Topics:
- Utilization management processes and tools
- Case management
- Continuum of care
- Referral management
- Pharmacy management
- Committees and peer review
- Clinical care strategies
- Evidence-based medicine
- Clinical guidelines
- Disease management
- Health risk assessments
Content and topic goals: There is an infrastructure of sorts
to help physicians and practices deliver cost-effective,
efficient and coordinated care to their patients. By having
programs and systems in place, clinicians can do a better
job serving individuals and also managing the larger practice
within a budget. This topic area covers several aspects
of medical and care management. It describes the extended
continuum of care and how physicians, with the help of case
managers, can coordinate and monitor care for patients who
require services beyond the practice setting. It presents
strategies and tools for managing two critical components
of care: referrals, so that generalists and specialists
can collaborate to best effect, and prescription drugs,
so that conditions are treated appropriately and cost-effectively.
Along with these approaches, the content addresses physician-directed
support systems-such as peer review mechanisms and committees-to
help each physician and the practice as a whole manage care
successfully.
Physicians and their clinical colleagues retain their fundamental responsibility of preventing, diagnosing and treating illness. To be most effective in the managed care environment, they need to apply the best-known practices to individual cases and patient groups. This topic area describes how physicians can practice evidence-based medicine, a process of finding answers to clinical questions to produce the best outcomes. A related strategy for reducing unwarranted variation across patients and providers in order to achieve the best care for all is the development and implementation of clinical guidelines for specific diagnostic and treatment situations. More inclusive approaches to treating patients with certain conditions are catalogued as disease management programs. Learners are trained to understand and apply these tools, along with the techniques for assessing risk factors in all patients in order to provide care and promote self-care as appropriate to the patient's level of need.
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