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Medicine Merit Badge Class 4

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Present views of member, lobby congress, education, sharing information ... Little incentive in several areas of preventive care: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Medicine Merit Badge Class 4


1
Medicine Merit BadgeClass 4
  • By Pedro Gelabert

2
Overview
  • Class 1
  • History of Medicine
  • Key Figures
  • Hippocratic Oath
  • Class 2
  • Health Care Provider-Patient Relationship
  • Health Care Professions
  • Medical Education and Specialties
  • Class 3
  • The Practice of Medicine
  • Class 4
  • Influencing Medical Practice
  • Medicine - Here and Abroad

3
Influencing Medical Practice
  • Role of Religion
  • Patient or doctor religious belief dictates
    boundaries on social issues, such as, cloning,
    stem cell research, assisted suicide, withholding
    of medical care, abortion, prayer and meditation
    vs. anti-depressants
  • Role of Federal Government
  • Executive Branch
  • proposes health-care programs, example Medicare
    and Medicaid
  • sets/restricts research, example embryonic stem
    cell research
  • Legislative Branch
  • control allocation of funds, set fees for
    Medicare and Medicaid
  • Judicial Branch
  • makes decision on social issues like abortion,
    right to refuse medical treatment, right to die,
    etc.

4
Influencing Medical Practice
  • Role of State Government
  • Practice Acts - Determines parameters for
    practice of health-care within its borders
  • Minimum requirements for education and training
  • Certifies qualified individuals
  • Investigates complaints
  • Provides health care for poor, manages Medicaid
  • Role of Insurance Companies
  • Cost of health care spread over a large group of
    people - healthy subsidize the cost of healthcare
    for sick
  • Negotiates fixed fees for all treatments and
    procedures
  • Set best practices for treatment
  • Role of Professional Societies
  • Present views of member, lobby congress,
    education, sharing information

5
Medicine in the US and abroad
  • Factors influencing health-care delivery
  • Resources developed vs developing countries
  • Specialization primary care vs specialists
  • Values
  • Life sustaining care
  • Essential care
  • Elective care example cosmetic surgery
  • Expectations

6
Medicine in the US
  • Capitalist with some socialism
  • Capitalism
  • Good doctors get paid more, bad doctors paid less
  • Can you afford it? Postpone care until absolutely
    necessary which leads to more expensive
    treatments
  • Socialism
  • Medicaid available to families with income very
    close to poverty level (0-30 more than poverty
    level)
  • Little incentive in several areas of preventive
    care
  • Exercise, quit smoking, nutrition and diets, etc.
  • Total cost unpredictable
  • Depends on health care provided and free market
    values

7
Medicine in Sweden
  • Why Sweden?
  • Similar quality of life education, housing,
    transportation, available goods and services
  • Nationalized
  • Everybody entitled to healthcare, same standard
    level of care
  • Paid through high taxes and small copayments
  • Rich can go to private practitioners or another
    country
  • Management spread out (regional or city
    government)
  • Physicians receive a salary
  • Total costs are predictable
  • Greater emphasis on preventive care
  • System is rigid and bureaucratic (lots of
    paperwork)
  • New technologies and procedures take longer to be
    introduced due to impact on overall costs

8
Medicine in Canada
  • Why Canada?
  • Similar quality of life education, housing,
    transportation, available goods and services
  • US neighbor
  • Nationalized
  • Government directed program with some private
    healthcare
  • Healthcare personnel employed by state government
    and salaried
  • Program paid by taxes
  • System is rigid and bureaucratic (lots of
    paperwork)
  • New technologies and procedures take longer to be
    introduced due to impact on overall costs

9
Medicine in China
  • Why China?
  • Developing nation, mostly rural, large
    population, most of the population at poverty
    level
  • Government controlled
  • Medical services vary greatly
  • Village doctor with 3-6 month training
  • Township health centers
  • Large county hospitals similar to US
  • Cost paid by government with recently patients
    paying for some of the cost

10
Medicine in Mexico
  • Why Mexico?
  • Developing nation, large cities and rural areas,
    most of the population at poverty level
  • Private and Nationalized
  • Less money available than Canada thus, more
    limited services
  • Lower expectations by the Mexican people
  • Less specialists, more primary care physicians

11
Comparisons
  • US has the most sophisticated medical and
    surgical technology
  • US infant mortality higher than several other
    developed nations, like Sweden. Some areas has
    the same infant mortality as China
  • US has higher violent deaths (guns, knifes)
  • US has higher lifestyle issues
  • Obesity, smoking, heart disease, diabetes
  • US has rising healthcare costs
  • US has 45M uninsured (US population 290M)
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