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#virtual healthcare
zaraillustrates · 1 year
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I was commissioned to illustrate the latest CVS Health Trends report, which discusses virtual vs. in-person healthcare and the "Rise of Omnichannel Care". © Zara Picken 2023 www.zarapicken.com
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gotodoctor-ca · 25 days
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GoToDoctor offers efficient virtual healthcare services, allowing you to consult with Canadian doctors from the comfort of your home. Experience timely medical advice, prescriptions, and referrals through our secure video chat or phone consultations. Connect with our professional team seven days a week for accessible and reliable healthcare solutions.
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everblink · 29 days
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Mastering Chronic Disease Management: How Virtual Care Revolutionizes Healthcare with Everblink Healthcare Pvt Ltd
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fiercemillennial · 2 months
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Telemedicine Reshapes Abortion Access: What You Need to Know
Breaking news: 16% of abortions in the US now happen via telemedicine. What does this mean for women's healthcare? #abortionaccess #reproductivehealth #womensrights #fiercelife #fiercemillennial
A new report highlights the rise of virtual abortion care, prompting important discussions for women’s health. The landscape of abortion access is shifting. A new report reveals that 16% of all abortions in the United States are now conducted via telemedicine. This marks a significant rise in virtual abortion services, raising important questions about women’s reproductive rights, healthcare…
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hoclinical · 4 months
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H & O Clinical PLLC
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Website: https://www.hoclinical.com
Address: 2025 Central Park Avenue, STE 203, Yonkers, NY 10710 and 10 North Wood Avenue, STE B2, Linden, New Jersey 07036, USA
H & O Clinical PLLC specializes in telehealth services, offering a comprehensive range of medical solutions including family medicine, mental health services, and various health tests. With a focus on virtual consultations and a commitment to personalized care, they cater to non-emergent symptoms and chronic disease management. Their services extend to weight loss programs, medication management, and more, ensuring accessible and quality healthcare for all.
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market-insider · 8 months
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Telemedicine in Acute Care: Market Dynamics and Growth Prospects
The global acute care telemedicine market is expected to reach USD 60.2 billion by 2030, based on a new report by Grand View Research, Inc. The market is expected to expand at a CAGR of 14.8% from 2022 to 2030. Technological development in the healthcare sector, increasing demand for immediate access to medical care, and shortage of specialty physicians especially in developing countries are some factors driving telemedicine growth in an acute care setting.
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Acute Care Telemedicine Market Report Highlights
Based on delivery, the clinician-to-patient segment accounted for the largest market share of 62.5% in 2021 as it provides easy access to medical professionals through chat or video conferencing and reduces long waiting and travel times to get treatment.
The telepsychiatry segment is expected to witness the fastest CAGR of 15.5% over the forecast period. The sector is witnessing significant growth as it holds the potential to become a better option to traditional in-person psychiatric facilities.
Based on the end-use, the hospitals and clinics segment dominated the market with a revenue share of 75.5% and is likely to grow at the fastest growth rate from 2022 to 2030. This is owing to the shortage of specialist physicians, especially in developing countries, and increased demand for better healthcare access among the people.
North America accounted for the largest revenue share of nearly 42.4% in 2021. Due to a favorable reimbursement structure and the availability of telemedicine services. For instance, In January 2021, The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) and the Digital Medicine Society (DiMe) launched “IMPACT” a new program for virtual healthcare.
The Europe market is anticipated to witness rapid growth over the forecast period with a CAGR of 15.2%. The increase in the elderly population and increased development in the healthcare infrastructure is driving the regional market expansion
Gain deeper insights on the market and receive your free copy with TOC now @: Acute Care Telemedicine Market Report
The COVID-19 pandemic caused the healthcare system to encounter various challenges. The swift adoption of various technologies across countries, driven by the necessity to provide continued medical care in the era of social distancing, has increased the penetration of telemedicine in acute care. In addition, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) increased the coverage of telehealth services through temporary waivers soon after the declaration of COVID-19 as a public health emergency in early 2020 to make it convenient for people to receive medical care while reducing their exposure to the virus in public settings such as hospitals and health care facilities.
Furthermore, the World Health Organization and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) collaborated to produce a universal standard for the usage of telehealth services to address the problem on an international scale. This guideline describes the technological criteria that a telehealth platform must fulfill to deliver accessible telehealth services.
In December 2021, Five Ascension Texas facilities collaborated with the nation’s major multispecialty telemedicine group to offer teleneurology services to their patients. The collaboration was intended to ensure 24/7 access to special neurology care. It will also strengthen on-site neurology treatment by offering doctors, nurses, and other professionals high-definition video consultations with neurologists on demand.
