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Non-COVID Healthcare

Non-COVID Healthcare

The coronavirus pandemic has changed the way medicine is practiced and will probably continue to change medicine for many years to come. Non-COVID healthcare delivery has been stressed during COVID-19 which involves the regular follow-up for hypertension, diabetes, cancer care, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and the list goes on.

There has been canceling of elective surgical procedures such as hernia and knee replacement surgeries. Obviously, the need for urgent interventions can not be postponed in cases of acute heart attacks, trauma, and other conditions that would jeopardize patient lives and survival if not done. Important decisions have to be made once the patient presented to the emergency room as coronavirus related healthcare dominated most of the healthcare facilities across the nation over the past 7 months.

Cancer care has been adversely affected as most care delivered via Telemedicine, but patients expressed that they want in-person visits for mental and psychological wellbeing. Other complicating factors such as staff shortage due to illness or caregiving responsibilities or due to an increase in mental health issues. Home-based care is replacing outpatient care, urgent care via Telemedicine which helps to continue to deliver healthcare in the safest way possible to minimize possible infection and disease transmission from COVID-19 patients or ( asymptomatic carriers) to other patients.

Telehealth can help evaluate and manage non-urgent cases, make appropriate referrals to subspecialists, monitor clinical conditions such as low blood sugar levels, and adjust medical therapy accordingly. Similarly, adjustments to blood pressure can be done in a similar way. Special considerations for in-patient facilities to have stations for hand sanitizers, use face masks, markings for monitoring social and physical distancing, limiting the number of people in the waiting room, restrict in-hospital visits. In some instances, may ask patients to wait outside in their vehicles until they are called in once a safe space is available. Innovations are continuing to help non-COVID healthcare delivery going during the middle of the pandemic as remote monitoring gadgets such as the Internet of Things (InT) will have a growing role along with using Telemedicine Technology in shaping healthcare delivery during the pandemic and in a post-COVID world both locally and globally.

  • Dr. Adel Eldin, MD, FACC, FACP, MBA, GGA
  • Board Certified Cardiologist
  • Founder, CEO
  • Affordable Quality Healthcare Program
  • www.prontocare.co
  • Founder, CEO
  • www.floridamedicaltourism.com
  • Wesley Chapel, Florida
  • Tel: 877-DR ELDIN

Please, Avoid Processed Meat

It has been confirmed in many long term studies that regular and high amounts of Red meat consumption is associated with increased risk of Cardiovascular disease and colon cancer . Thus there is a big need to change eating patterns and replacement with other healthy protein sources. It has been made clear that a major contributor to health problems and thus high cost healthcare in the USA is related to poor nutrition and unhealthy national choices which would further perpetuate a vicious cycle of poor nutrition and adverse health outcome which leads to enormous preventable waste of US healthcare dollars spent! One good example is the association of high Red Meat consumption and increased mortality.

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Coffee is good in Moderation!

Coffee is a global beverage with millions of metric tonnes consumed annually, half of which is consumed here in the US. Most type used in the world is seeds of ( Coffee Arabica). Coffee has very interesting history as the effect of wild coffee berries on goats in ( Abyssinia , currently Ethiopia was first observed in 850 AD. Then by the 15th Century was introduced in Yemen, then spread in the 16th Century to Turkey during the Ottman Empire , Egypt, North Africa, India, West Africa, Italy and rest of Europe then to the new land ( America) rest of the World

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