Title: Making Health Care Decisions
1Making Health Care Decisions
B. Lee Green Texas AM University
2Objectives
- Describe the role of information in making
decisions about health care - Identify high-quality sources of health
information, including reputable hotlines and
internet sites - Describe five advertising techniques used to
promote health products and services - Recognize quackery and health fraud and cite
examples of each - Learn how to employ several strategies when
selecting a physician
3Objectives
- Identify a range of alternative and complementary
health care providers - Recognize the difference between primary,
secondary, and tertiary care and acknowledge your
own and your physicians responsibilities in
regard to each form of health care - Understand the advantages and disadvantages of
traditional indemnity plans, HMO and preferred
provider organizations - Differentiate between prescription and over the
counter drugs - Understand the steps to take before taking a
natural product as medicine
4Buying Health Care How Do Consumers Make
Decisions?
- Decision Making and Accurate Health Information
- Patient Package Insert an information sheet,
required by the FDA, that warns the consumer of
possible contraindications for use of a drug or
medical product. - Contraindications are circumstances that make use
of a pharmaceutical or medical product
inadvisable.
5Making Health Care Decisions
Table 16.1
6Making Health Care Decisions
Table 16.2
7Buying Health Care How Do Consumers Make
Decisions?
- Advertising Health Care
- Approaches to advertising
- Scientific Studies
- Bandwagon Approach
- Testimonials
- Emotional Appeals
- Comparison with other Products
- Price Appeal
8Buying Health Care How Do Consumers Make
Decisions?
- Health Fraud
- Quackery is a health claim made for a product or
service that cannot be justified by
scientifically derived evidence. - Placebo a look-alike pill with no therapeutic
value.
9How to Choose Health Care Providers
- The Right Physician for You
Table 16.3.1
10How to Choose Health Care Providers (cont'd.)
Table 16.3.2
11How to Choose Health Care Providers
- Complementary and Alternative Health Providers
- Naturopaths are the general practitioners of
alternative medicine - Selecting a Health Care Provider
- Referral from current physician
- Referral from student health center
- Ask a nurse if they would recommend a physician.
- Referral from a friend
12How to Choose Health Care Providers
- When to Go to the Hospital
- Primary Care routine medical care provided by a
physician in the office or at an emergency room
in a hospital or clinic. - Outpatient Care care provided in a physicians
office, emergency room, or ambulatory clinic that
does not involve hospitalization or overnight
stays. - Secondary Care care involving surgery and
nonroutine medical treatment, usually delivered
in a hospital. - Inpatient Care health care provided in a
hospital.
13How to Choose Health Care Providers
- When You Go to the Hospital
- Tertiary Care special medical procedures, such
as open-heart surgery and transplants, performed
at medical school hospitals or at large regional
hospitals. - Preadmission Certification approval from a
health plan of the need for inpatient hospital
care prior to the actual admission.
14How to Choose Health Care Providers
- When You Go to the Hospital
Figure 16.1
15Paying For Health Care
- Uninsured having no health insurance.
- Underinsured having limited health insurance
that compromises ones access to health care
services and places one at significant financial
risk. - Medicare is coverage for people over age 65.
- Medicaid is coverage for people of low income or
who are disabled.
16Paying For Health Care
- Indemnity (Fee-for-Service) Plans
- Indemnity (Fee-for-Service) Plan insurance
coverage in which a person pays for most of his
or her medical bills and then files a claim to be
reimbursed.
17Paying For Health Care
- Managed Care Plans
- Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) prepaid
plans that offer a defined set of benefits
according to a predetermined monthly premium. - Point-of-Service Plans (POS) HMOs having an
indemnity-type option that lets members get care
from physicians outside the plans network. - Preferred Provider Organizations (PPO) a hybrid
form of insurance that merges features of
traditional fee-for-service insurance and prepaid
plans.
18Paying For Health Care
- Asking Questions about a Health Plan
- What type of coverage do you need?
- How do you feel about your choice of physicians
or hospitals? - What is the plans policy on special areas of
coverage? - When does coverage take effect?
- Overall, does this plan meet your needs?
19Drugs and Natural Products as Medicine
- Prescription Drugs are drugs ordered specifically
for a person by his or her physician and filled
by a registered pharmacist. - Over-the-Counter (OTC) Drugs are drugs purchased
without a prescription. - Generic Drugs have the same active chemical
ingredients as brand name drugs.
20Drugs and Natural Products as Medicine
- The Correct Way to Take Medications
- Five questions to ask when given a new
medication - What is the name of the drug and what is it
supposed to do? - How and when do I take it, and when do I stop
taking it? - What food, drinks, other drugs, or activities
should I avoid? - What are the side effects, and what should I do
if they occur? - Is there any written information available about
the drug?
21Drugs and Natural Products as Medicine
- The Correct Way to Take Medications
Figure 16.2
22Concluding thoughts
- You are responsible for your health
- Common sense
- Health skills
- Healthy behaviors