Our doctors, physician assistants, nurse practitioners and nurses make home visits and provide you with medical care in your home. Our experienced staff provides each patient with a team of experienced and compassionate healthcare professionals. Through regularly scheduled visits, our team becomes familiar with patients, caregivers and family members, and establishes strong relationships that promote a better quality of life for patients confined to their homes. We provide home health care exclusively to patients in private residences, assisted living centers and independent living centers.
As experts in meeting the needs of homebound patients, we have the knowledge and experience to treat both routine and complex medical conditions. Home primary care (HBPC) interventions move the provision of primary care from an office to the patient's home. HBPC programs are rooted in the home visiting and community health outreach practices of earlier times. In the past, home visits were a standard part of health care and community health. Forty percent of doctors were making home visits in the 1930s, but this number dropped to less than 1 percent in the 1980s.
12 While home visits have returned, particularly in geriatrics, today's home visits and home care are provided in a very different health care system. Unlike the family doctor who made home visits, today most primary care providers don't see patients in multiple settings (for example, inpatient care may be the primary responsibility of hospitalists, while the HBPC team ensures coordination and smooth transitions between care facilities). Many HBPC teams specialize in home care, in the sense that they manage a panel of patients who participate in these programs and have a limited number of patients, if any, that they usually see in an office. It is a not-for-profit medical organization that provides comprehensive health care and health management services in the California Bay Area, with a focus on people living with HIV (PLWH). Our services are customer-focused and cover the full range of our participants' needs, from medical to psychosocial and everything in between.
We pride ourselves on providing the highest level of care at no cost to the participant, while providing a caring and accepting environment in which everyone is treated with the dignity and humanity they deserve. It is committed to offering affordable and accessible healthcare that meets the needs of our customers. From case management to direct medical and health services, we ensure that every patient is educated, informed and empowered to achieve well-being and health through care and support. Some of our programs focus on specialized HIV care. Health Care,16 refers to the potential opportunity both to reduce costs and to improve the quality of care and increase patient well-being.
Because primary care members can receive fast, dedicated care when they need it, their overall health improves. Developing and evaluating interventions for HBPC is important because the number of people who can benefit from this model of care is large and growing. This will help us to have a more complete picture of your health and will allow us to better coordinate your care. A common misconception is that these two terms are interchangeable and describe the same type of health care services. We work together to develop care plans that address a wide range of physical, emotional and social health needs.
Studies on HBPC span more than 20 years and have been conducted in several countries, so it is likely that routine care has had different meanings. Primary Care At Home has worked diligently to create a superior practice model for patients confined to their homes. Caregivers feel supported and often relieved to receive medical care for a loved one at home. For more information about this new Medicare program, visit the Primary Care First website or call 1-800-MEDICARE.
First, we'll address home health care, a term that comes up frequently when we talk about health and wellness services for the elderly. Watch the video to hear what home primary care providers, the veterans they care for, and their families have to say about this program. As part of this program, Medicare will begin to share some of your personal health information with us, for example, when you receive care in hospitals, emergency departments and specialized offices. Given the variability between populations, it is understandable that HBPC interventions have broad objectives, ranging from preventing falls to providing palliative care.