Read The Official Patient's Sourcebook on Lupus Online
Authors: MD James N. Parker,PH.D Philip M. Parker
·
Massachusetts:
Treadwell Library Consumer Health Reference Center
(Massachusetts General Hospital),
http://www.mgh.harvard.edu/library/chrcindex.html
·
Massachusetts:
UMass HealthNet (University of Massachusetts Medical
School),
http://healthnet.umassmed.edu/
·
Michigan:
Botsford General Hospital Library - Consumer Health
(Botsford General Hospital, Library & Internet Services),
http://www.botsfordlibrary.org/consumer.htm
·
Michigan:
Helen DeRoy Medical Library (Providence Hospital and
Medical Centers),
http://www.providence-hospital.org/library/
·
Michigan:
Marquette General Hospital - Consumer Health Library
(Marquette General Hospital, Health Information Center),
http://www.mgh.org/center.html
·
Michigan:
Patient Education Resouce Center - University of Michigan
Cancer Center (University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center),
http://www.cancer.med.umich.edu/learn/leares.htm
·
Michigan:
Sladen Library & Center for Health Information Resources -
Consumer Health Information,
http://www.sladen.hfhs.org/library/consumer/index.html
·
Montana:
Center for Health Information (St. Patrick Hospital and Health Sciences Center),
http://www.saintpatrick.org/chi/librarydetail.php3?ID=41
154 Lupus Nephritis
·
National:
Consumer Health Library Directory (Medical Library
Association, Consumer and Patient Health Information Section),
http://caphis.mlanet.org/directory/index.html
·
National:
National Network of Libraries of Medicine (National Library of Medicine) - provides library services for health professionals in the
United States who do not have access to a medical library,
http://nnlm.gov/
·
National:
NN/LM List of Libraries Serving the Public (National Network of Libraries of Medicine),
http://nnlm.gov/members/
·
Nevada:
Health Science Library, West Charleston Library (Las Vegas
Clark County Library District),
http://www.lvccld.org/special_collections/medical/index.htm
·
New Hampshire:
Dartmouth Biomedical Libraries (Dartmouth College
Library),
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~biomed/resources.htmld/conshealth.htmld/
·
New Jersey:
Consumer Health Library (Rahway Hospital),
http://www.rahwayhospital.com/library.htm
·
New Jersey:
Dr. Walter Phillips Health Sciences Library (Englewood
Hospital and Medical Center),
http://www.englewoodhospital.com/links/index.htm
·
New Jersey:
Meland Foundation (Englewood Hospital and Medical
Center),
http://www.geocities.com/ResearchTriangle/9360/
·
New York:
Choices in Health Information (New York Public Library) -
NLM Consumer Pilot Project participant,
http://www.nypl.org/branch/health/links.html
·
New York:
Health Information Center (Upstate Medical University, State University of New York),
http://www.upstate.edu/library/hic/
·
New York:
Health Sciences Library (Long Island Jewish Medical Center),
http://www.lij.edu/library/library.html
·
New York:
ViaHealth Medical Library (Rochester General Hospital),
http://www.nyam.org/library/
·
Ohio:
Consumer Health Library (Akron General Medical Center, Medical
& Consumer Health Library),
http://www.akrongeneral.org/hwlibrary.htm
·
Oklahoma:
Saint Francis Health System Patient/Family Resource Center (Saint Francis Health System),
http://www.sfh-tulsa.com/patientfamilycenter/default.asp
Finding Medical Libraries 155
·
Oregon:
Planetree Health Resource Center (Mid-Columbia Medical
Center),
http://www.mcmc.net/phrc/
·
Pennsylvania:
Community Health Information Library (Milton S.
Hershey Medical Center),
http://www.hmc.psu.edu/commhealth/
·
Pennsylvania:
Community Health Resource Library (Geisinger Medical
Center),
http://www.geisinger.edu/education/commlib.shtml
·
Pennsylvania:
HealthInfo Library (Moses Taylor Hospital),
http://www.mth.org/healthwellness.html
·
Pennsylvania:
Hopwood Library (University of Pittsburgh, Health
Sciences Library System),
http://www.hsls.pitt.edu/chi/hhrcinfo.html
·
Pennsylvania:
Koop Community Health Information Center (College of
Physicians of Philadelphia),
http://www.collphyphil.org/kooppg1.shtml
·
Pennsylvania:
Learning Resources Center - Medical Library
(Susquehanna Health System),
http://www.shscares.org/services/lrc/index.asp
·
Pennsylvania:
Medical Library (UPMC Health System),
http://www.upmc.edu/passavant/library.htm
·
Quebec, Canada:
Medical Library (Montreal General Hospital),
http://ww2.mcgill.ca/mghlib/
·
South Dakota:
Rapid City Regional Hospital - Health Information Center (Rapid City Regional Hospital, Health Information Center),
http://www.rcrh.org/education/LibraryResourcesConsumers.htm
·
Texas:
Houston HealthWays (Houston Academy of Medicine-Texas
Medical Center Library),
http://hhw.library.tmc.edu/
·
Texas:
Matustik Family Resource Center (Cook Children’s Health Care
System),
http://www.cookchildrens.com/Matustik_Library.html
·
Washington:
Community Health Library (Kittitas Valley Community
Hospital),
http://www.kvch.com/
·
Washington:
Southwest Washington Medical Center Library (Southwest
Washington Medical Center),
http://www.swmedctr.com/Home/
Your Rights and Insurance 157
APPENDIX E. YOUR RIGHTS AND INSURANCE
Overview
Any patient with lupus nephritis faces a series of issues related more to the
healthcare industry than to the medical condition itself. This appendix
covers two important topics in this regard: your rights and responsibilities as a patient, and how to get the most out of your medical insurance plan.
