Patients can at times be confused as to when to call their Doctor versus when to visit the Urgent Care center or go to the Emergency Department. It is important to provide information to the patients so they can make an informed decision.
Although the Primary Care Doctor knows a patient’s health history, including what treatments have worked best in the past, urgent care clinics are a great resource for when the Primary Care Doctor is not available.
Emergency Departments are true centers for emergent care. Rapid treatment including advanced treatment like surgery, would be a key factor in determining if an ER is needed.
When to go to the Urgent Care center:
• Symptoms that your physician would treat, but their office is closed (holiday/after-hours/weekend)
• Flu-like symptoms
• Cough/congestions/sore throat
• Sprains/strains
• Small cuts that may require stitches
When to go to the ER:
• Chest pain
• Difficulty breathing
• Numbness on one side
• Slurred speech
• Fainting/change in mental status
• Serious burns
• Head/eye injury
• Concussion/confusion
• Broken bones/dislocated joints
• Severe cuts/hemorrhaging
Source:
www.scripps.org
Approved Quality Committee – 1/8/2020
September 2021 Notes from the Network
Update: Community Care Grant Reporting Requirements. Practices that received the Highmark Community Cares Grant must expend those funds as approved and report how the funds were used by November 30, 2021. The Pennsylvania Medical Society (PAMED) will be issuing...
May 2021 Notes from the Network
Opportunity to Meet CEO Dr. John Pagan: PA Clinical Network CEO, John Pagan MD FACS, will be conducting three townhall style meetings on Tuesday May 11. This is an opportunity for our membership to meet and ask questions of our new CEO. Three virtual options will be...
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