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January 22, 2007
OP-ED from the
Illinois
Academy
of Family Physicians
Fredric D. Leary, MD –
Oak Park
Chair of the Board
Javette C. Orgain, MD –
Chicago
First vice president
To verify:
Ginnie Flynn – IAFP director of public relations
630-435-0356 x118, 630-263-4613 cell or
gflynn@iafp.com
Cutting
access to care is a bad Rx for
Cook
County
There’s
an old saying: When one
door closes another one opens.
However,
if doors close in the
Cook
County
public health system, who will open a door to those patients?
If
thousands of patients lose their medical home, where will they go?
What will happen when they put off seeking health care until
they end up at the closest emergency room?
Family physicians have many questions, but the current budget
recommendations don’t provide many answers.
For
years, the County leaders used band-aid approaches to “stop the
bleeding” in the budget.
Meanwhile, the numbers of uninsured in the county are
growing and people are getting sicker. Radical
surgery on the budget won’t solve our health care crisis any more
than the band-aid has so far.
Family
Medicine physicians working at the Near South Health Center absorb
the majority of these patients referred both from emergency and the
inpatient service from
Provident
Hospital
for follow-up and primary
care. Family physicians
care for families at
Stroger
Hospital
, in the school clinics and in
the community clinics. In
short, family physicians practice where they are needed most.
Like
many of its patients, the
Cook
County
health system is suffering from many chronic problems.
When a patient suffers from multiple conditions, like
diabetes, high blood pressure, and depression, for example – that
patient needs several medications, careful monitoring and lifestyle
changes in order feel better. Family
physicians are best trained to treat the entire patient, with all
their conditions and help them navigate the health system. Family
physicians help patients prevent many of the devastating illnesses
that cost lives and precious health care dollars.
Fixing
the county health budget is much like helping a sick patient.
It takes a comprehensive family-medicine approach. It
means correctly diagnosing all the problems and monitoring the
patient while preventing future health crises.
A
“family medicine” approach to the county’s health budget is
needed to manage all the problems and prevent future failures in the
county safety net. Keep
family medicine intact in
Cook
County
so patients can keep the medical home they need.
If family physicians don’t care for the families of
Cook
County
, who will?
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