• Eligible Rural Healthcare Provider Transition Project (RHPTP) applicants include small rural hospitals and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)-certified rural health clinics. (ruralcenter.org)
  • Rural Health Clinic (RHC) is a special designation given to health care practices in underserved rural areas by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that help ensure access to care for rural residents. (hrsa.gov)
  • Recipients of Rural Health Clinic COVID-19 Testing and Mitigation (RHCCTM) Program funding include eligible RHCs with a unique, active CCN listed in either the CMS Provider of Service file or the CMS Survey & Certification's Quality, Certification and Oversight Reports (QCOR). (hrsa.gov)
  • The RHCCTM program built on the success of the Health Resources and Services Administration's (HRSA) Rural Health Clinics COVID-19 Testing (RHCCT) Program, first funded in May 2020. (hrsa.gov)
  • There were 14 abortion clinics in the Netherlands in 2019. (wikipedia.org)
  • 12:43 In the early 1970s, the first specialised abortion clinics emerged such as in Arnhem (Mildredhuis, 1971) and Heemstede (Bloemenhove Clinic, 1973). (wikipedia.org)
  • Between 2011 and 2016, 162 abortion clinics in the United States closed or stopped offering abortions due largely to legislative regulations enacted by Republican state lawmakers. (wikipedia.org)
  • Between 2011 and 2016 the number of abortion clinics in Texas dropped from 40 to 19 as a result of the state's House Bill 2, which was struck down by the Supreme Court in June 2016. (wikipedia.org)
  • Abortion clinics have frequently been the site of protests by anti-abortion activists. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Louisiana House of Representatives on Monday adopted a bill that will impose new restrictions on abortion clinics , including requiring physicians to have admitting privileges at local hospitals. (marieclaire.com)
  • Seven months earlier, Balthrop could have directed Ashley to abortion clinics in Memphis, 90 minutes north, or in Jackson, Miss., two and a half hours south. (time.com)
  • Curran helped open the safety-net clinic in 2020 after decades of practicing medicine in the rural area and seeing the fallout of Texas high rate of uninsured people. (ksat.com)
  • [2] Health workers and access to healthcare continue to be concentrated in cities and coastal regions, with many areas of the country having few to no medical resources. (wikipedia.org)
  • Family HealthCare is a primary care clinic that serves all regardless of insurance status and ability to pay. (cdc.gov)
  • Rural areas of the United States continue to be unserved or underserved regions for healthcare. (cio.com)
  • For Guatemalans living in rural areas, access to healthcare is often nonexistent, which is why centers like Amatitlán Health Center are so critical. (hearttoheart.org)
  • Works to improve the delivery of quality, cost-effective healthcare in rural underserved areas through the Rural Health Clinics (RHC) Program. (ruralhealthinfo.org)
  • Healthcare services in rural areas of China typically lack the same level of access and quality present in urban areas. (gallup.com)
  • As China continues on the path of major healthcare reforms that affect urban and rural populations, policymakers might consider the need for medical travel as one metric of success. (gallup.com)
  • South Africa has a serious lack of healthcare facilities in rural areas but some new solar-powered mobile clinics are changing that. (nextbillion.net)
  • We isolated this virus from a child cultured by using cell lines and conditions as previously with acute febrile illness in rural Haiti, confirming its role as a cause of mosquitoborne illness in the Caribbean region. (cdc.gov)
  • Eligible small rural hospital" is defined as a non-federal, short-term general acute care hospital that: (1) is located in a rural area as defined in 42 U.S.C. 1395ww(d) and (2) has 49 available beds or less, as reported on the hospital's most recently filed Medicare Cost Report. (ruralcenter.org)
  • Isolated rural health practitioners were required to be involved in a wide variety of activities related to the disaster in addition to their routine work: e.g. preventive health (public health and safety activities), routine medical care, acute medical care, psychological care, post-mortems and recovery of medical facilities. (who.int)
  • Mayo Clinic is expanding its footprint to Abu Dhabi, a move that underscores its efforts to bring its brand and expertise to international patients. (albertleatribune.com)
  • Mayo Clinic will invest revenue into practice, education and research. (albertleatribune.com)
  • Mayo Clinic practice administration chair Roshanak Didehban said the facility is first meant to provide care for people living in the United Arab Emirates. (albertleatribune.com)
  • This announcement doesn't change our commitment to transform the Mayo Clinic health system to provide that expertise to the communities of Minnesota. (albertleatribune.com)
  • The Chippewa Valley Makers Network is a collaboration between UWEC, Mayo Clinic, individual community members, and the Pablo Center. (weau.com)
