Difference between revisions of "Patient Stories"

From Patient Determinants
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 95: Line 95:
 
'''Paying For High Cost Treatments''' <br>
 
'''Paying For High Cost Treatments''' <br>
 
* [https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/tackling-the-financial-toll-of-cancer-one-patient-at-a-time/2016/04/09/c8a85dd8-fb16-11e5-9140-e61d062438bb_story.html Scott Steiner is 46-year-old father of six kids that had to struggle to afford high cost cancer treatments. (4/9/16)]   
 
* [https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/tackling-the-financial-toll-of-cancer-one-patient-at-a-time/2016/04/09/c8a85dd8-fb16-11e5-9140-e61d062438bb_story.html Scott Steiner is 46-year-old father of six kids that had to struggle to afford high cost cancer treatments. (4/9/16)]   
 +
 +
'''Paying For Medicine''' <br>
 +
* [http://khn.org/news/many-copd-patients-struggle-to-pay-for-each-medicinal-breath/amp/ After a lifetime of smoking, 67-year-old Juanita Milton needs help breathing. She’s tethered to an oxygen tank 24/7 and uses two drug inhalers a day, including Spiriva, which she called “the really expensive one.” (6/5/17)]
  
 
'''Patient Dialog'''
 
'''Patient Dialog'''

Revision as of 13:27, 6 July 2017

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

Disability from Stroke

End of Life

Fragmented Healthcare System
Lack of a coordinated, patient centered approach

Geriatricians

Health Insurance Issues

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 Chronic Pain

Medical Decisions - Quality of Life vs. Aggressive Interventions

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

Widespread Hype Gives False Hope To Many Cancer Patients