Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#46
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When people with an insurance card can't get a primary doctor, or they cannot wait a week or two with the problem they have....or they do not WANT to wait a week to see the dr. they have....they go to the ER. And that is fact. And it's why the ER's are so full and will continue to be so, regardless of ACA coverage. "A recent Senate report said the country is short about 16,000 primary care doctors – and that shortage is only expected to grow. That's especially troubling for people in the public health and medical fields, since a soon-to-be-enacted provision of the Affordable Care Act will extend Medicaid to millions of Americans – begging the question of who, exactly, will treat them. A recent study in the Annals of Family Medicine estimated there are nearly 209,000 primary care providers in the U.S. That's a big number, but with population growth, aging and the changes brought on by the Affordable Care Act, experts say today's shortage of 16,000 primary care physicians will grow to about 52,000 by 2050. That's also a big number – but it's a bigger problem. Why the shortage of primary care doctors? Dr. Felix Aguilar, the president and CEO of UMMA Community Clinic in South Los Angeles, says the primary care physician is a "jack of all trades but master of none." "The role of primary care is to provide comprehensive care that is affordable, prevention-based and that looks at all the faces of a human life – from babies to grandmas," he said. Dr. Aguilar is a practitioner of family medicine – one form of primary care. He's worked in underserved South L.A. for about 10 years, and loves what he does. But Aguilar says there are a few things about the job that keep a lot of young medical students away. For one, they have a heavy patient load. "We have less support," he said. "We're not hospital-based and, of course, we get less money, so those are the drawbacks." Primary care doctors typically earn less and and get less support than doctors who choose to go into specialized fields: cardiology, neurology, podiatry, oncology and other specialized fields. Specialists also tend to work with fewer patients. Add to that an average medical school debt of more than $160,000, and it's easy not so hard to see why a more lucrative field – that is, one that isn't primary care – would be so attractive to medical students....." Primary care doctor shortage creates critical void, leaving field's future uncertain | OnCentral | 89.3 KPCC Last edited by ilovetv; 04-13-2013 at 04:55 PM. |
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#47
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#48
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Mack 184, I have no doubt that the ER employees are dedicated and work hard. Last night I did not see anyone whinning and asking for sandwiches and coffee. What I saw was a waiting room with at least 20 people, some who were frail and suffering. I saw patients helping one another to make the sitituation more tolerable. I understand that patients are treated based on order of severity but there just was NOT enough available help. i certainly never suggested that the help was inept. I also understand that the problem is financial and as our population grows and ages, it will only get worse. I know that this is a problem in all cities but just because it's that way everywhere, that doesn't make it ok. So how do we change this? I actually think most people DO know how emergency rooms work. They just feel the system is failing those in need....off my soap box know.
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#49
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TVRH has very little uncompensated care compared to the vast majority of US hospitals. They are not suffering from a "deluge of the uninsured".
One thing that gets almost no notice here on TOTV or within TV itself is the excellent Urgent Care facility on the East Campus. Compared to the TVRH-ER the Urgent Care handles very few patients often with staff waiting around with no one to help. Far too many people call the Big Red Bus and that bus only stops at one location...TVRH-ER. Many, many of the people who find themselves waiting at TVRH could be easily handled at the Urgent Care but they choose not to. Then the gripe & carp about the terrible service and waiting time. Most of the people who wind up waiting & waiting & wating at the ER are triaged between a 3-5 which means they are non-critical (no matter what the patient thinks they are) and could be easily treated MUCH more quickly at the TVRH-Urgent Care on the East Campus. Give it a try.
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"I did not get into rock-n-roll just to pick up chicks. However..I was able to adapt". Ted Nugent |
#50
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#51
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#52
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The answer as I said in my original post is...MONEY. With Medicare reimbursements falling faster than pants at an orgy those hospitals that rely heavily on Medicare for revenue are in a nasty bind. TVRH receives more per-capita Medicare dollars than any US hospital. Unfortunately they do not have access to the kinds of dollars that help other hosptials balance the books. There are plenty of people of means within TV who could consider leaving part of their estate to the hospital. The hospital is a charitable organization, and while TVRH DOES get a lot of volunteer help, they could almost use donations far more than they need the bodies, although in all honesty..if TVRH didn't have the large number of volunteers they'd be in worse shape than they are because they can barely afford to pay the staff they currently have. It'll get worse. A lot of this is NOT of TVRH's making. Decisions made the Federal & State level have handcuffed at lot of their choices. But again.. the answer is...MONEY.
