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  2. Hospital readmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_Readmission

    The range of time for this care varies but the bundling time can start 3 days prior to the acute care. [20] One of the advantages of the bundled payment program is that it incentivizes hospitals not to discharge patients too early, as the post-acute care facility will just have to deal with the implications that come with that. [20]

  3. Admission, discharge, and transfer system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admission,_discharge,_and...

    Core business systems are systems used in a health care facility for financial payment, quality improvement, and encouraging best practices that research has proven beneficial. Used in health care, an ADT system is usually the foundation for other types of health care information systems because it holds valuable patient information such as a ...

  4. Acute care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_care

    Acute care may require a stay in a hospital emergency department, ambulatory surgery center, urgent care centre or other short-term stay facility, along with the assistance of diagnostic services, surgery, or follow-up outpatient care in the community. [2] Hospital-based acute inpatient care typically has the goal of discharging patients as ...

  5. Inpatient care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inpatient_care

    The concept of hospitalist medicine provides around-the-clock inpatient care from physicians whose sole practice is the hospital itself. They work with the community of primary care physicians to provide inpatient care and transition patients back to the care of their primary care provider upon discharge.

  6. Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Medical...

    The Hill-Burton Act of 1946, which provided federal assistance for the construction of community hospitals, established nondiscrimination requirements for institutions that received such federal assistance—including the requirement that a "reasonable volume" of free emergency care be provided for community members who could not pay—for a period for 20 years after the hospital's construction.

  7. Medical guideline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_guideline

    Plates vi & vii of the Edwin Smith Papyrus (around the 17th century BC), among the earliest medical guidelines. A medical guideline (also called a clinical guideline, standard treatment guideline, or clinical practice guideline) is a document with the aim of guiding decisions and criteria regarding diagnosis, management, and treatment in specific areas of healthcare.

  8. How long will flags be at half-staff? Here's what to know ...

    www.aol.com/news/long-flags-half-staff-heres...

    President Joe Biden ordered a national day of mourning in January and flags to be displayed at half-staff following President Jimmy Carter's death.

  9. Bethesda Hospital (Saint Paul, Minnesota) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bethesda_Hospital_(Saint...

    Bethesda Hospital is one of only two long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs) in Minnesota. Long-term acute care hospitals deliver specialized, extended, aggressive medical care for patients who have experienced a life-changing illness or injury like stroke, multiple organ failure following major surgery, traumatic accidents involving spinal ...