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Ambulatory care

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Centre in California is a large ambulatory care center where ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC) are routinely assessed and managed.

Ambulatory care or outpatient care is medical care provided on an outpatient basis, including diagnosis, observation, consultation, treatment, intervention, and rehabilitation services. This care can include advanced medical technology and procedures even when provided outside of hospitals.[1][2][3][4][5]

Ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC) are health conditions where appropriate ambulatory care prevents or reduces the need for hospital admission (or inpatient care), such as diabetes or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.[6]

Many medical investigations and treatments for acute and chronic illnesses and preventive health care can be performed on an ambulatory basis, including minor surgical and medical procedures, most types of dental services, dermatology services, and many types of diagnostic procedures (e.g. blood tests, X-rays, endoscopy and biopsy procedures of superficial organs). Other types of ambulatory care services include emergency visits, rehabilitation visits, and in some cases telephone consultations.[7]

Ambulatory care services represent the most significant contributor to increasing hospital expenditures and to the performance of the health care system in most countries, including most developing countries.[8][9]

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  • What Is Ambulatory Care? -- UC San Diego Faculty Interview
  • Ambulatory Care Centre
  • About the Ambulatory Surgery Center

Transcription

Hi, I'm Sarah McBane and I'm one of the faculty with UCSD School of Pharmacy. My clinical site is in family medicine. Hi, I'm Dr. Nathan Painter. I'm an Associate Clinical Professor here at the School of Pharmacy and a family medicine pharmacist. I'd like you to think of ambulatory care as any setting where a patient can actually walk in to see that provider. Which is different from in-patient or acute care where the patients are actually already in the facility. Ambulatory care is really taking care of patients that are able to get places on their own usually to see a physician for some kind of acute or chronic condition to be evaluated and treated. At my ambulatory care clinic in a family medicine practice I work alongside physicians medical residents, students, and pharmacy residents to manage their medications. That ranges anywhere from anti-coagulation with warfarin, diabetes where I'm able to sit down with patients, provide patient education, titrate their insulin, look at all their labs to evaluate it and make recommendations and changes based on those labs. My clinic is actually a family medicine clinic. It's UCSD 4th & Lewis which is actually where we are right now. Here at UCSD 4th & Lewis family medicine I see patients in collaboration with the different positions here. This morning we actually had a patient visiting the clinic for anti-coagulation therapy management. So a Coumadin type visit. However, because we're in family medicine we can also address other problems for the patients. This particular patient is planning a trip for a ski excursion and she's worried about her lower back pain. We were actually able to work with the patient's primary care provider and provide her with a therapy that will help address that lower back pain during her upcoming trip. Family medicine is best thought up of as a traditional doctor's office where patients go to get their care throughout their entire lives. As a pharmacist I work in collaboration with the physicians there to help make sure all those patients had the best possible medication therapies. I see patients on a scheduled appointment basis in 15 to 30 min intervals. In general our protocols here are very, very open and we have the capacity to address virtually any chronic disease that the patient has. What I really want students to know about my clinic is there's lots of opportunities to see lots of different things. The physicians see pretty much anything from birth to death. There's new born babies, there's pregnant mothers and young people coming in; middle age, elderly, people dying of cancer, people needing pain management, people treated for hypertension. There's all sorts of people. So the experiences you are able to gain is very broad and you never really know what to expect. You really have to be open and ready and willing to learn just about anything, really focused on a lot a chronic diseases. You really think about the long-term; it's one of the major differences between an in-patient service and an ambulatory care service is that you really have to think long term about the patient and the patient's care because you know part of ambulatory care is you see patients repetitively over a long period of time.

Scope

Health care organizations use different ways to define the nature of care provided as "ambulatory" versus inpatient or other types of care.[7][8][10][11][12]

A typical assessment and treatment space for patients in an ambulatory care clinic.

Sites where ambulatory care can be delivered include:

  • Doctor's surgeries/Doctor's offices/General medical practice: This is the most common site for the delivery of ambulatory care in many countries, and usually consists of a physician's visit. Physicians of many specialties deliver ambulatory care, including specialists in family medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics, gynaecology, cardiology, gastroenterology, endocrinology, ophthalmology, dermatology, and geriatrics.
  • Clinics: Including ambulatory care clinics, polyclinics, ambulatory surgery centers, and urgent care centers.
    • In the United States, the Urgent Care Association of America (UCAOA) estimates that over 15,000 urgent care centers deliver urgent care services. These centers are designed to evaluate and treat conditions that are not severe enough to require treatment in a hospital emergency department but still require treatment beyond normal physician office hours or before a physician appointment is available. In Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union, Feldsher health stations are the main site for ambulatory care in rural areas.[13]
  • Hospitals: Including emergency departments and other hospital-based services such as same day surgery services and mental health services.
    • Hospital emergency departments: Some visits to emergency departments result in hospital admission, so these would be considered emergency medicine visits rather than ambulatory care. Most visits to hospital emergency departments, however, do not require hospital admission.
  • Non-medical institution-based settings: Including school and prison health; vision, dental and pharmaceutical care.[citation needed]
  • Non-institution settings: For example, mass childhood immunization campaigns using community health workers.[9]
  • Telemedicine: An expanding sector of ambulatory medicine that uses telecommunications and information technology to improve patient access to care; particularly those living in remote regions. Studies have suggested that telemedicine can be effective in delivering adequate patient care including older adults.[14]
    • Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many countries developed large scale telemedicine frameworks in effort to continue outpatient assessments and follow-ups across various specialties while minimizing the spread of COVID-19.[15]

Personnel and medical education

A nurse operating medical equipment in an ambulatory care setting.

Ambulatory care services typically consist of a multidisciplinary team of health professionals that may include (but is not limited to) physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses, pharmacists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech therapists, and other allied health professionals.[16][17]

Given the growth of ambulatory medicine, it has become a significant component of education for medical trainees across various specialties.[18][19][20] Over the past decades, internal medicine residency programs across North America have made efforts to incorporate more ambulatory training to the medical education curriculum.[21][22] The ambulatory medical training is focused on patient management through multidisciplinary teamwork while creating longitudinal continuity in patient care.[23][24]

Treatments

Ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC) are illnesses or health conditions where appropriate ambulatory care prevents or reduces the need for hospital admission. Appropriate care for an ACSC can include one or more planned revisits to settings of ambulatory care for follow-up, such as when a patient is continuously monitored or otherwise advised to return when (or if) symptoms appear or reappear.[citation needed]

Relatively common ACSC include:[6][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35]

Hospitalization for an ambulatory care sensitive conditions is considered to be a measure of access to appropriate primary health care, including preventive and disease management services. While not all admissions for these conditions are avoidable, appropriate ambulatory care could help prevent their onset, control an acute episode, or manage a chronic disease or condition.[6][25][26] For Medicaid-covered and uninsured U.S. hospital stays in 2012, six of the top ten diagnoses were ambulatory care sensitive conditions.[36]

Safety

There have been concerns regarding the safety of ambulatory medicine.[37][38] Some of the common potential sources of harm include errors to medications and diagnostics as well as breakdowns in communications and coordination of care.[39] One major complication of ambulatory care that predisposes to patients to harm is the risk for missing appointments.[40] Missed appointments are common, costly, and can lead to significant delays in both diagnosis and treatment.[39][40]

Advancements in information technology (IT) have helped to address some safety concerns of ambulatory medicine by minimizing mismanagement of electronic health records (EHR), improving interoperability, and increasing health professionals communication.[39] Some have raised the notion of designing health professionals payment policies with greater focus on safety in addition to patient volumes.[39] Furthermore, strategies for increased patient and caregiver engagement have been heralded as potentially beneficial in both patient care as well as data gathering for patient safety.[41][42]

See also

References

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  2. ^ "Medical Definition of Ambulatory care". MedicineNet.com.
  3. ^ "What is "Ambulatory Care"?". William Osler Health System. Archived from the original on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
  4. ^ "Programs & Services: Ambulatory Care". Saskatoon Health Region. Archived from the original on 2011-09-05.
  5. ^ "Ambulatory care". The Free Dictionary. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
  6. ^ a b c Canadian Institute for Health Information, Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions. Archived 2022-01-21 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 14 April 2014.
  7. ^ a b "Comprehensive Ambulatory Care Classification System". Canadian Institute for Health Information. Archived from the original on 2011-09-29. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
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  9. ^ a b Berman P (2000). "Organization of ambulatory care provision: a critical determinant of health system performance in developing countries" (PDF). Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 78 (6): 791–802. PMC 2560790. PMID 10916916.
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  11. ^ Alberta Health and Wellness. Alberta Ambulatory Care Reporting Manual. Archived 2011-10-07 at the Wayback Machine Edmonton, April 2009.
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  17. ^ Cup EH, Pieterse AJ, Hendricks HT, van Engelen BG, Oostendorp RA, van der Wilt GJ (2011). "Implementation of multidisciplinary advice to allied health care professionals regarding the management of their patients with neuromuscular diseases". Disability and Rehabilitation. 33 (9): 787–795. doi:10.3109/09638288.2010.511414. PMID 20804405. S2CID 12392545.
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This page was last edited on 11 February 2024, at 14:34
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