Healthcare Glossary


Quality Quest for Health of Illinois

Blog: Category: Insurers & Health Plans

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What is Necessary Care?

By: Dr. Robert Parker, on July 19, 2010

A 57-year-old low risk healthcare worker went into his physician office recently for a completely routine check-up.  He had no complaints and the internist proceeded to probing the chronic problem list with questions.  The blood pressure was under excellent control on Lisinopril.  A 2008 lipid profile showed the cholesterol under excellent control with Simvastatin.  The last hearing evaluation was from 2006 and the patient had no sense of worsening high frequency hearing loss.  The sleep apnea appeared under good control and there had been no weight gain since a CPAP machine was started in 2006.  A colonoscopy done in 2000, at age 47, for occasional blood noted on the toilet tissue, was negative. There were no new GI symptoms and the hemocult exam was negative.  A review of past immunizations disclosed the absence of a hepatitis A or B vaccine. The physical was normal except for a small mole on the back that was “probably normal.  

Quality Quest Awareness Campaign

By: Dr. Gail Amundson, on July 2, 2010

Patients and families have the potential to be one of the most powerful forces driving improvement in our healthcare system. Quality Quest for Health of Illinois is working to make sure people have information to help them get excellent healthcare. The healthcare they need and deserve. We're on a quest to improve healthcare and you can help.

The Medical Home- Will It Deliver On Its Promise?

By: Dr. Michael Jongerius, on June 28, 2010

So what exactly is this new “Patient Centered Medical Home” (PCMH) and why has it become  the new buzzword for healthcare reform? Matter of fact, it is mentioned at least 15 times in the recent healthcare reform legislation.  Recognizing that having access to primary care is the key to improving healthcare outcomes, everyone from payers, purchasers, physicians and patients are hoping that the medical home will improve quality and drive down healthcare costs.

 

Electronic Record Keeping

By: Quality Quest Staff, on June 15, 2010

A substantial part of reducing waste in healthcare can be accomplished through widespread institution of electronic health records (EHRs). Too often, tests and procedures are repeated on patients because the providers do not have records of what care the patient has already had. This kind of unnecessary care makes up more than $500 billion every year that, with EHRs, could be cut out of healthcare spending. EHRs are also useful in tracking both long- and short-term care schedules, keeping providers and patients aware of when procedures like mammograms, colonoscopies, and diabetes-related tests need to be done.

Physician Shares His Practice's Service and Clinical Performance With Patients

By: Quality Quest Staff, on June 3, 2010

An Interview with Dr. Michael Jongerius

I'm originally from St. Louis and I went to college and medical school at the University of Missouri in Columbia. After that, I did my primary care residency in York, PA. I then started practicing medicine in Peoria to fulfill a commitment with the Health Service Corps. When I completed that, I intended to go back to St. Louis to practice, but there was an opening that appealed to me for a physician in a Methodist rural practice in Princeville, that included a large migrant health population. Following some time there, I had the opportunity to help start a practice on an expanding edge of Peoria. Several years down the road, I decided to take an administrative position, but before long, I missed the clinical work. I wanted to return to practicing medicine, but do it differently than before, in my own way. That leads me to where I am today, in my Junction Medical practice which I opened in January 2009.

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