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"I did not get into rock-n-roll just to pick up chicks. However..I was able to adapt". Ted Nugent |
#53
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If you have lots of people coming into the ER during the day, the more the system clogs up and slows down. Then..if you need something at night when the Urgent Cares are closed..you enter a system that is running like a pig on stilts. Maybe..just maybe things will slow down about 2am and they'll start to catch up. Many nights that doesn't happen..So the cycle continues right into the next day. Pretty much, if you're not dieing...(Use the hospital's scale here..not yours) the local Urgent Care facilities can take care of you. You will get in & out MUCH faster than if you use the ER.
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"I did not get into rock-n-roll just to pick up chicks. However..I was able to adapt". Ted Nugent |
#54
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This most likely explains a lot and could also contribute to the explanation of why the ER was so non-busy over the Easter Weekend. Seems to be the same scenario on any other holiday weekend as well. Guess those "emergencies" can wait until after the festivities.
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Lubbock, TX Bamberg, Germany Lawton, OK Amarillo, TX The Villages, FL To quote my dad: "I never did see a board that didn't have two sides." |
#55
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"I did not get into rock-n-roll just to pick up chicks. However..I was able to adapt". Ted Nugent |
#56
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Mack184, you are correct. The night I was there I saw about 20 people waiting. Only 2 or 3 looked like they were not from "around here" (whatever that means). I don't think Wildwood or Oxford have a hospital so of course there will be some young people there. :-). Anyway, the problem that I saw was far too many patients than could be accommodated.
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#57
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This is very scary - for those of us who just moved to TV this may be a awake up call - have a plan in place just in case a sudden illness occurs - thanks for the info
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#58
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In Virginia I worked for a non-profit hospital that I loved- 5 miles down the road they built a stand-alone ER. This helped with the long waiting, etc. This facility would do EVERYTHING a hospital ER would do-with the exception of placing you in a bed to keep you. Tons of people liked the idea--maybe that would be a solution. However, it seems with the growth of our area 100,000 and increased ages- that there will be another hospital built. I am all for it!!! In Virginia I worked for a non-profit hospital that I loved- 5 miles down the road they built a stand-alone ER. This helped with the long waiting, etc. This facility would do EVERYTHING a hospital ER would do-with the exception of placing you in a bed to keep you. Tons of people liked the idea--maybe that would be a solution. However, it seems with the growth of our area 100,000 and increased ages- that there will be another hospital built. I am all for it!!! In Virginia I worked for a non-profit hospital that I loved- 5 miles down the road they built a stand-alone ER. This helped with the long waiting, etc. This facility would do EVERYTHING a hospital ER would do-with the exception of placing you in a bed to keep you. Tons of people liked the idea--maybe that would be a solution. However, it seems with the growth of our area 100,000 and increased ages- that there will be another hospital built. I am all for it!!!
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#59
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If you are not on Medicare or Medicaid, chances are you will get treated sooner. I posted this a few weeks ago
You are certainly correct that they NEED the beds, but going about releasing the beds is another matter. I was at urgent care recently. The Dr. wanted me to get a particular test that had to be done in the hospital. He told me to walk across the street to the hospital and he would send the orders over for the test. I walked over, they admitted me into a bed in the emergency room....walking past MANY sick and injured folks on gurneys in the hall way. I explained that I do NOT need a bed...only a test. they admitted me anyway. After blood work and a couple hours wait, they took me for the test....then back to the room that I didn't need. They kept me waiting in the room for another 4 hours while I waited for results, then a Dr to release me...all the while taking up a bed (really the room, I never got in the bed). On my way out I still saw many folks in the hall that needed a room. Two in particular had very bloody heads. Didnt have any idea why this incident happened this way....I was not sick, nor in an emergency situation...Is it possible that they saw that I had private insurance and not Medicare??? I hope thats not the case, but I did feel ridiculous taking the room away from those that needed it. |
#60
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Something about all these stories is absolutely so totally sickening,(no pun intended)!
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