Your Rights as a Patient
The President’s Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality
in the Healthcare Industry has created the following summary of your rights
as a patient.
56
Information Disclosure
Consumers have the right to receive accurate, easily understood information.
Some consumers require assistance in making informed decisions about
health plans, health professionals, and healthcare facilities. Such information includes:
·
Health plans.
Covered benefits, cost-sharing, and procedures for resolving complaints, licensure, certification, and accreditation status,
comparable measures of quality and consumer satisfaction, provider
network composition, the procedures that govern access to specialists
and emergency services, and care management information.
56Adapted from Consumer Bill of Rights and Responsibilities:
http://www.hcqualitycommission.gov/press/cbor.html#head1
.
158 Lupus Nephritis
·
Health professionals.
Education, board certification, and recertification, years of practice, experience performing certain procedures, and
comparable measures of quality and consumer satisfaction.
·
Healthcare facilities.
Experience in performing certain procedures and services, accreditation status, comparable measures of quality, worker,
and consumer satisfaction, and procedures for resolving complaints.
·
Consumer assistance programs.
Programs must be carefully structured to promote consumer confidence and to work cooperatively with health
plans, providers, payers, and regulators. Desirable characteristics of such
programs are sponsorship that ensures accountability to the interests of
consumers and stable, adequate funding.
Choice of Providers and Plans
Consumers have the right to a choice of healthcare providers that is
sufficient to ensure access to appropriate high-quality healthcare. To ensure
such choice, the Commission recommends the following:
·
Provider network adequacy.
All health plan networks should provide access to sufficient numbers and types of providers to assure that all
covered services will be accessible without unreasonable delay --
including access to emergency services 24 hours a day and 7 days a week.
If a health plan has an insufficient number or type of providers to
provide a covered benefit with the appropriate degree of specialization,
the plan should ensure that the consumer obtains the benefit outside the
network at no greater cost than if the benefit were obtained from
participating providers.
·
Women’s health services.
Women should be able to choose a qualified provider offered by a plan -- such as gynecologists, certified nurse
midwives, and other qualified healthcare providers -- for the provision of
covered care necessary to provide routine and preventative women’s
healthcare services.
·
Access to specialists.
Consumers with complex or serious medical conditions who require frequent specialty care should have direct access
to a qualified specialist of their choice within a plan’s network of
providers. Authorizations, when required, should be for an adequate
number of direct access visits under an approved treatment plan.
·
Transitional care.
Consumers who are undergoing a course of treatment for a chronic or disabling condition (or who are in the second or third
trimester of a pregnancy) at the time they involuntarily change health
Your Rights and Insurance 159
plans or at a time when a provider is terminated by a plan for other than
cause should be able to continue seeing their current specialty providers
for up to 90 days (or through completion of postpartum care) to allow for
transition of care.
·
Choice of health plans.
Public and private group purchasers should, wherever feasible, offer consumers a choice of high-quality health
insurance plans.
Access to Emergency Services
Consumers have the right to access emergency healthcare services when and
where the need arises. Health plans should provide payment when a
consumer presents to an emergency department with acute symptoms of
sufficient severity--including severe pain--such that a “prudent layperson”
could reasonably expect the absence of medical attention to result in placing
that consumer’s health in serious jeopardy, serious impairment to bodily
functions, or serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
Participation in Treatment Decisions
Consumers have the right and responsibility to fully participate in all
decisions related to their healthcare. Consumers who are unable to fully
participate in treatment decisions have the right to be represented by
parents, guardians, family members, or other conservators. Physicians and
other health professionals should:
· Provide patients with sufficient information and opportunity to decide
among treatment options consistent with the informed consent process.
· Discuss all treatment options with a patient in a culturally competent
manner, including the option of no treatment at all.
· Ensure that persons with disabilities have effective communications with
members of the health system in making such decisions.
· Discuss all current treatments a consumer may be undergoing.
· Discuss all risks, benefits, and consequences to treatment or
nontreatment.
· Give patients the opportunity to refuse treatment and to express
preferences about future treatment decisions.
160 Lupus Nephritis
· Discuss the use of advance directives -- both living wills and durable
powers of attorney for healthcare -- with patients and their designated
family members.
· Abide by the decisions made by their patients and/or their designated
representatives consistent with the informed consent process.
Health plans, health providers, and healthcare facilities should:
· Disclose to consumers factors -- such as methods of compensation,
ownership of or interest in healthcare facilities, or matters of conscience --
that could influence advice or treatment decisions.
· Assure that provider contracts do not contain any so-called “gag clauses”
or other contractual mechanisms that restrict healthcare providers’ ability
to communicate with and advise patients about medically necessary
treatment options.
· Be prohibited from penalizing or seeking retribution against healthcare
professionals or other health workers for advocating on behalf of their
patients.
Respect and Nondiscrimination
Consumers have the right to considerate, respectful care from all members of
the healthcare industry at all times and under all circumstances. An
environment of mutual respect is essential to maintain a quality healthcare