COVID-19 Habits Offer a Rich Lesson in What Patients Like About Telemedicine

COVID-19 Habits Offer a Rich Lesson in What Patients Like About Telemedicine

Unfounded or not, fear of visiting healthcare facilities (including urgent care centers) has resulted in many patients forgoing care during the COVID-19 crisis. However, the pandemic has also resulted in growing reliance on telemedicine—and, not coincidentally, in employment of telemedicine services among urgent care operators. A survey of 1,800 patients conducted by Doctor.com and published in the journal Patient Care revealed what moves patients to choose telemedicine for a given complaint, but also their preferences …

Read More
CDC Update: Obesity Is High Risk with COVID-19—but Hypertension Is Lower Risk Than First Thought

CDC Update: Obesity Is High Risk with COVID-19—but Hypertension Is Lower Risk Than First Thought

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention continues to refine its guidance on which patients are most likely to experience severe disease when infected with COVID-19—with some of their statements reflecting a change from earlier advice. Early on in the pandemic, the CDC suggested that hypertension would put infected patients at higher risk than those without hypertension; now, however, the agency now says hypertension does not confer significant additional risk. Obesity, however, is associated with …

Read More
UCA Webinar: Why Acute Flaccid Myelitis Should Be on Your Radar Now

UCA Webinar: Why Acute Flaccid Myelitis Should Be on Your Radar Now

While the world’s attention has been focused on COVID-19, another mysterious virus has continued to wreak havoc on the families it affects. Acute flaccid myelitis, which has been afflicting a growing number of children for several years, has continued to strike seemingly out of the blue. While care for children diagnosed with AFM is clearly beyond the resources of an urgent care center, parents could easily present to urgent care when symptoms first start to …

Read More
UHG Study: Too Many Children Lack Primary Care; Urgent Care Could Be Filling the Gaps

UHG Study: Too Many Children Lack Primary Care; Urgent Care Could Be Filling the Gaps

Data from a new study by UnitedHealth Group show that urgent care centers could be providing care for millions of American children who have limited access to well-child visits. Looking at the care of plan members between the ages of 3 and 18 in West Virginia, they found that only one out of three children received an annual well-child visit—with the shortfall being especially dramatic among Medicaid-covered families, children of color, and in rural areas. …

Read More
New CDC Data Paint a Dark Picture of Patients Neglecting Needs for Immediate Care

New CDC Data Paint a Dark Picture of Patients Neglecting Needs for Immediate Care

Readers of JUCM News may recall that, for the most part, patients have been putting off annual physicals, follow-up exams for chronic conditions, and well-child visits since the COVID-19 pandemic took hold in the U.S. However, new data from the CDC show that too many patients also avoided care for immediate needs. Over a 10-week period at the start of various state stay-at-home recommendations, 20% fewer patients sought care for what ended up being heart …

Read More
Be Aware: Thyroid Symptoms Could Mimic Serious Pathologies in Patients Who’ve Had COVID-19

Be Aware: Thyroid Symptoms Could Mimic Serious Pathologies in Patients Who’ve Had COVID-19

A patient presents to your urgent care center with palpitations and neck pain radiating to her jaw. She also has a painful, enlarged thyroid on palpation. Concerns for heart attack and malignancy were ultimately ruled out upon further evaluation in this real-world case published in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. The patient, who it was later learned had recently recovered from COVID-19, was found to have subacute thyroiditis (SAT), presumed to have stemmed …

Read More
No Matter What ‘Wave’ of the Pandemic We’re In, Tell Patients to Keep Wearing a Mask

No Matter What ‘Wave’ of the Pandemic We’re In, Tell Patients to Keep Wearing a Mask

Internationally, public health experts are in disagreement over the prospects of a second wave of widespread COVID-19 infection—though not because they think the pandemic is sputtering to a halt anytime soon. Some (such as Anthony Fauci, MD, head of the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) say it’s premature to think about a second wave because we don’t know when the first wave will end. Others, such as a group …

Read More
Another Drug Is Purported to Reduce Deaths Due to COVID-19; Is This One the Real Deal?

Another Drug Is Purported to Reduce Deaths Due to COVID-19; Is This One the Real Deal?

Several drugs (and even, dangerously, household cleaning products) have been put forth as possible preventive or curative agents for COVID-19. They’ve all been discredited for that purpose, ultimately, so far. Now, however, researchers in the UK are suggesting that a commonly used glucocorticosteroid may hold some promise. As part of the Randomised Evaluation of COVID-19 Therapy (RECOVERY) trial, dexamethasone was shown to reduce death from COVID-19 by one third in ventilated patients and by one …

Read More
Help Your Occ Med Customers Ensure a Healthy Return for the Workforce

Help Your Occ Med Customers Ensure a Healthy Return for the Workforce

Workplaces across the country are starting to take steps toward normalcy, with restaurants in many states letting patrons back in or offering outdoor dining options. Retail and office jobs will follow. That doesn’t mean folks feel safe going back after months of working remotely, however, or that precautions shouldn’t be taken to prevent a second wave of COVID-19 infections. Pennsylvania-based St. Luke’s Occupational Medicine, in collaboration with St. Luke’s Behavioral Health, St. Luke’s Fitness Centers, …

Read More
Latest UCA/CUCM COVID-19 Data Reveal Telemedicine—and Related Reimbursements—Continue to Climb

Latest UCA/CUCM COVID-19 Data Reveal Telemedicine—and Related Reimbursements—Continue to Climb

The Urgent Care Association’s weekly snapshot of how urgent care operators are faring during the COVID-19 pandemic shows that telemedicine is continuing to contribute to both patient care and related revenues. This week’s data show that 87% of responding urgent care centers are offering telemedicine through their locations; the remaining 13% have no plans to add it right now, however. The good news for those who have taken the leap is that most are being …

Read More
Log In