Caring for the displaced and uninsured : clinical case studies in nursing and healthcare / Leslie Neal-Boylan.

By: Neal-Boylan, Leslie [author.]
Contributor(s): Ohio Library and Information Network
Language: English Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2023Copyright date: �2023Description: 1 online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 1119866049; 9781119866046; 9781119866060; 1119866065Subject(s): Medically uninsured persons -- Medical care -- Case studies | Refugees -- Medical care -- Case studiesGenre/Form: Electronic books. | Case studies. | Case studies.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Caring for the Displaced and UninsuredDDC classification: 362.1/0425 LOC classification: RA413.7.U53 | N43 2023Online resources: OhioLINK Connect to resource | Wiley Online Library Connect to resource | Wiley Online Library Connect to resource (off-campus) Summary: Caring for the Displaced and Uninsured presents clinical case studies that focus on the issues faced primarily by patients who are uninsured, self-paying, or are visiting from their home countries. While addressing the clinical aspects of primary care for a variety of conditions, these case studies go a step further to confront the issues faced by patients who seek care in clinics for the uninsured. Each case highlights the challenges presented by cultural, language and economic differences to providing high quality care, in particular for those whose jobs negatively affect their health, such as through musculoskeletal pain, neurological problems, prolonged standing, depression, or anxiety about feeding and housing their families. The cases explore how the healthcare provider approaches care with insufficient resources for patients who may have fled torture and violence, poverty and homelessness to face new challenges in the United States. The healthcare provider plays a key role in the adjustment of people seeking a better life for themselves and their families. Caring for the Displaced and Uninsured addresses: Issues related to family, medication, food, housing, finances, work, trauma, mental health, specialty access, delayed screening, visitors, and immigration; How to think in broader terms when treating immigrant or uninsured patients; The nuances of treating patients who have lived outside of their home country, apart from their families, for many years; Tips for providing quality healthcare within the parameters that currently exist in the healthcare system.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

Includes index.

Caring for the Displaced and Uninsured presents clinical case studies that focus on the issues faced primarily by patients who are uninsured, self-paying, or are visiting from their home countries. While addressing the clinical aspects of primary care for a variety of conditions, these case studies go a step further to confront the issues faced by patients who seek care in clinics for the uninsured. Each case highlights the challenges presented by cultural, language and economic differences to providing high quality care, in particular for those whose jobs negatively affect their health, such as through musculoskeletal pain, neurological problems, prolonged standing, depression, or anxiety about feeding and housing their families. The cases explore how the healthcare provider approaches care with insufficient resources for patients who may have fled torture and violence, poverty and homelessness to face new challenges in the United States. The healthcare provider plays a key role in the adjustment of people seeking a better life for themselves and their families. Caring for the Displaced and Uninsured addresses: Issues related to family, medication, food, housing, finances, work, trauma, mental health, specialty access, delayed screening, visitors, and immigration; How to think in broader terms when treating immigrant or uninsured patients; The nuances of treating patients who have lived outside of their home country, apart from their families, for many years; Tips for providing quality healthcare within the parameters that currently exist in the healthcare system.

There are no comments for this item.

to post a comment.