  • 267 of the 1,671 abortion providers in the U.S. in 2014 were clinics at which the majority of patient visits were for abortions. (wikipedia.org)
  • The clinic treats non-life threatening injuries and illnesses, as well as routine immunizations and wellness visits. (findurgentcarenearme.com)
  • Since then, the clinic has had about 40,000 patient visits at both the Gun Barrel City and Athens locations. (kltv.com)
  • A frequently cited reason for non-linkage to care is the time -consuming pre- ART assessment often requiring several clinic visits before ART -initiation. (bvsalud.org)
  • Once they have started ART the follow-up schedule foresees monthly clinic visits . (bvsalud.org)
  • Once they have started ART , follow-up clinic visits will be less frequent. (bvsalud.org)
  • This trial will show if in individuals tested HIV -positive during community -based HTC campaigns the proposition of same-day ART initiation in the community , combined with less frequent follow-up visits at the clinic could be a pragmatic approach to improve the care cascade in similar settings. (bvsalud.org)
  • The East Texas Community Clinic (ETCC) is expanding options for low-cost health care. (kltv.com)
  • GUN BARREL CITY, Texas (KLTV) - The East Texas Community Clinic (ETCC) is expanding options for low-cost health care. (kltv.com)
  • According to the website, "East Texas Community Clinic provides comprehensive primary care and preventive care, including health, oral, mental health and substance abuse services to persons of all ages, regardless of their ability to pay or health insurance status. (kltv.com)
  • If you're not able to pay it, that's fine we'll work with you," East Texas Community Clinic CEO Glen Robison said. (kltv.com)
  • Dr. Doug Curran in his office at the East Texas Community Clinic in Athens last November. (ksat.com)
  • She now relies on the East Texas Community Clinic for regular care. (ksat.com)
  • To launch the East Texas Community Clinic, or ETCC, they persuaded two local organizations to put up $200,000 in seed money. (ksat.com)
  • In 2019, at an age when most physicians are ready to retire, the longtime friends set out on a new venture: opening a safety-net clinic that would treat anyone, regardless of their ability to pay. (ksat.com)
  • The Benson area has a catchment area of about 5,000 to 6,000 patients. (cdc.gov)
  • Home-based HTC campaigns will be conducted in catchment areas of six clinics in rural Lesotho . (bvsalud.org)
  • At the end of the last century, Mayo started merging with smaller hospitals and clinics, largely in southeast Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa. (albertleatribune.com)
  • The period of availability for the Rural Health Clinic Testing and Mitigation (RHCCTM) Program was January 1, 2021, through December 31, 2022. (hrsa.gov)
  • The Georgia Partnership for Telehealth , for example, has set up 13 school-based health clinics that use telemedicine technology to give children access to basic primary care services. (cio.com)
  • Summary: The VSee + Advantech telemedicine cart solution is providing accessible specialist Tele-ophthalmology care for elderly diabetics in rural Taiwan Diabetes is a chronic disease that currently affects approximately 463 million adults (aged 20 - 79 years) worldwide, according to the International Diabetes Federation. (vsee.com)
  • Telemedicine has played a pivotal role in providing specialized care to remote regions , reducing the burden on urban health care centers and providing essential health care access in rural Mali. (borgenproject.org)
  • In Kayes, a city with limited medical facilities, a telemedicine network was established to connect local clinics with medical experts in the capital city of Bamako. (borgenproject.org)
  • The marriage of mobile clinics and telemedicine is proving to be a powerful tool in the fight against poverty. (borgenproject.org)
  • The success of improving health care access in rural Mali through mobile clinics and telemedicine is a testament to the power of innovation and collective action. (borgenproject.org)
  • Greater emphasis should be placed on persuading doctors to practice in rural areas. (cdc.gov)
  • The demand required the clinic to open a new Gun Barrel City location this year, moving from a location with four exam rooms to the current location with 12 exam rooms. (kltv.com)
  • The idea was to build a network of safety-net clinics to serve a mostly rural area east of Dallas, beginning with the clinic in Gun Barrel City. (ksat.com)
  • The pop-up clinics see patients on a first-come, first-served basis and allow registration to begin at midnight on Friday. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Wind's team worked tirelessly to seek businesses, nonprofits, churches, governmental organizations, and individuals who would donate funds, food, or time, and sometimes all three, in addition to creating awareness for potential patients and organizing everything from securing providers to managing the clinic layout. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Like most urgent care clinics, Deweyville Rural Health Clinic accepts walk-in patients. (findurgentcarenearme.com)
