Sunday, October 26, 2014

Mobile Urgent Care Goes Where Help Is Needed

By Dominique Martin


New legislation has provided a way for many people without health insurance to obtain affordable coverage, but there is still a sizable population falling between the cracks. These individuals often live under severe economic hardship, and a standard doctor appointment may not a be realistic option. Mobile urgent care is designed to bring high-quality medical facilities and personnel to the neighborhoods and people that need them the most.

Brick-and-mortar urgent treatment centers have traditionally been a recommended alternative for patients seeking a less-costly option to visiting a standard emergency or trauma center located in a hospital. Without insurance, the cost of emergency treatment skyrockets, wait times routinely last multiple hours, and there is little follow-up. Urgent need centers routinely treat common ailments and injuries, have access to lab tests and x-rays, give physicals, and more.

A moving unit provides a better and more cost-effective way to reach people who choose to forgo standard treatment for economic reasons, and is often housed in a recreational vehicle remodeled to make way for modern medical center equipment. Units may be staffed by nurse practitioners under the guidance of doctors, with additional staff available when size and budgets allow.

Although the worst of the recession seems past, not everyone has shared in that reality. There is a considerable penalty for enduring years of minimal health maintenance, such as experiencing the current wave of diabetes. Many people are minimally aware that they may have the symptoms, but have not yet developed neuropathy, blindness, or lost an extremity to infection. For them, a traveling doctor brings not treatment, but also longer-term monitoring.

Most have few restrictions on who may or may not become a patient. From children requiring vaccinations or treatment for common ailments like ear infections, to the elderly without financial resources, there is no litmus test deciding who may or may not receive help. In areas with large populations of new immigrants, politics are routinely set aside in favor of helping all people enjoy the benefits of good health.

For those recuperating from surgery, some units feature help for patients after they have been discharged. The ability of a unit to travel helps cut down lengthy recovery times, limits the chances of avoidable post-surgical infections or other complications, and helps support caregivers within families. For patients living alone, the service increases peace of mind.

Without this type of program, many patients would receive little or no personalized medical attention. Doctors and practitioners not only assess and treat symptoms, but also provide current information regarding nutrition and diet, dispense prenatal advice, and help parents keep child immunizations up to date. They provide information for young adults on safer sex and STD transmission.

More than four thousand people can receive help in one year from a single unit, and demand for the service is not diminishing. Educational material and screenings for healthy individuals helps prevent future problems, while suppressing cost inflation. Whether patients are coping with the singular stresses of aging or having trouble finding affordable decent housing, care of this type helps fill the need.




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