Health
Care Facilities
A
sick or injured person can obtain medical care in several
different places. These include provider practices such
as medical offices and clinics, hospitals, nursing homes,
and home care.
There
are about 200,000 medical offices, clinics, and other
provider practices in the United States. Earlier in
the 20th century most physicians were solo practitioners
working in their own offices or in partnership with
another doctor. Patients visited the office, received
an examination or other service, and paid a fee. This
traditional solo, fee-for-service medicine has been
declining. Many physicians now practice in groups where
they share the same offices and equipment with other
doctors. Group practices may combine primary care physicians,
several kinds of specialists, laboratories, and equipment
for diagnosing disease. Physicians who practice in a
group reduce their own expenses and provide patients
with a wider range of services.
Many
doctors are joining with hospitals, insurance companies,
and industrial employers to provide managed care for
groups of patients. Physicians may work as employees
of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) or other
health care alliances. These plans oversee, or manage,
care for patients, to avoid unnecessary services and
reduce costs. Rather than taking a fee from each patient,
managed care physicians may receive an annual salary
from the HMO or a fixed sum for each patient.
Patients
who are too sick for care in a doctor's office go to
a hospital. Hospitals offer patients 24-hour care from
a staff of health professionals. They provide services
not available elsewhere, such as major surgery, child
birth, and intensive care for the critically ill. The
United States has about 6,020 hospitals including more
than 1 million beds. Several kinds of hospitals exist,
including general hospitals, specialized hospitals that
care for specific diseases, small community hospitals,
and large academic medical centers that train new doctors.
Hospitals also provide many outpatient services to patients
being treated in doctors' offices and clinics. These
include laboratory tests, computerized imaging scans,
X rays, and other diagnostic tests for people who do
not require admission to the hospital.
Hospital
care is the most expensive form of health care. Efforts
to control health care costs have emphasized reducing
the number of patients admitted to hospitals and their
length of stay. During the 1980s and 1990s, these efforts
led to the closing of more than 600 hospitals, which
eliminated almost 200,000 beds. Physicians also try
to treat more people on a nonhospital, or outpatient,
basis, and these cost-control efforts have led to fast
growth in outpatient treatment centers. These include
ambulatory surgery centers, where patients undergo operations
once available only in hospitals and return home the
same day.
Patients
who need long-term medical care because of advanced
age or chronic illness may stay in a nursing home. The
United States has about 17,000 nursing homes with about
1.8 million patients. The number of nursing homes has
doubled since 1960 because there are more older people
in the population. Changing lifestyles, in which adult
children and parents often live far apart, also contributed
to the need for more nursing homes. About 85 percent
of nursing home patients are age 65 and over. Many stay
for a few weeks while recovering from an acute illness.
They receive medical care and help with everyday activities
like eating, bathing, and using the bathroom. Then they
return home and care for themselves, often with the
help of family or other caregivers. Other patients stay
longer.
Some
patients need regular medical care and other assistance,
but are not sick enough for a hospital or nursing home.
Home health care allows them to receive skilled nursing
and other care in their own homes. Home care services
are the fastest-growing sector of the health care industry,
increasing about 30 percent per year in the 1990s. This
growth is largely because home care is less expensive
than hospital or nursing home care. Home care also is
very popular with patients because most people prefer
staying at home, rather than entering a hospital or
nursing home. About 15,000 home health agencies provide
most home care services in the United States. Many agencies
are privately owned. Hospitals, public health departments,
and other organizations also offer home care.
Hospices
are special health care facilities that provide care for
dying patients in the final stages of a terminal illness.
A hospice staff is focused on making the last days of
a dying patient pain free and comfortable. Many patients
choose hospice services in their homes. |