媒体问询
CareOregon与多个社区伙伴合作,帮助人们获得医疗保健、住房、就业、教育、健康食品等等。我们相信,哪怕只帮助到一个人或一个家庭,也能使整个社区变得更加强大。这就是我们所说的CareOregon效应。
请与我们联系,以获取更多信息。欢迎采访CareOregon的专家或我们的会员以获得背景资料,或为您的组织安排客座发言人。
联系方式:
Erich Ericson
品牌、营销与传播副总裁
612-226-8741
media@careoregon.org
我们的专业领域包括:
- 俄勒冈健康计划 (Medicaid)
- Medicare
- 医疗机构
- 医疗机构中的精益流程改进
- 医疗保健中以人为本的(又称以用户为中心的)设计
- 会员理事会和会员宣传工作
- 创新的会员福利方式
- 健康护理政策
品牌风格指引
如果您想分享有关CareOregon的信息,请点击此处,参考我们的品牌风格指南。
最新新闻、新闻稿和更新信息
Housecall服务方庆祝服务俄勒冈州25年
PORTLAND, Ore. -- This year marks the 25th anniversary of a unique program that provides in-home care for some of Oregon's most vulnerable residents.
Housecall Providers has expanded to three programs since it began in 1995. At any given time, its primary-care arm serves 1,500 to 1,600 patients. It also has about 120 hospice patients, and provides community-based palliative care for 150 people with serious but non-life-threatening conditions that require wraparound services.
Chief executive Rebecca Ramsay said staff is on call for patients' serious needs.
"If the patient has the flu or is having any kind of exacerbation of their chronic illness, we can make urgent visits as well," she said. "So the difference there is that we're going to the patient on an urgent basis, instead of the patient having to come to an office setting."
In 2017, the nonprofit community-benefits company CareOregon acquired Housecall Providers.
The program's primary-care medical director, Dr. Pamela Miner, said they serve homebound elderly Oregonians, people coping with physical or developmental disabilities, and those with medical or behavioral health challenges. She said the ability to provide house calls allows them to care for so-called "super-utilizers" -- the handful of Medicare beneficiaries that makes up the majority of hospital visits.
"We help prevent expensive trips to the hospital and unnecessary nursing-home stays," she said. "Not only does this set a new standard for the quality of care that patients can expect at home, it improves patient health outcomes, lowers health-care costs and improves the care team's satisfaction as well."
Miner said her team takes COVID-19 precautions on home visits and uses teleconferencing as much as possible.
In 2012, Housecall Providers began participating in the federal Independence at Home demonstration, a Medicare shared-savings model. Still, Ramsay said it's hard to remain financially viable and the program relies on donations. She said home-based service is an option many people want, and it is likely to be in even greater demand as the population ages.
"There's a lot of work to do," she said, "in order to really make sure that the health-care financing system is coming along with us in the recognition of the value of this type of care."
Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service - OR
To view the whole article click here.