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Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Preventative Health Care for the Outpatient Population

 

As Americans spend more time at work, the demands placed on them to stay productive have only increased. But the demands of life outside the office have remained largely unchanged. With longer commutes, increased social media usage and long shifts at work, Americans are spending more time in the “office.” That means that the prevention that used to take place once a person was past their initial health concerns is now a priority every day.  As a result, many Americans are going to the doctor more often than ever before.

Because preventive care is not just important for the patient — it’s an essential part of the doctor’s working life, too. That’s why it’s important for doctors and their staff to have the right tools available to help them stay on top of everything they need to do with their patients. Below, the dedicated and compassionate team of professionals from ParCare Community Health Network will explain how healthcare providers can help in providing preventive care.

 

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Exploring the Role of Primary Care: A Shift Towards Preventive Medicine

 

Did you know that half of all heart disease, strokes, cancer and diabetes could be prevented if people had access to better primary care?

Access to affordable and high-quality care is a major challenge for many Americans. But the benefits of having regular primary care go beyond preventing disease. Keeping track of your health and getting preventive care could actually make you live longer and healthier. Primary care is the first place to go for advice on health and disease. It’s where you get a broad picture of your health, not just a diagnosis. In fact, getting regular checkups is one of the 10 pillars of primary care.

The primary care doctors at ParCare Community Health Network are the gatekeepers to speciality care. ParCare is a multi-speciality center that provides the community with the most affordable and accessible health care options. The ParCare Community Health Network provides a variety of services including primary care, internal medicine, dermatology, physical therapy, and pediatrics.

 


What is Primary Care?

Primary care is a critical component in preventing disease. It’s an essential component of public health and medicine, and it helps you get early diagnosis for illnesses and injuries that might otherwise become fatal.

ParCare Community Health Network primary care physicians provide preventive care, treatment for common conditions, and manage chronic illnesses. They work to prevent illness before it happens. They also help you stay healthy by providing regular medical screenings. If you have a primary care doctor, they can check your blood pressure, cholesterol levels, or weight at each visit. They can also recommend medication if necessary to improve your health.

Every year thousands of people die of heart disease or cancer because they either don’t know they have the illness or they ignore the warning signs that something is wrong with their health and get diagnosed too late.

If you want to reduce your risk of becoming ill, make sure you have a primary care doctor that provides regular medical checkups so any potential problems can be identified early on in their development.

 

What is the Role of the Primary Care Physician?

The primary care physician is the first line of defense in illness prevention. They provide medical screening, early diagnosis, and treatment for a wide range of illnesses and injuries. This is why it’s so important to have regular checkups with your primary care physician. They can provide you with information about how to stay healthy and prevent diseases that are more likely to affect people over a certain age.

When it comes to treating patients, ParCare Community Health Network is truly about creating relationships and taking care of the whole person. It is important that no patient is turned away for proper health care due to lack of ability to pay and is the belief of ParCare that everyone should have access to affordable care. ParCare accepts most types of insurance, including Medicaid, and offers sliding scale payment fee.

 

Why is Primary Care Important?

Despite advances in medicine, the leading causes of death in America are still preventable. Heart disease and cancer take many lives each year, but these diseases are largely preventable with a healthy lifestyle and early intervention.

Primary care plays an important role in prevention. It provides medical screening, early diagnosis, and treatment for a wide range of illnesses and injuries. When you have a primary care doctor and receive regular checkups, you can help stave off many of the leading causes of death in the United States.

Primary care is one of the most important factors in your health because it focuses on preventing illness rather than treating it after the fact. A visit to your doctor can include screenings for blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, heart disease, stroke risk (carotid artery), breast cancer (mammogram), prostate cancer (PSA or digital rectal exam), cervical cancer (Pap test or HPV DNA test) and more. These screenings can detect problems before they become serious health risks-saving both time and money down the line.

