see
the full text of articles. I'm prompted for a user name and password.
Why is this happening?
When this happens, the unique IP (internet protocol) address of
your machine is not being recognized by our computer. Your institution
probably has not included your IP address when the administrator activated
their subscription. You may notify your administrator that you would
like access to Health Affairs Online and refer him or her to
online information.
- Who from my institution can access Health Affairs Online?
Authorized users (faculty, registered students, staff, and on-site
visitors) may access Health Affairs Online from registered
IP addresses located at your institution.
Check with your institution's Account Administrator.
- What is an Institution?
An Institution includes all parts of a single organization in a single geographical location. For multi-campus academic institutions, each organization listed in the Directory of Higher Education [http://www.educause.edu/dheo/], or its equivalent, is considered a separate institution. Academic law and academic medical libraries may be part of a University only if they report to the same CAO or CEO.
- How does institutional access work?
When someone attempts to use Health Affairs Online, our server
checks to see whether the requesting computer is within the list of
Internet IP address provided by a subscribing institution. If it is,
the reader will be able to use all those services enabled for institutional
readers. For users on-site at a registered institution, there are
no user names or passwords to remember.
If readers want to access Health Affairs Online from computers
that are not registered, they can do so only by using their individual
subscriptions.
- How can I tell if my institution has subscribed to Health
Affairs Online?
Ask your librarian or institutional-subscription administrator for
information.
If your institution does not have a print subscription to Health
Affairs or has chosen not to activate institutional online access,
you can choose to access by an individual
subscription. Individual subscribers can take advantage of the
content features listed above.
- Can my institution subscribe only to the electronic version?
Yes, institutional subscribers may purchase online-only subscriptions.
- Will we still be able to get the print version? And for how
long?
Yes, institutions and individuals will be able to receive the paper
version for the foreseeable future.
- If our Health Affairs Online subscription expires and
at some later date we reinstate our subscription, will we have access
to all years of the electronic version?
Yes, institutions and individuals will have access to the full electronic
archive of Health
Affairs when they subscribe.
- How can I access Health Affairs Online if I am not
a subscriber?
You may purchase Health Affairs as an individual subscriber,
or you may purchase single articles. Without a subscription you may
have access to the Table of Contents, abstracts, full text searching
(but not full text viewing) at no cost and without having to register.
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