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joseywritesng · 1 year
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What you need to know
What you need to know
30 Nov. 2022 – Amazon encourages patients to “skip the waiting room” with the launch of Amazon Clinica virtual healthcare that aims to provide treatment for nearly 2 dozen common health problems. The service goes a step further than a typical telehealth visit and promises personalized treatment without appointments, video calls or live chat. Patients can answer questions about their symptoms and…
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vcdoctor · 2 years
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How Can Telemedicine Be Used To Improve Opioid Addiction Treatment?
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Learn how telemedicine can be used to monitor patients safely at a distance as they ease off opioid addiction treatment for pain management.
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As you can guess, the bill is not a good one.
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librarycards · 2 months
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The term “social transition” has a non-trans history in the psychology of adolescence. In the 1980s, it was an operative metaphor for describing adolescence through the American trope of a rocky period of self-making, what one psychologist in 1978 termed “the difficulty of adolescence as a transitional period.” The primary “transition” that concerned psychologists at the time was school, where social shifts in friend groups and hierarchies from middle school to high school affected a young person’s self-esteem and mental integrity, resulting either in positive self-actualization or, if the social transition went poorly, “problem behavior.”³
The term “social transition” was only later adopted by psychologists and psychiatrists looking to powerfully expand their jurisdiction over trans youth to include entirely non-medical practices that often spur parents to reject or harm their kids: wearing a dress, cutting or growing out hair, wearing a binder or a bra, wearing makeup, or adopting a new name and pronouns. Making those banal but concrete practices of changing gender into psychiatric events was intended to convince anxious and angry parents that they shouldn’t put down their children. By the same token, tying practices of clothing and self-description to healthy development overinflated them with a pathological degree of significance, upping the ante and creating a lucrative target, both for parents of trans youth who wanted to stop their children from transitioning and, now, politicians.
I don’t mean to imply that psychiatry directly caused HB 2885, just that it clearly holds one part of the blame for inventing the root vulnerability that Gragg has taken advantage of in Missouri. If anything, the attachment of sex offender felonies to a teacher complimenting a teenager’s haircut exposes, once and for all, how fraudulent the medicalization of transition has been all along. Gragg can claim the right of the state to control children’s dress and speech (masquerading as the rights of parents) through teachers and counselors, in part, because psychiatry and medicine first claimed the right to regulate trans youth’s practices of transition.
Still, the causal events that led to HB 2885 run far deeper than the shallow history of “social transition” as an especially foolish psychiatric fiction. Here lies the far bigger problem raised by this bill. Not only will psychiatrists prove to be the least effective political allies of trans youth in Missouri, but contemporary queer and transgender culture’s elevation of the private right to dress as the sine qua non of politics is also quite useless as a political strategy.
Part of what I gather stuns in bills like HB 2885 is their audacity. The law would target the most conservative, least politically subversive of all transgender practices: individual style, identification, and language-use. In the case of minors, “social transition” is also a cheap compromise offered to young people who are refused blockers and hormones by disapproving parents and doctors, but that compromise is offered in a broader queer and transgender culture that has elevated self-identification through style as the ultimate arbiter of being transgender, making it much harder to advocate for a genuine right to transition for anyone, teenager or adult.
[...]
Students have very limited First Amendment rights on school campuses, meaning that they cannot present themselves as private individuals enjoying the right to dress as they please.⁷Their self-expression is governed from the outset by a competing set of custodians, from parents to schoolteachers, to psychiatrists and doctors, to the Missouri House of Representatives. Trans youth’s interests are therefore materially extraneous to the mainline of contemporary queer and transgender culture, whose architects were wealthy, college-educated adults whose prior enjoyment of full-citizenship was the very reason they demanded only the affirmation of a right to dress.
I suspect that part of the genuine shock of bills like HB 2885 is that most people reasoned that LGBT liberalism’s elevation of the private individual over all other political concerns would inoculate dress and language from state interference. It evidently has not. What perhaps has been misunderstood, then, is how the state exercises power. The law cannot prohibit being transgender, for there is no such state of being. The state has no need to target people’s interior selves, either, for the law can seize people where it always has, in concrete social practices that it simply declares are the undesirable traits of transgender people—namely, practices of transition.
