The use of telehealth services may attract patients to large referral centers by allowing smaller rural facilities to ________.
divert patients to larger facilities
attract better qualified physicians
consult with larger hospitals to provide care
join the networks of larger health care facilities
Answer: Consult with larger hospitals to provide care.
The main purpose of the telehealth is to provide health care in regards to promotive, preventive, and rehabilitative to all the areas of the patients including the following:
Counsel with partners
Lead interviews
Survey and screen customers
View demonstrative pictures
Survey slides and research facility reports
Broaden rare human services assets
Diminishing the quantity of medical clinic visits for patients with ceaseless conditions
Diminishing human services costs
Handle disengagement and forlornness
Give wellbeing training
Improve case the executives administrations
Improve the value of access to administrations
Improve the nature of customer care
Improve the general nature of the customer's record
The use of telehealth services may attract patients to large referral centers by allowing smaller rural...
Health care providers may have financial concerns related to the wide-spread use of telehealth services. This concern is related to the fact that ________.Group of answer choices fewer patients will want to use the services of providers who depend on telehealth training costs for staff will be prohibitive to some small practices many insurers do not cover services unless...
You are the CEO of a local hospital, which is located within a suburban location in a large metropolitan area. Though it neighbors million-dollar homes, the hospital’s mission includes providing care to underserved and indigent populations in the local area. In fact, one of the signature programs in this hospital is a prenatal care program provided for Medicaid beneficiaries. This hospitals goal is to increase the number of Medicaid beneficiaries that participate in prenatal care. It knows that only 40%...
Ethically, health-care providers should refuse all patients that do not have the ability to pay. refuse patients when the practice is already oversubscribed. only refuse patients when the provider has announced his or her retirement. refer all low-income patients to a charitable organization instead of providing any health care to these patients. It is never acceptable to withhold information from patients for fear they will refuse treatment. True False Knowledge that, if revealed, would harm not only the client but...
Title: Partners Health Care Systems (PHS): Transforming Health Care Services Delivery through Information Management According to government sources, U.S. expenditures on health care in 2009 reached nearly $2.4 trillion dollars ($2.7 trillion by the end of 2010).[1] Despite this vaunting national level of expenditure on medical treatment, death rates due to preventable errors in the delivery of health services rose to approximately 98,000 deaths in 2009.[2] To address the dual challenges of cost control and quality improvement, some have argued...
The activity An EHR was implemented at the General Hospital one year ago, before you were hired. The implementation process did not go smoothly and now there are strong EHR advocates and strong EHR-dissenters on the team. The CEO wants to move forward with an implementation of the bar-coded medication administration feature of the EHR, but the director of nursing does not. You have been asked to manage the implementation and see that it is successful. You will first need...
Once upon a time American physicians had it all. Overcoming modest beginnings, internal divisions, and myriad rivals, during the 20th century doctors in the United States achieved “professional sovereignty” (Starr 1982). They secured extraordinary levels of clinical and financial autonomy, as well as social prestige and public deference, and through the American Medical Association (AMA) exerted substantial political influence over health policy making. Organized medicine had a crucial role in shaping the major institutions of American health care, including private...
please Identify the key points and main thesis of the article 2. Describe the skills you will need to develop to manage the hospital of the future. use critical analysis doing these questions Suggestion for writing assignmemnt make believe the reader has never read the article -what are the key points you would want the reader to know in order to understand the hospital of the future. In addition, managers, executives do not have time to read--so again what key...
Which of the following is an advantage of technology in nursing practice? a. inclination of nurses to focus on the equipment rather than the patient b. increased ability to monitor patients remotely c. increased confidentiality of patient information d. reliability of internet resources 2. When using computers in direct patient care, it is important to remember to: a. assess the patient and provide care based on the individual's needs b. look up the clinical practice guidelines for each illness use...
13. Bozeman Health's Competitive Dilemma By Eric Connell proximity Bozeman Health is a not-for-profit health system that operates in southwest Montana. The main hospital in Bozeman has 86 beds, a Level 3 trauma center designation, and a medical staff of over 200. It has patient revenue of approxi- mately $350 million. Bozeman is home to Montana State University (approxi- mately 15,000 students) and is a haven for outdoor recreation because of its to mountains, rivers, and Yellowstone National Park. The...
what discuss can you make about medicalization and chronic disease and illness? Adult Lealth Nursing Ethics mie B. Butts OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, the reader should be able to do the following: 1. Explore the concept of medicalization as it relates to the societal shift away from physician predominance of the 1970s. 2. Differentiate among the following terms: compliance, noncompliance, adherence, nonadherence, and concordance. 3. Examine cultural views with regard to self-determination, decision making, and American healthcare professionals' values...