Publication | Closed Access
The emerging health care world: implications for social work practice and education.
114
Citations
21
References
1996
Year
Family MedicineChronic IllnessesSocial Work PolicySocial Work PracticeHealth Care ManagementSocial WorkHospital MedicineProfessional RolesPrimary CareChronic Disease ManagementConnected HealthDigital HealthHealth Care WorldPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth EducationCare DeliveryHealth SciencesIntegrated CareSocial WorkerHealth PolicyHealth WorkforceNursingHealth SystemsSchool Social WorkSocial Work ResearchSocial Policy
Advances in technology and new financing models are driving dramatic changes in patient care delivery, shifting the U.S. health system from an acute-disease paradigm to a community-oriented, primary-care network focused on managing chronic illnesses, where social workers provide continuous care across the continuum.
Dramatic changes in patient care delivery have been stimulated by advances in technology and new approaches to the financing of health care. Traditionally, the American health care system has been based on a paradigm of unpredictable acute simple disease, a model that has become inappropriate as increasing numbers of patients are presenting with multiple, chronic health problems. Because chronic illnesses are determined by many factors, such as an individual's social, psychological, and physical environment; genetic makeup; and health care accessibility factors, the hospital, once the dominant organization in health care, must become part of a primary care network of community-oriented delivery systems focused on chronic disease management. In this model, the social worker treats the patient throughout the continuum of care. Therefore, dynamic training that addresses the changing health care environment will be needed. In addition, social workers will need to work as members of a team in addressing the needs of patients for preventive, curative, and rehabilitative services.
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