Yet CHC is a Patient Centered Medical Home, which is more than just a nice title added to the website, and the patient centered aspect shone through in the first Project ECHO teleconference. Yes, there were the introductory speeches, the photographers and the press, but the center of Project ECHO was talking about how the whole team at CHC could work together to help specific patients fighting HIV and Hepatitis C.
Yet what is often overlooked is that there are many other issues that patients embarking such treatments, especially those from underserved populations, that need to be addressed. Many of these are logistical issues. How do patients get help making sure their treatments are covered? How do they get to the office for appointments? How do they find enough stability in their lives to sufficiently comply with their treatments over an extended period to make them successful?
The kickoff Project ECHO teleconference illustrated the importance of telemedicine in a patient centered medical home context, not only by improving access for primary care providers to experts in hepatitis C, the biochemical mechanisms of action of drugs, and the psychological impacts of disease treatment programs, but to folks who can help patients navigate complex logistical issues in the treatment.
When we look at things this way, we see the importance of a patient centered focus. It is important to have specialists help primary care providers in treating chronic conditions, but what really matters is when everyone works together to make sure the patient receives all the help and treatment they need.
Description: Dr. Igor Koralnik, the co-director of Northwestern Medicine’s Comprehensive COVID-19 Center, is one of…
Dr. Leana Wen, a health news commentator for The Washington Post and CNN, is known…
Very early this morning the U.S. House passed a bill that would result in more…
Originally broadcast May 15, 2025 Millions are still living with the effects of Long COVID…
Originally broadcast May 8, 2025 Skin cancer is the most common cancer in the United…
A recent survey surprisingly found only 41% of physicians were “very confident” about their ability…