Download Delivering Healthcare

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
The patient is not hospitalized.
 Typically involves care rendered at an
outpatient facility.


Provider offices may be single specialty
or multi-specialty.
A specialty is a branch of medicine that
focuses on a particular area of expertise.
 Examples?
 These facilities can be medical or
diagnostic.
 Examples?

Usually revolves around primary care
 What is primary care?

› What types of specialties?
› What types of providers?
› What types of facilities?
What is meant by Point of Entry?
 Primary suggests chief or main – central
aspect of healthcare.

From a patient family perspective
 Accessible
 Comprehensive
 Coordinated
 Continuous
Also includes
 Community
 Integrated delivery systems
 Ecosystem
Comprehensive – address any
healthcare issue throughout the patient’s
life.
 Coordinated – health services and
information meet the needs of the
patient.
 Continuity – long-term clinical
relationship with the patient.

Geography
 Culture
 Language
 Financial issues
 Administrative hurdles

A clinician is an individual who has a
recognized scientific knowledge base
and has the authority to direct the
delivery of health services to patients.
 There is an expectation that the
clinician/patient relationship will
continue and aspects of mutual trust,
responsibility, and respect will develop.


Primary care clinic – gateway to other
healthcare services.
› Family practice
› General internal medicine
› Pediatrics
› Obstetrics/gynecology

Examples of specialties:
› Dermatology – study of the skin
› Pathology – study of the nature of disease
› Radiology – use of imaging technology to
›
›
›
›
diagnose
Nuclear medicine – use of radioactive
substances to diagnose and treat
Psychiatry – study of mental illness
Emergency medicine – care for patients
needing emergency care
Preventative medicine – methods of preventing
illness
Cardiology
 Immunology
 Gastroenterology
 Orthopedics
 Neurology

These services can be performed in both
outpatient and inpatient facilities.
Increasing number of aging patients.
 Less than ideal preventative care
coverage.
 Increasing levels of documentation.
 Complex billing.
 Medical students don’t consider primary
care ‘attractive’. (The number of US
graduates entering a family practice
residency dropped by 50% between
1997 and 2005.)

Huge debt upon completing medical
school.
 Specialists are better compensated.


Challenges of treating older, chronically
ill patients with complex medical issues.
Grants for training and educational
innovation
 Shift in training with emphasis on primary
care
 Increase recruitment of physicians for
primary care (offering incentives)


Retail clinics – treat common and minor
illnesses. Staffed by nurse practitioners.
› Example Market of Choice – S. Willamette
Urgent care centers – walk-in clinics – more
acute care. Staffed by licensed
practitioners; typically have lab or x-ray
facilities.
 Emergency room – life threatening
emergencies. Overcrowding is a huge issue
fueled by primary care provider shortage.


Patient-centered homes
› Triage system – nurses can direct patient to
appropriate level of care
› Availability of afterhours care in primary care
clinics, convenience care centers, or urgent
care centers.
› Increasing enrollment in safety net programs.
› Simplification of health information provided
to the patient.

Laboratories
›
›
›
›
›
›
›
›
›
Anatomical pathology
Surgical pathology
Chemical pathology
Study of blood
Blood banking
Cytogenetics
Clinical microbiology
Forensic pathology
Molecular pathology

Diagnostic imaging
› X-rays (CT, MRI, PET, ultrasound,
mammography, bone density, and nuclear
medicine)
› Interventional radiology (angiography)
› Teleradiography – review digital images
remotely.
Home health care – domiciliary care or
home care.
 Hospice – terminally ill – life expectancy
not to exceed 6 months
 Physical therapy
 Occupational therapy

Ancillary care is usually supervised by a
physician.
Provider may be a physician or mid-level
(such as nurse practitioner or physician’s
assistant).
 Point of contact – Front office staff

› Receptionist
› Greeter
› Triage staff
› Scheduler
Medical office assistant (MOA)
Provider – coordinates the clinical care and
addresses clinical issues.
 Other members of a clinical team


›
›
›
›
›
›
›
Care management coordinator
Pharmacist
Dietician
Social worker
Counselor
Back office medical assistants
Coders & billers

It takes a village …