Remember the Less Advantaged as Thanksgiving Approaches—and Your Patients Are Likely to Remember Your Kindness

Remember the Less Advantaged as Thanksgiving Approaches—and Your Patients Are Likely to Remember Your Kindness

With the news dominated by the COVID-19 pandemic since last spring, it’s easy for the public to forget that “everyday” problems like food insecurity persist (and, in fact, could be worse at this time due to the downturn in the economy). IMA Urgent Care Centers and Primary Care Offices in New Jersey hasn’t forgotten, though, and are working with a local nonprofit organization to host a Thanksgiving food drive, just as they’ve done in years …

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Five Key Signs Could Predict Whether Your COVID-19 Patient Is Headed for Hospitalization

Five Key Signs Could Predict Whether Your COVID-19 Patient Is Headed for Hospitalization

Recognizing which patients with COVID-19 will require hospitalization has been something of a crapshoot unless one presents in obvious distress. That may be changing, however, thanks to a new tool that is purported to aid in predicting who is likely to end up in the hospital. As detailed in a new article published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases, the COVID-19 acuity score (CoVA) draws on demographic, clinical, radiographic, and medical history variables that assess …

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Helpful or Not, Patients Now Have the Right to Read Your Notes

Helpful or Not, Patients Now Have the Right to Read Your Notes

As of November 2, your patients (and all patients in the U.S.) are entitled to immediate access to clinical notes related to their care, along with all test results and pathology and imaging results thanks to the 21st Century Cures Act. The newly enacted law requires healthcare facilities to provide timely, electronic access to consultations, discharge summaries, history, physical examination findings, imaging narratives, laboratory and pathology report narratives, and procedure and progress notes. While this …

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New COVID-19 Testing Platforms Are on the Way. Now if We Can Only Improve Reporting…

New COVID-19 Testing Platforms Are on the Way. Now if We Can Only Improve Reporting…

Shortfalls in testing supplies—especially in urgent care centers—was a serious problem at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. Anecdotal evidence suggests that one reason the virus spread so widely and quickly was that asymptomatic patients who didn’t know they were sick (and infectious) went about their business instead of quarantining. Supply chain issues have, largely, been ironed out so there’s no shortage of places to get tested. However, an article published …

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You Knew It All Along, but Now There’s Proof—Delaying Care May Be Riskier Than COVID-19

You Knew It All Along, but Now There’s Proof—Delaying Care May Be Riskier Than COVID-19

PowerPoint Presentation Urgent care professionals recognized early on that patients were not seeking care for complaints they would have presented with before the COVID-19 pandemic. Now there are data backing up that belief. According to information gathered by the consulting firm Advisory Board, total urgent care center volumes dropped 50% in the spring. As you know, they’ve come back strong since then, although Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles reports that its urgent care locations are still …

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From Brick-and-Mortar to Highways and Byways: Taking COVID-19 Testing on the Road

From Brick-and-Mortar to Highways and Byways: Taking COVID-19 Testing on the Road

PowerPoint Presentation As the incidence of COVID-19 continues to creep up around the country, it wouldn’t be surprising if we see fear of visiting healthcare facilities return among the public. Given that testing for the virus is essential to minimizing its spread, that could spell trouble on the same level as we experienced last spring. Some urgent care centers have taken to establishing temporary testing sites in retail parking lots. Some, like American Family Care …

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Be Aware: Just Because a Patient is ‘Over’ COVID-19 Doesn’t Mean They’re Not Still Suffering

Be Aware: Just Because a Patient is ‘Over’ COVID-19 Doesn’t Mean They’re Not Still Suffering

PowerPoint Presentation “Two weeks” has come to be viewed as some kind of magic number for resolution of COVID-19 symptoms and risk for transmitting the virus to close contacts. That may be shortsighted for at least some patients, however. Something called post COVID-19 syndrome has been identified by physicians at the Mayo Clinic after recognizing that some patients continue to experience intense fatigue, headaches, and difficulty concentrating for weeks—or even months—after they’re deemed to be …

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Retailer Efforts to Grab COVID-19 Test Customers Face Steep Obstacles—Such as Immediacy

Retailer Efforts to Grab COVID-19 Test Customers Face Steep Obstacles—Such as Immediacy

Many retail outlets are trying desperately to capture revenue from the seemingly endless need for COVID-19 testing facilities. Some, such as national drugstore chains, are doing so successfully. Others face steep obstacles, however. Costco, for one, has tried hard to make it convenient for customers to self-test for the virus by offering a home version. The first challenge they encountered was the fact that many people who get a COVID-19 test are doing so to …

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Seniors Have Been Especially Fearful of ED Visits During the Pandemic. Promote Your Practice Accordingly

Seniors Have Been Especially Fearful of ED Visits During the Pandemic. Promote Your Practice Accordingly

There’s been much discussion, including public service announcements from the Surgeon General of the United States, of the need to maintain visits for ongoing and acute healthcare concerns in spite of the COVID-19 pandemic. As urgent care operators know, however, patients have stayed away in droves (especially in the early days of the crisis). What may come as news is the fact that patients 65 years of age and over have been most hesitant, especially …

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Available Guidelines Are All You Need to Improve Antibiotic Stewardship—and Save Lives

Available Guidelines Are All You Need to Improve Antibiotic Stewardship—and Save Lives

Suggestions that urgent care was any more responsible for overuse of antibiotics—and subsequent drug resistance—than other practice settings were largely blown out of proportion. For one thing, patients self-select urgent care over other settings when it seems evident that an antibiotic is needed, so it’s likely that urgent care providers see more patients who really do need a prescription. Clearly there are instances where one is given even though it’s not indicated, as well. As …

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