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Skilled Hands with a Caring Touch
       
                
Providing home health care services in Scott, Stoddard, New Madrid, Mississippi, Dunklin and Pemiscot Counties in southeast Missouri.Services Include ...
Nursing Services
   Aide Services
   Speech Therapy
   Physical Therapy
   Occupational Therapy
Medical Social Worker
   Infusion Nurses
   Home Nutrition Service
 

Info on Home Care from your friends at
Contin
u-Care of Missouri Delta Medical Center

Continu-Care offers a full compliment of homemaker services.What is Home Care?
     Home care is a service to recovering, disabled, or chronically ill people who need medical treatment and/or assistance with the activities of daily living. Generally, home care is appropriate when a person requires care, and family and friends cannot easily or effectively provide it on their own. The National Association for Home Care estimates that more than 8 million Americans currently receive home care for both acute, and long-term needs. This figures increases every day as greater numbers of people are able to leave institutions or, thanks to advancing technology, avoid ever having to enter them. State-of-the-art medical equipment for use in the home now can provide treatments and services that once were available only in the hospital.

How was Home Care Started?
     Home care has been an American tradition for more than a century. Starting in the 1880's, public health nurses traveled to patient's home, caring for the sick, teaching family members how to provide care in their absence, suggesting ways to improve health and comforting the dying. As the nurse's role in saving lives became more apparent, insurance companies started to offer visiting nurse services to their working - and middle-class policyholders faced with illness. By 1916 these services were available to more than 10 million policyholders in the United States, creating the first nationwide system of insurance payment for home-based care.

Who Provides Home Care?
     Home care services usually are provided by home care organization, but may also be obtained from registries and independent providers. Home care organizations include home health agencies, hospices, homemaker and home care aide (HCA) agencies, staffing and private-duty agencies, and companies specializing in medical equipment and supplies, pharmaceuticals, and drug infusion therapy. These organizations hire or contract with physicians; registered, licensed practical nurses; physical, occupational, speech and respiratory therapists and assistants; HCAs; dietitians; laboratory technologist; dentists and dental hygienists; pharmacists and medical social workers.

Who Pays for Home Care?
     Home Care is paid for directly by the patient and his or her family members, or thorough a variety of private and public sources. Hospices generally provide care regardless of the patient's and family's ability to pay. Private insurance programs typically cover some services for acute needs, but benefits for long-term services vary from plan to plan. Public third-party payors include Medicare, Medicaid, the Older Americans Act, the Veterans Administration, Social Services Block Grant programs, and community organizations.

What are the advantages of Home Care?
     Home Care improves our society's quality of life by enabling individuals to stay in the comfort and security of their own homes during times of illness, disability, and recuperation.

  • Home care maintains the patient's dignity and independence-qualities that commonly are lost in institutional settings.
  • Home care is less expensive than other forms of health care delivery. In 1997 the average Medicare charges per day in a hospital and skilled nursing facility were estimated at $2,121 and $454, respectively. The average Medicare charge per home care visit during this time was an estimated $88.
  • Home care offers a wide range of specialized services tailored to meet the needs of every individual on a personal provider-to-patient basis.
  • Home care reinforces and supplements informal care by educating the patient's family members and friends about the care giving process.

What is the Future of Home Care?
     By the year 2030, one in every five US citizens will be elderly. As this segment of the nation's population continues to grow faster than any other segment, and as medical technology enables more and more health care to be performed in the home, home care is sure to remain a vital part of the American health care delivery system. The unparalleled growth in the nation's older population will raise the demand for professional home care services to an all-time high.

 
 

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Missouri Delta Medical Center
1008 North Main Street • Sikeston, MO 63801
Phone 573-471-1600
info@missouridelta.com

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