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This is it: The Last Chance for EHR Stimulus Funds! Webinar
2014-07-31    
10:00 am - 11:00 am
Contact: Robert Moberg ChiroTouch 9265 Sky Park Court Suite 200 San Diego, CA 92123 Phone: 619-528-0040 ChiroTouch to Host This is it: The Last Chance [...]
RCM Best Practices
2014-07-31    
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
In today’s cost-conscious healthcare environment every dollar counts. Yet, inefficient billing processes are costing practices up to 15% of their revenue annually. The areas of [...]
Aprima 2014 User Conference and VAR Summit
2014-08-08    
12:00 am
Aprima 2014 User Conference and VAR Summit Vendor Registration Thank you for your interest in participating in the Aprima 2014 User Conference and VAR Summit. Please [...]
Innovations for Healthcare IT
2014-08-10    
All Day
At Innovations for Healthcare IT, you'll discover new techniques and methods to maximize the use of your Siemens systems and help you excel in today's [...]
Consumerization of Healthcare
2014-08-13    
1:00 pm - 1:30 pm
Join Our Complimentary Express Webinar for an overview of “The Consumerization of Healthcare” on Wednesday, August 13th at 1:00 pm ET. Consumerism in the healthcare [...]
How to use HIPAA tracking software to survive an audit
2014-08-20    
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Wednesday, August 20th from 2:00 – 3:30 EST You have done a great job with Meaningful Use but will you pass a HIPAA audit?  Bob Grant, HIPAA auditor and expert will show you how to achieve total compliance and [...]
How Healthy Is Your Practice?
2014-08-27    
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
According to recent statistics from MGMA, the typical physician practice leaves up to 30% of their potential revenue on the table every year. This money [...]
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Latest News

Jul 01 : New script for health care

script for health care

Ophthalmologist Dr. Patrick Costello removes cataracts, performs laser eye surgery and does cosmetic eyelid procedures at the free-standing Griffiss Eye Surgery Center in Rome.

Amy Neff Roth

Ophthalmologist Dr. Patrick Costello removes cataracts, performs laser eye surgery and does cosmetic eyelid procedures at the free-standing Griffiss Eye Surgery Center in Rome.

He said the center, which opened about three years ago, offers patients cheaper, faster and more convenient care than a hospital.

“Everyone is highly specialized,” he explained. “Typically, I can do two-and-a-half times as many cases at the surgery center in the same amount of time. And I’m not operating any faster. It’s the turnover of the room and the efficiency.”

His center is not alone. Two more local ambulatory surgery centers are in the works: an orthopedic, plastic and pain surgery center in Westmoreland and another for pain management in either Utica or Kirkland.

The facilities are just the latest step in a decades-old march of services moving away from hospitals into community settings, whether that be an X-ray machine in an orthopedic surgeon’s office, chemotherapy in a doctor’s office or stitches in an urgent care center.

The availability of so many services in the community raises the question: Do we still need hospitals?

Anyone who’s ever had a heart attack knows the answer is yes — but not necessarily hospitals as we know them today.
“I think to a large extent if you say hospital, it is still the brick building that care goes on in (that people think of),” said Dr. John McCabe, CEO of Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse. “But the nature of that care is changing, and I think more and more, you’re seeing movement from the hospital to a care system.”

Growing competition for patients in money-making services, falling reimbursements for the services hospitals do provide and health care reform are pushing hospitals to change what they do, where they do it and how they do it.

Consumers |in the middle

After the opening of the Griffiss Eye Surgery Center, the Mohawk Valley Health System – made up of St. Elizabeth Medical Center and Faxton St. Luke’s Healthcare – lost an estimated $11.4 million in profits between 2011 and 2013, officials estimate.

“It’s a lot of revenue that the hospital has lost and it’s a lot of profit,” said health system President and CEO Scott Perra.

That makes it harder, he said, for hospitals to offer another vital service to the community – access.

“The major difference between a medical office and a hospital is access,” said Dennis Whalen, president of the Hospital Association of New York State. “The hospital is open 24/7, 365 days a year. Anybody who walks into a hospital is required under the law to be treated, regardless of their ability to pay.”

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