Title: HCA 701: Survey of the U.S. Healthcare System
1HCA 701 Survey of the U.S. Healthcare System
- Physicians and Ambulatory Care
2RESOURCES NEEDED TO MAINTAIN A HEALTH CARE
DELIVERY SYSTEM
Financing
Health Care Delivery System
Technology Supplies
Healthcare Professionals
Facilities
Source Williams and Torrens, Introduction to
Health Services, 2002
3Healthcare Professionals
- Healthcare is a major employer
- It has a rapidly growing labor sector
- Professionals
- Non-professionals and technicians
- Non-institutional workers
- Rapid growth due to
- Technology growth and specialization
- Health insurance coverage
- Aging population
- Emergence of hospitals
4Types of Healthcare Worker Certification
- Licensure state or legal designation
- Certification and registration
- Independent and dependent professions
- Independents practice without physician
supervision (e.g., doctors, dentists) - Dependents need physician supervision (most
nurses, CNAs)
5Ambulatory Care
- Personal health care given to the patient in an
non-hospital or institutional setting - Types of settings
- Physician owned private practice
- Managed care clinic settings
- Community health care settings
- Urgent care facilities
- Shift to ambulatory care due to several factors
- Medicare PPS
- Managed care
- Improved technology
6Patient Visits per 100 persons by Ambulatory
Service Type, 1993-94 and 1999-2000
7Physician Authority
- Based on modern science and scientific knowledge.
- Physicians become the intermediaries between
science and private experience - Authority signifies the presence of status and
quality - Requires legitimacy and dependence.
- Legitimacy acceptance by subordinates
- Dependence bad things can happen if we dont
obey - Types of Physician Authority
- Social Authority
- Cultural Authority
- Professional Authority
8The Evolution of the Physician in the U.S.
- Allopathic
- Homeopathy
- Osteopathic
- Chiropractic
9(No Transcript)
10Physicians
- Comprised of two types by practice
- Primary care physicians short supply in U.S.
- Family Practice, Internal medicine, OB/GYN,
Pediatricians - Specialists Surplus in U.S.
- Specialize in specific areas
11Physician Surplus or Shortage?
- Rapid growth of physicians, esp. specialists,
during 1980-95 due to - Massive federal outlays
- Influx of International Medical Graduates (IMGs)
- Distribution of physicians gives appearance of
shortage - Not enough primary care providers
- Medical underserved areas in rural communities
and inner cities - Malpractice and the impact on physicians
12Physicians NV vs. US
Physicians Type Nevada U.S.
Physician generalists per 100,000 population 21 30
Physician specialists per 100,000 142 206
13Changing Role of the Physician
- More employed physicians
- By managed care organizations and hospitals (the
emergence of the Hospitalist) - Large group practices emerged with the growth of
managed care - Emphasis away from specialty areas to managed
care - More female physicians
14Physicians who would recommend the practice of
medicine
15For physicians who wouldnt recommend medical
profession
16Distribution of Physicians by Specialty 1980,
1986, 1995, 2000 (In thousands
- 1980 1986 1995 2000 Pct.
Change - Specialty No./ No./ No./
No./ 1986-2000 - All specialties 414/100 521/100 630/100
684/100 31.4 - Primary Care 159/38.5 179/34.4 205/32.5
219/32.0 22.2 - Other Medical
- Specialties 25/6.2 62/12.0 83/13.2
94/13.7 50.2 - Surgical Specialties 110/26.7 134/25.7
158/25.2 170/24.9 27.0 - All other specialties 118/28.5 144/27.8
183/29.1 201/29.4 38.9
17Physician Medical Education
- Undergraduate medical curriculum
- Most emphasize the acute care setting
- Increase in women and minorities
- Graduate medical education
- Major increases in residencies
- Shifts in the organization of medical schools
- Must compete for patients
- Shift to managed care by med school hospitals
- Trends medical education in for-profit hospitals
- Flexnor Report
18Will doctors meet demand in a bio-terror event
19Nurses
- Typifies the concern of healthcare nursing is
concerned with human response to health problems - Historic factors that shaped nursing as a career
- Occupation to support physicians
- Emergence of hospitals as community institutions
- Acceptable female occupations, primarily white
females - Linked to religious orders
20Understanding the Nursing Shortage
- Changes in occupational opportunities for women
since 1970s - Majority of RNs are 50 years of age or married
with children at home - Low salaries pay compression
- Burnout
- Lack of clinical career ladder
- Active vs. Inactive about 1/3 of nurses not
working fulltime