Jules Gill-Peterson, The Unimportance of Wearing Clothes. [emphasis added]
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spacedocmom · 6 months
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Doctor Beverly Crusher @SpaceDocMom I am always dispensing free hugs and other support in my sickbay for anyone who has been treated poorly by other health care workers because of your race, weight, gender, sex, place of origin, etc. If you can get to my sickbay, I will shower you with kindness. emojis: black heart, blue heart, masked 1:41 PM · Nov 15, 2023
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skyloftian-nutcase · 2 years
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Have a Healthcare Four background snippet
Four looked at his hands as they trembled. The instructor prattled on, unaware of anything going on in Four’s environment since it was a virtual program. He was ready to vibrate right out of his seat after having a shot of caffeine, running around the unit, working a code, and now being forced to sit for four hours and deal with this stupid class.
Four loved to learn. He truly did. But this nurse residency program was not specific to his unit, so they covered some of the driest, most generalized topics. At least he was almost done with it for the year.
Sighing heavily, Four slammed his head on the computer desk. He was hiding in the staff locker room with a work desk on wheels that he’d smuggled in from the unit so he could attend this meeting until he could get back to work. He felt awful - an unresolved schedule conflict meant the charge nurse had to temporarily jump in and handle his patient while he was dragged into this mandatory class. He was off orientation for heaven’s sake, he was over this residency program.
Grabbing his phone, he texted Hyrule. For the record, I hate this nurse residency program.
He figured Hyrule might not be awake, but he had to rant to someone and all the others were likely busy. Malon and Time were probably in the OR, and Legend was likely asleep after his night shift.
He looked around, tapped his fingers, and then saw his phone light up. He grabbed it immediately and saw a reply from Hyrule.
lol sounds bad. But hey guess what you’re probably gonna to get an admit
Four furrowed his brow, typing, how do you know that? Didn’t you get off this morning?
Mandatory overtime, Hyrule replied. Had a call out. But we just flew someone. It was kind of stressful but the flight nurse and flight medic were great and the pilot even gave a thumbs up! I felt a little better about it after that. But she’s pretty messed up I’m sure she’ll end up on your unit.
Four bit his lip. Mandatory overtime meant Hyrule was working a 48 hour shift. That was brutal.
I guess we’ll see, he typed. If she gets here I’ll give you a follow up so you know how she’s doing. Maybe text Time to see if I don’t hear anything about it.
Four looked up to glance at the computer and see if there was anything useful being discussed, and confirmed that, as expected, nothing of importance was being covered. His phone buzzed several times, and he read Hyrule‘a messages.
UGH
FREAKING BEEDLE
Calling again
he probably wants a sandwich
Four snickered. Poor Hyrule. He’s heard of that particular frequent flyer who often called 911 just to get a taxi ride to the ED. Hyrule was going to be exhausted at the end of his shift. Hey, I was going to get together with Legend and Time for drinks after work. Wanna join?
Hyrule’s answer was immediate. Yes! :D
“Ok, so we’re going to go into breakout rooms to discuss HIPAA.”
Four’s head snapped up. Not breakout rooms, good grief. That meant he had to actually talk about this stuff.
Resigned to his fate, Four put his phone down and tried to stop his hands from shaking.
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seilon · 1 year
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kpop is. a really really fucked up industry man. it really is
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hafwen · 5 months
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One good thing about COVID is that I was supposed to go in for my 3 month pain management appointment today but I have COVID so I get to do a virtual appointment!
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justtogetthrough · 10 months
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I have so many tasks I need to do around the house but this weekend I can’t do anything due to being extremely sick, still, going on over a week.
My friend suggested I book a virtual appointment with Telus Health if I wanted to avoid the hospital as my only way to see a doctor.
In order to book an appointment though they need the front and back of my drivers license as well as a picture RIGHT NOW to verify the photo I submit matches my ID.
That seems like such an unnecessary invasion of privacy. If any ID, why would it not be my healthcard? When we have the appointment they could see that I match my submitted ID.
Right now I look like utter shit from having barely eaten in a whole week and having my phone turn on the front facing camera and needing to look at myself in this state and then submit the photo that will then stay in their records in this state of ill health made me cry and I closed out of it all.
Would I rather lie in the fetal position in terrible abdominal pain for the foreseeable future? No. But I’m starving and sick and I already have a serious eating disorder and body dysmorphia. Being required to take and submit a photo of myself when I am at my absolute worst just to see a doctor who may or may not be able to help without the possibility of a physical exam makes me want to die.
Healthcare in Ontario is fucking impossible.
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malewifespike · 2 years
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one good thing about the 21st century is telehealth. if i had to actually make an appt w/ my primary care doctor every time i needed more meds i would lose my mind
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