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uhc for providers :: Article Creator UnitedHealthcare And Genesis At Odds, Patients At Risk Of Losing In-network Providers The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, or SAMHSA, reported that among the people who misused prescription pain relievers in 2020, nearly 65% stated that their primary reason for doing so was to relieve physical pain. The percentage of people reporting drug misuse as a reason to get high was 11.3%. Misuse is defined as patients taking prescription medications in a way other than what has been recommended by their doctor. It might look like taking someone else's prescription or taking one's own at larger or more frequent doses, or for a longer period of time. Citing data from SAMHSA, Zinnia Health identified the most commonly misused prescription drugs in the United States, all of which are opioid analgesics, or opioid pain relievers. This class of drugs acts on the central nervous system by blo

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What To Know About Preventive Care

Most people think of scheduling an appointment to see a doctor when they are sick, but not everyone realizes how important it is to see a primary care provider (PCP) for preventive care even when you are feeling healthy.

A primary care provider could be:

  • a physician (MD or DO), or
  • an advanced practice clinician (APC) who is either a physician assistant (PA) or a nurse practitioner (NP).
  • Preventive care is important for all patients to maintain better health, and usually begins with an annual check-up. During this visit your primary care provider will:

  • get to know you, and learn about your health and family history;
  • screen for current diseases;
  • discuss medications and supplements you take;
  • check for future disease risks;
  • discuss recommended screenings based on your age, gender, family history, and risk factors;
  • update your vaccinations and immunizations;
  • discuss healthy lifestyle and challenges, such as diet and exercise; and
  • get a baseline for your health to improve care in the future.
  • Your provider can tell you if they think you should come more often than once a year.

    Regular visits with your primary care provider create a baseline for your health so you can identify changes in your health or your body that might not be normal. Schedule an appointment right away if you experience any of the following:

  • A lump you can feel anywhere in your body
  • A cough or fever that does not go away
  • Unusual aches or pains that do not go away
  • Changes in your skin or sores that don't heal
  • Losing weight without trying
  • Changes in your stool or blood in your stool
  • Identifying potential diseases early on (when you first experience symptoms) can sometimes provide more options for treatment and a better outcome.


    Making Primary Care The Primary Focus Of Our Health Care System

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    getty

    Greater use of primary care services has long been associated with better health, better care, and lower costs. But policies in support of primary care are not commensurate with their potential benefit—that must change.

    Last week's unveiling of what is being called the first "scorecard" to track the nation's commitment and investment in high-quality primary care revealed unsurprising but sobering results. Greater use of primary care services has long been associated with better health, better care, and lower costs. But policies in support of primary care are not commensurate with their potential benefit—that must change.

    Inspired by a seminal 2021 National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report on primary care, the new scorecard was developed by the Robert Graham Center and supported by the Milbank Memorial Fund and The Physician's Foundation. The findings demonstrate continued low U.S. Investment in primary care, a shrinking primary care physician workforce with too few being trained in community settings, an increasing percentage of adults reporting they do not have a usual source of care, and limited federal funding opportunities for primary care research.

    From my perspective, three significant findings are cause for concern. First, primary care physician spending across all insurance types dropped, or at best did not increase, over the last decade. While spending for nurse practitioners and physician assistant outpatient visits increased, there was no net total increase in spending among this grouping of primary care providers.

    Particularly striking is that spending was less among public payers such as Medicare and Medicaid compared to commercial insurance. Given the need to manage multiple chronic conditions and address social needs amongst these vulnerable populations, one might have hypothesized that greater primary care resources to ensure comprehensive, coordinated and patient-centered care would be utilized. That doesn't seem to be the case.

    Second, policymakers on both sides of the aisle have long touted value-based health care transformation as the pathway to unshackle the health care system from the inefficiencies of fee-for-service payments. In tracking the movement to fully capitated physician payments (the most ambitious of value-based models), researchers found no change for either primary care visits or non-primary care visits over the last decade; fully capitated visits represented only 7-9% of total visits.

    While tracking hybrid payment models (a mix of fee-for-service and capitation) would have likely demonstrated greater progress, this finding raises questions about the pace of moving toward more efficient payment models.

    Third, and perhaps most concerning is that 27.1 percent of adults in 2020 reported that they did not have a usual source of care. This number has increased over the last decade, in spite of the Affordable Care Act leading to a nearly 50% reduction in uninsured Americans during this time. A separate report issued this week by the National Association of Community Health Centers estimated that over 100 million Americans do not have access to a usual source of primary care.

    A critical benefit of health insurance is the ability to establish a trusted source of care to address acute, chronic, and preventive health issues, which studies show improve outcomes and reduce unnecessary utilization of higher-intensity care. All payers must do a better job in helping to establish and maintain primary care-patient relationships.

    The findings of this report should open policymakers' eyes. Governors and state officials can use the data to assess their state Medicaid programs' support of primary care. The Biden administration should release its long-anticipated HHS Action Plan on federal actions to further support high quality primary care. It's noteworthy that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) has signaled its interest in testing new advanced primary care payment models this year.

    Congress can also support primary care in a multitude of ways. The Senate HELP Committee has indicated interest in augmenting the health care workforce, and in doing so, the primary care workforce needs to be a focus. In addition, on Thursday, the committee will hold a hearing on the state of the nation's network of federally qualified health centers, which provide comprehensive primary care to over 30 million Americans; mandatory funding expires for these centers this year and will require reauthorization. Further, a bipartisan group of House members is also seeking input on enhancing value-based incentives for Medicare beneficiaries, which has significant implications for primary care.

    Primary care public policy has been a backburner issue for far too long. The new scorecard should provide a sense of urgency to strengthen the primary care infrastructure so that we can achieve affordable high-quality care leading to better health outcomes for all Americans.


    What Is Primary Care?

    Primary care is the first point of contact for health care for most people. It is mainly provided by GPs (general practitioners), but community pharmacists, opticians and dentists are also primary care providers.

    In general practice, the aim is to provide an easily accessible route to care, whatever the patient's problem. Primary care is based on caring for people rather than specific diseases. This means that professionals working in general practice are generalists, dealing with a broad range of physical, psychological and social problems, rather than specialists in a particular disease area.

    An important role is acting as the patient's advocate and co-ordinating the care of the many people who have multiple health problems. Since primary care practitioners often care for people over extended periods of time, the relationship between patient and doctor is particularly important. Primary care involves providing treatment for common illnesses, the management of long term illnesses such as diabetes and heart disease and the prevention of future ill-health through advice, immunisation and screening programmes.

    What is the relationship between primary care and primary health care?

    The World Health Organization distinguishes between 'primary care' and 'primary health care' in the following way:

    "Primary care is a key process in a health system that provides promotive, protective, preventive, curative, rehabilitative, and palliative services throughout the life course. Primary health care (PHC) is a broader whole-of-society approach with three components: (a) primary care and essential public health functions as a core of integrated health services; (b) multisectoral policy and action; and (c) empowered people and communities."

    See also: Primary care (PC) and primary health care (PHC). What is the difference? Laura K Muldoon , William E Hogg, Miriam Levitt. Canadian Journal of Public Health. 2006 Sep-Oct;97(5):409-11. Doi: 10.1007/BF03405354

    About the Centre for Academic Primary Care

    The Centre for Academic Primary Care is a leading centre for primary care research and teaching in the UK. We are part of Bristol Medical School.

    Learn more about our research and how it aims to improve health care and health outcomes:

    Research themes

    Four domains of primary care general practice, pharmacy, optometry, dentistry.






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