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Transcript
Health Care Systems
Health Careers
September 17, 2009
Objectives
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
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10.
Private Health Care Facilities
Government Agencies
Voluntary or Non-Profit Agencies
Health Insurance Plans
Organizational Structure
Cost Containment
Home Health Care
Geriatric Care
Telemedicine
Alternative and Complementary Care
Health Care Systems
 Health Care Systems today include the many
agencies, facilities, and personnel involved in the
delivery of health care.
 According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics


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
Health care is the largest and fastest growing industries in the
U.S.
Employs over 14 million people (2008)
200 different health careers
Health Care has become a 2 billion dollar a day industry
(2004)
Private Health Care Facilities
 Hospitals
 Vary in size and types of service provided
 Also classified as private or proprietary


Operating for profit
Can be religious, non profit, voluntary, or government

Depends on where the source of income comes from
Long Term Care Facilities
 Long Term Care Facilities: (Nursing Home,
Geriatric)



Provide assistance and care for elderly patients.
Also Provide care for individuals with disabilities or handicaps.
Extended Care or Skilled Care Facilities:

Designed to provide skilled nursing care and rehabilitative care to
prepare patients to return home.
 Geriatric Care: care for the elderly
Private Health Care Facilities
 Independent or Assisted Living:
 Allow individuals who can care for themselves to live on
their own by renting or purchasing an apartment in the
facility.
 If needed or wanted, services are provided:
Meals
 Housekeeping
 Laundry
 Transportation
 Social Events
 Basic Medical Care

Medical Offices
 Vary greatly
 Privately owned all the way to large complexes that operate as
corporations
 Doctors treat a wide range of illnesses
 Other specialize
Dental Offices
 Vary in size
 Dental services can include general dental care and
very specialized care

Examples??
Clinics
 Also called satellite clinics
 Varies in size
 Hospitals offer outpatient clinics
 Health Departments offer clinics
 Medical centers at colleges and universities offer
clinics.
Optical Centers
 Can be individually owned by an ophthalmologist or
optometrist or can be part of a wide variety of stores.
 Vision Examinations
 Prescribe glasses or contacts
 Also check for eye diseases
Emergency Care Facilities
 Fast traumatic care
 Ambulance, Helicopter
 Both private and governmental
 Frequently operated by fire departments
Laboratories
 Perform many tests for other facilities.
 May be in the hospital or clinic, but also could
operate as a separate health care service.
Home Health Care Agencies
 Designed to provide care in a patient’s home.
 Used by elderly and disabled
 Services include
 Nursing care
 Personal care
 Therapy
 Homemaking
 Health departments, hospitals, private agencies, and
non profit/volunteer groups can offer this care
 Trend is returning in this direction
Hospice
 Provide care for the terminally ill with life
expectancies of 6 months or less.
 Care can be provided in the home or at the hospice
facility.
 Psychological, social, spiritual, and financial
counseling is provided.
Mental Health Facilities
 Treat patients with mental disorders and diseases.
 These facilities include:
 Guidance and counseling centers
 Psychiatric clinics and hospitals
 Chemical abuse and treatment centers
Genetic Counseling Centers
 Independent facility or connected with another
facility.
 Genetic counselors work with couples or individuals
who are pregnant or considering a pregnancy.
 What do they do?


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Perform prenatal screening
Check for genetic abnormalities
Birth defects
Explain results and options of the results
Consult with couples before pregnancy to try and identify any
genetic diseases or disorders
Rehabilitation Facilities
 Located in hospitals, clinics, or privately owned
 Provide care for physical or mental disabilities to
obtain maximum self-care.
 Examples:





