jeudi 25 avril 2019

Without A Walk In Physician Clinic Annandale VA Patients Have No Other Options

By Anthony Baker


Over the past decade or two amazing advances have been made in the field of medicine. Diseases that were virtual death sentences can now be treated successfully. Sadly, the vast majority of people still have to accept these diseases as death sentences because they cannot afford the exorbitant fees charged by doctors and hospitals. Those without medical insurance have very few options and without a walk in physician clinic Annandale VA patients will often have no options at all.

There are approximately eleven thousands clinics spread across nine thousand regions across the United States. Many of the clinics, especially those run by churches and charities are free of charge. Others, such as those run by pharmacies and local authorities charge a nominal fee. These clinics are not formally organized in any way and there is no or little central coordination. Patients cannot make appointments but simply have to wait their turn.

There are no treatment standards shared by all the clinics. The levels of service that they offer vary. There are some that will only accept emergency cases. Others concentrate upon child care and family planning. Many clinics, especially those run by pharmacies, offer a wider range of services ranging from treating minor wounds to providing relief for the symptoms of common ailments.

These clinics remain very popular under those that cannot afford private medical care. They may only offer rudimentary treatment but in many cases that is all that is needed. They do not ask questions and provide help to anyone needing it. Even an illegal immigrant will be assisted. Most patients also enjoy the fact that clinics are often open for long hours.

Critics do praise the efforts of those trying to help the poor but they nevertheless maintain the position that these clinics simply do not provide proper medical care. They have too little staff and most patients have to wait for many hours to get helped. The long queues make it impossible to spend sufficient time with every patient. Under those circumstances proper medical care is simply not possible.

Very few clinics have a doctor on board although a few of them depend upon the occasional visit from doctors wanting to be involved in community work. Nurses tending to patients cannot make accurate diagnoses and they are not qualified to prescribe medication. Very few facilities have equipment such as X ray machines and other life saving diagnostic tools. As a result, the treatment is almost always symptomatically.

Clinics treat patients at face value and have no access to their medical histories. This, critics say, is a major drawback of the system. If the person tending to the patient does not know his medical history he cannot know whether the patient is allergic for anything, whether he abuses substances or what illnesses he suffered from before. In those circumstances it is all too easy to make mistakes that can be detrimental.

There can be absolutely no argument that the poor and disenfranchised do not have access to quality medical care. They have to be satisfied with very basic care from clinics that are themselves under tremendous pressure. One can only hope that the authorities will start to see decent medical care as a basic human right.




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