Patient Stories

From Patient Determinants
Revision as of 14:18, 16 July 2019 by Admin (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

To truly understand managing health, we need to hear first hand from patients to relate, emphathize and learn how to improve.

Addressing Non-Medical Determinants

Aging In Place

Alcoholism

Behavior Impact on Health

Breaking The Stigma

Caregivers

Community Health Worker

Depression and Suicide

Disability from Stroke

End of Life

Fragmented Healthcare System
Lack of a coordinated, patient centered approach

Geriatricians

Health Insurance Issues

Happiness

Health Care Professionals As Patients

Health Literacy

High-Deductible Health Plans

High-Need, High-Cost Patients

  • Forty-year-old Jeremie Seals was assigned a care manager and a regular physician that helped reduced his 15 ER visits and 11 hospitals stays to 4 ER visits and 4 hospitals stays the following year. (7/10/13)
  • Virginia Hunt's story illustrates the effectiveness and ineffectiveness of our healthcare system that addresses conditions and often lacks capability to treat the overall patient. (3/3/13)
  • Rebecca Bryson has 10 different medical conditions and depends on 13 health care providers. Her life improved when a program funded a Clinical Care Specialist and the creation of a Shared Care Plan. (2006)

Incrementalism in Managing Health

Living Conditions

Living With Cancer

Living With Chronic Pain

Medical Decisions - Quality of Life vs. Aggressive Interventions

Medical Debt

Loneliness

Mental Health Treatment

Opioid Addiction

Paying For High Cost Treatments

Paying For Medicine

Patient Dialog

Patient Goals

Primary Care Physicians - Managing Health

Social Concerns

Shared Decision Making

Stress Of Monitoring After Cancer Treatments

Support System Beyond Spouse and Family

Videos - In Their Own Words

Widespread Hype Gives False Hope To Many Cancer Patients