 

Steps You Can Take to Prevent Disease

There are many ways you can take steps to reduce your risk of disease. You can learn about the leading causes of death in the U.S. and take steps to avoid them. It’s important that primary care doctors screen for conditions like heart disease, cancer, and diabetes.

In addition, you can make lifestyle changes that affect your health. For example, if you smoke, quitting is a good way to cut your risk of lung cancer in half and greatly reduce your risk of coronary artery disease. If you eat well and stay active by walking for 30 minutes each day, you will have a lower chance of developing type 2 diabetes or heart disease in the future.

 

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

6 Things You Didn't Know About Internal Medicine


Internal medicine is the branch of medicine that deals with the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of illness involving internal organs. Practitioners specialize in one or more organ systems including cardiology (heart), gastroenterology (digestion), nephrology (kidneys), pulmonology (lungs), rheumatology (joints), among others.

Internal Medicine physicians practice general internal medicine or subspecialize in a particular area like cardiology or oncology. ParCare Community Health Network is a multi-specialty health center providing such services as primary care, internal medicine, dermatology, physical therapy, and pediatrics. ParCare's specialty departments feature experts in every field, from Cardiologists to OBGYN, along with a full-time general internist. With years of experience and impressive credentials, each doctor provides his patient with personalized plan. Below, the healthcare specialists from Parcare explain the six things you didn't know about Internal Medicine.

Monday, September 27, 2021

Primary Care - The Place to Identify and Deal with Social Determinants

 

Primary health care (PHC) is the frontline care of the health care system that is comprehensive and coordinated. PHC provides multidisciplinary, patient-centered care with a focus on both the treatment and prevention of various conditions. It is the first point of contact to keep people well and improve their quality of life. A strong, accessible PHC system reduces pressure on hospitals by supporting people to manage their health issues in the society. The ultimate goal of primary health care is better health for all.

ParCare Community Health Network is multi-specialty healthcare center committed to providing the best care for our patients, educating health professionals and leaders for the future, pursuing discovery research in all of its forms, including basic, clinical, and population-based research, and serving our community.

ParCare's network includes outstanding doctors who specialize in primary care, internal medicine, dermatology, physical therapy, and pediatrics.

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Osteoarthritis Pain Management

Osteoarthritis is a degenerative disease that affects the articular cartilage, causing pain, functional limitation and sometimes deformity.

Here, experts from Parcare Community Health Network will explain more about osteoarthritis and will share with you tips for its management.

Experts from Parcare Community Health Network assure that the pain is produced "by the changes that occur in the joint". It may be that the articular cartilage is badly damaged, almost destroyed, that the synovial membrane (the tendon sheaths) has become inflamed or that there has been a narrowing of the joint space, among other causes.


According to the World Health Organization (WHO), osteoarthritis is one of the four diseases that affect the loss of quality of life of citizens who suffer from it, because it limits them in their social and work life. In addition, it is, along with fibromyalgia and osteoporosis, one of the chronic ailments that imply a significant use of social health resources and a high consumption of drugs.

A specialist in Traumatology at Parcare Community Health Network explains that this degenerative pathology is influenced by factors such as age, family history, obesity, repetitive microtrauma and previous cartilaginous injury, among others. In osteoarthritis such as that of the hip, as explained by a orthopedic surgeon at the NY-based healthcare providerParcare Community Health Network, several factors correlate and condition instability in the joint. A different distribution of loads and / or micro-trauma are generating structural damage to the articular cartilage.

Therefore, it is important to go a the specialist on order to control the progression of osteoarthritis. Parcare specialists  also recommend going to a consultation if you feel a pain constant pain in the joints, even if not severe. Specialized medical attention will help to slow down the progress of the disease.

Parcare Community Health Network specialists share some recommendations that can help slow the progression of this degenerative disease.

 

Natural tips to control osteoarthritis

Take care of your posture

Exercise gently. Find a good maintenance exercise program to mobilize your joints.