Physical Rehabilitation
Occupational Rehabilitation
Speech Rehabilitation
Hearing Rehabilitation
Recreational Rehabilitation
Health Maintenance Organization
 Provide total care directed toward preventive health
care.
 Often use the services of other health care
institutions (only HMO affiliated)
 Type of health insurance – pay membership fee
Industrial Health Care Centers
 Found in large companies or industries
 Provide health care for their employees
 Basic Exams
 Teaching accident prevention
School Health Services
 Found in schools
 Emergency Care for victims
 Also perform screening for health conditions
 Hearing
 Vision
 Speech
 Scoliosis
Government Agencies
 World Health Organization
 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
 National Institutes of Health
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
 Food and Drug Administration
 Agency for Health Care Policy and Research
 Occupational Safety and Health Administration
 State and Local Health Departments
World Health Organization (WHO)
 International Agency
 Sponsored by the United Nations
 Compiles statistics and information on disease
 Publishes the information
 Investigates and addresses serious health problems
throughout the world.
U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services
 National Agency
 Deals with health problems in the United States
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
 Researches on disease
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
 CDC
 Concerned with the causes of disease
 Promotes healthy living
 Controls disease in populations
 Informs the public on any disease and helps regulate
health issues
FDA: Food and Drug Administration
 Federal Agency responsible for regulating food and
drug products sold to public.
 Most likely that if it is publically sold the FDA has
approved it.

Excluding Supplements
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research
 Federal Agency established in 1990
 Research the quality of health care delivery and
identify standards of treatment that should be
provided at health care facilities.
OSHA: Occupational Safety and
Health Administration
 Establishes and enforces standards that protect
workers from job related illness and injury.
State and Local Health Departments
 Minnesota Department of Health
 Winona County Community Health Services
 Provide specific services needed by the state and
local community.
 Examples of services:





Immunizations
Inspections of environmental health issues
Communicable disease control
Collection of statistics
Clinics for health care and prevention
Voluntary and Nonprofit Agencies
 Organization typically studies disease it supports
 Provide special services to people with disease
 Provide funding for future research
 Supported by donations, fundraisers, grants, and
membership fees
 Examples:




American Heart Association
American Cancer Association
National Foundation of the March of Dimes
American Red Cross
Health Insurance Plans
 Offered by thousands of agencies
 Help reduce the cost of health care
 Example:
 Blue Cross Blue Shield
 Health Partners
Terminology for Insurance
 Deductibles: the amount that must be paid by the
patient before the insurance policy takes over.
 Co-payment: specific amount of money the patient
pays for a particular service
 Co-insurance: requires that specific percentages or
expenses are shared by patient and insurance
company.

80 % insurance and 20% patient
Other Insurance Options
 PPO: Preferred Provider Organization
 Insurance provided by company to their employees.
 Medicare:
 Federal government program that provides health care for
almost all individuals over the age of 65 or anybody that has
been collecting Social Security.
 Type A: Hospital and Long Term Care
 Type B: Additional coverage for doctor’s services

Only pay 80%
 Medicaid:
 Medical assistance program operated by individual states.
 Low – Income
 Children or disabled who qualify
Other Insurance Options
 Workers Compensation
 Treatment for workers injured on the job
 Pays for medical bills and wages lost
 Managed Care
 An approach that has developed in response to rising health
care costs.
 Principle behind it
Health care must have a purpose
 Do not go to the doctor for everything that happens

Organizational Structure
 Chain of command
 Who supervises who
 Should indicate areas of responsibility and lead to
the most efficient operation of the facility.
Cost Containment
 Diagnostic Related Groups
 Combination of Services
 Outpatient Services
 Mass or Bulk Purchasing
 Early Intervention / Preventive Services
 Energy Conservation
 Telemedicine
 Use of video, audio, and computer systems to provide medical
/ health care services
 Mainly used by professionals
Alternative and Complementary Methods
 Ayurvedic Practitioners: ancient philosophy
 Developed in India
 Prescribe diet, herbal treatment, exercise, yoga, massage,
minerals, and living practices
 Chinese Medicine:
 Holistic based
 Proper flow of energy promote health
 Everything is connected
Alternative and Complementary Methods
 Chiropractics Care
 Believe that the brain sends vital energy to all body parts
through nerves and spinal cord.
 Homeopaths:
 Body will heal itself
 Naturopaths
 Natural Therapies
Fasting
 Special Diets
 Lifestyle Changes

 Many more
Vocabulary
 Wellness:
 The state of being in optimum health.
 Balance all parts of health
 Prevention measures
 Holistic health
 Care that promotes physical, emotional, social, intellectual,
and spiritual well-being.
 Treating the whole body
 Uses methods of diagnosis and treatment in addition to
“regular” western medical practices.