THE MOST IMPORTANT BOOK IN HEALTH CARE TODAY
Obamacare and the changes it brings could save our primary care doctors from extinction. Or it could crush them.
Imagine health care without your Familiar Physician. Every time you’re sick, you’re a stranger, enduring long waits for medical treatment from someone who may never have seen you before.
This is what the future could look like … because there’s a tempest bearing down on primary care medicine.
It’s powered by frustrated doctors retiring early with not enough physicians in the pipeline to replace them; more than 30 million newly insured patients; an aging population; increasing regulations; and it's converging with a sea change in health care reform.
It’s the perfect storm that endangers primary care medicine and threatens to drive our trusted familiar physicians toward extinction.
Just as primary care is about to collapse, here comes IBM.
The patch of fair weather within the coming storm is a care delivery model called the medical home, now quietly embedded in the heart of health care reform.
This is the story of the dedicated people who helped build the medical home and implement it on a national level — the enduring vision of IBM’s Dr. Martin Sepúlveda and the powerful advocacy of his colleague IBM’s Dr. Paul Grundy.
And it’s told through the unique perspective of Dr. Peter Anderson, a pioneer in team care medicine and a champion of primary care whose efforts to create a better model of primary care delivery parallels and supports the development of the medical home.
Their efforts show us that passion and inspiration can remain at the heart of health care in the future. As we move toward that future learn what you can do to help assure that the Familiar Physician, the basis for a strong physician-patient relationship, survives the coming storm.
Give this book to your doctor. And hurry. You might just save his or her career.
Obamacare and the changes it brings could save our primary care doctors from extinction. Or it could crush them.
Imagine health care without your Familiar Physician. Every time you’re sick, you’re a stranger, enduring long waits for medical treatment from someone who may never have seen you before.
This is what the future could look like … because there’s a tempest bearing down on primary care medicine.
It’s powered by frustrated doctors retiring early with not enough physicians in the pipeline to replace them; more than 30 million newly insured patients; an aging population; increasing regulations; and it's converging with a sea change in health care reform.
It’s the perfect storm that endangers primary care medicine and threatens to drive our trusted familiar physicians toward extinction.
Just as primary care is about to collapse, here comes IBM.
The patch of fair weather within the coming storm is a care delivery model called the medical home, now quietly embedded in the heart of health care reform.
This is the story of the dedicated people who helped build the medical home and implement it on a national level — the enduring vision of IBM’s Dr. Martin Sepúlveda and the powerful advocacy of his colleague IBM’s Dr. Paul Grundy.
And it’s told through the unique perspective of Dr. Peter Anderson, a pioneer in team care medicine and a champion of primary care whose efforts to create a better model of primary care delivery parallels and supports the development of the medical home.
Their efforts show us that passion and inspiration can remain at the heart of health care in the future. As we move toward that future learn what you can do to help assure that the Familiar Physician, the basis for a strong physician-patient relationship, survives the coming storm.
Give this book to your doctor. And hurry. You might just save his or her career.
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We can see that whatever form health care takes in the future it will, at the very least, contain the passion and inspiration they’ve already put into it. There are moments in our life when we look back on things and suddenly realize when a watershed event happened.
Such it is for health care in America.
We are all facing the unknown. Few people really understand the new 2,000-page law related to health care reform, much less how it will affect us.
We didn’t see this at the time, but a powerful series of events occurred, creating a key turning point.
And that turning point for our health care is the story of how two men rallied a thousand health care organizations and stakeholders around a new model of health care.
The medical home.
Such it is for health care in America.
We are all facing the unknown. Few people really understand the new 2,000-page law related to health care reform, much less how it will affect us.
We didn’t see this at the time, but a powerful series of events occurred, creating a key turning point.
And that turning point for our health care is the story of how two men rallied a thousand health care organizations and stakeholders around a new model of health care.
The medical home.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781614487371
Publisert
2013-10-03
Utgiver
Morgan James Publishing llc; Morgan James Publishing llc
Vekt
181 gr
Høyde
226 mm
Bredde
149 mm
Dybde
17 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
242
Forfatter
Om bidragsyterne
Dr. Peter Anderson, a pioneer in team care medicine and a passionate champion for primary care, struggled for a decade to save his own medical practice while also creating strategies for the tempest descending upon primary care medicine.With co-authors Bud Ramey and Tom Emswiller, two long-standing, award winning health care communicators, Dr. Anderson describes the quickly approaching crisis that holds the potential to impact health care in America for decades.
It’s powered by burned-out and frustrated family doctors retiring early with not enough young primary care physicians to replace them; more than 30 million newly insured patients; an aging population; increasing regulations and decreasing reimbursement—and it’s converging with a sea change of healthcare reform in a world of uncertainty.
It’s the perfect storm that endangers primary care medicine and threatens to drive our trusted familiar physicians toward extinction.