Straighten your back when sitting

Avoid sitting for a long time

Follow a healthy diet and monitor calcium intake

Try to control pain without medication

Don't strain your joints, especially on days or when you're in pain

Limit prolonged use of heels for special occasions. Narrow shoes are not good either.

Avoid foods rich in purines and uric acid, such as fatty meats, cold cuts, seafood, and some vegetables such as cauliflower, asparagus, peas, and spinach.

Follow healthy habits and don't smoke. Limit your alcohol intake.


How pain management and exercise are approached in patients with advanced osteoarthritis is very important. For example, the health group at Parcare Community Health Network, have developed an integrated care plan, with the aim of improving the quality of life of the patients with osteoarthritis. In this program a multidisciplinary approach is carried out, which includes education related to chronic pain, how to manage it, how to have a healthy lifestyle and a broad practical component in which patients learn to perform a therapeutic exercise that allows them to improve their quality of life. life and its functionality, always adapting to your capabilities and needs.

Monday, June 21, 2021

How to Prevent Potential Illnesses?

 

In the Preamble to its Constitution, which came into force in 1948, the World Health Organization (WHO) defines health as "a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not just the absence of diseases or illnesses."

This state and the absence of disease have a direct impact on our quality of life and the years we enjoy it. In fact, medical advances and increased economic development have allowed Americans to live longer. Thus, in recent decades, life expectancy has improved greatly throughout the world including the United States.

ParCare Community Health Network is a Brooklyn multi-specialty health center providing such services as primary care, internal medicine, dermatology, physical therapy, and pediatrics; helping patients to maintain optimal health and prevent potential diseases. ParCare is a culturally sensitive center that provides the community with the most affordable and accessible health care options.


What Diseases Affect us the Most?

According to data published by the National Institute of Statistics (INE), diseases of the circulatory system were the leading cause of death, followed by tumors and diseases of the respiratory system. Nervous system pathologies, including Alzheimer's, were the fourth leading cause of death.

In addition, there are plenty of health problems and diseases that are just as serious as they are common. Among them are the following:

Cardiovascular diseases: These are pathologies that can affect the heart (heart attack, angina pectoris and heart failure) and other organs, such as the brain (hemorrhage or cerebral infarction) or the kidney (renal failure). Its appearance is determined by risk factors such as hypercholesterolemia (too high blood cholesterol levels) and hypertension (too high blood pressure).

Diabetes: This is a chronic condition that occurs when the body loses its ability to produce enough insulin or to use it effectively, causing too much sugar in your blood (hyperglycemia). Over time, this glucose ends up damaging the tissues, deterioration that in the long term causes alterations, dysfunctions and insufficiencies in organs such as the eyes, kidneys, nerves, heart and blood vessels.

Overweight and obesity: obesity in our country has increased from 7.4% to 17.0% in the last twenty-five years. Furthermore, 37% of Americans adults are overweight and three out of ten children and adolescents are overweight or obese. Both are risk factors for hypercholesteremia, hypertension, and diabetes.

Chronic respiratory diseases (CKD): The WHO includes in this category asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), respiratory allergies, occupational lung diseases and pulmonary hypertension, among others.

Stress: Although there are no epidemiological data, one in three patients who visit ParCare Community Health Network, a NYC-based healthcare provider, has symptoms derived from stress. According to the American Society for the Study of Anxiety and Stress, negative, intense stress that persists for a long period of time increases the probability of developing anxiety problems, chronic fatigue, exhaustion and other problems of health such as infectious processes or psychophysiological disorders.

At ParCare Community Health Network, we strive to provide high quality patient care, we view each patient holistically and truly care about the overall patient experience. We embrace a value driven approach to health care that is high-quality, comprehensive, and supported with best in class technology and people. Our philosophy is that partnering with patients and their families requires a thorough understanding and respect of each patient’s unique needs, culture, values and treatment preferences.

ParCare Community Health Network: Bridging Healthcare Gaps

When it comes to primary care, the benefits are undeniable – increased longevity and a better quality of life. However, many individuals fac...