  • Mayo has argued that they have trouble staffing rural facilities, and that there aren't enough patients to justify the cost of some services. (albertleatribune.com)
  • We learned from the pandemic that we could integrate virtual care and remote monitoring of patients, so a hybrid virtual clinic might help improve access to care. (medscape.com)
  • To estimate the prevalence and incidence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection among patients attending three STD clinics in Pune, India, and to identify associated risk factors. (bmj.com)
  • Of the 2098 patients screened at STD clinics in Pune during 1996, 497, who returned for at least one follow up visit, were screened for various markers of HBV infection (HBsAg, anti-HBs, anti-HBc), HIV antibody, and VDRL. (bmj.com)
  • Taking into account areas with some cardiologists in practice, but not enough to meet the number of patients-dubbed "cardiology deserts"-that number rose to nearly 17 million. (tctmd.com)
  • This retrospective review of records describes the pattern of child and adolescent psychiatric disorders among patients consulting 3 child psychiatric clinics in Saudi Arabia during the year 2008. (who.int)
  • A study by researchers at the University of Stirling shows that due to a lack of knowledge and skills, older patients in rural areas are being denied the benefits that modern communication technologies such as text, Web and video can bring in health care delivery. (stir.ac.uk)
  • Traditional face-to-face medical outpatient clinics are a common way of assessing and monitoring patients and have been in place for many years, but many patients are seen in the clinic with little or no positive outcome in terms of treatment decisions, with some patients being seen as a matter of routine. (stir.ac.uk)
  • The NHSC system is a federal program consisting of around 500 clinics which deliver medical care to approximately 170,000 patients nationwide in underserved rural areas. (cdc.gov)
  • Must, if a small rural hospital, be meeting the quality data reporting requirements of Inpatient Quality Reporting, Outpatient Quality Reporting, or the Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project. (ruralcenter.org)
  • The aim of this study was to assess the epidemiology of asthma and risk factors for hospital admission among children attending the outpatient and emergency clinic in a university hospital in Sohag, Egypt. (who.int)
  • Our hope is to connect them to resources and preventive ongoing care following the clinic. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Access to abortions is extremely limited, particularly in rural and conservative areas. (wikipedia.org)
  • In a rural part of upstate New York, students with access to school-based health centers received more medical care and missed less school, Cornell researchers found. (cornell.edu)
  • New grants from the Cornell Center for Social Sciences (CCSS) will fund research ranging from exploring why people spread polarizing content online to assessing health care access in rural New York. (cornell.edu)
  • The high prevalence of chronic low back pain in elderly people living in rural riverside areas, along with limited access to treatment and the different impacts on the performance of daily activities and the quality of life, reveals the relevance of this condition as a public health problem. (rrh.org.au)
  • Mobile clinics have done miracles for health care access in rural Mali. (borgenproject.org)
  • Access to free or affordable health care in rural areas helps families save on medical expenses. (borgenproject.org)
  • With better health care access, women in rural areas can actively participate in the workforce, gain financial independence and contribute to their families' well-being. (borgenproject.org)
  • Our global partner network allows us to help the private sector understand the demand for health products in these markets and provide technical support in areas such as R&D, manufacturing, clinical studies, market access, compliance, and commercialization. (gatesfoundation.org)
  • Such clinics are urgently needed because low-income Texans have less access to health care than residents of any other state. (ksat.com)
  • Applications can be made by individual health care organizations (critical access hospitals, small rural hospitals, rural health clinics), jointly by a hospital and a rural health clinic or clinics, or by a consortium of rural health clinics. (ruralcenter.org)
  • Adequate regional access to care in a nearby city or area, the high costs of obtaining visas, and transportation may be a few reasons behind this low figure. (gallup.com)
  • Perhaps reflecting gains in rural access, rural Chinese are no more likely to say they traveled for medical care than urban Chinese, but regional differences still pose a challenge. (gallup.com)
  • Increasing access to essential drugs, monitoring the emergence of anti-infective drug resistance, and creating a safer environment for drug prescription, distribution, and consumption as well as the development of national drug policies within the framework of national health policies, constitute the main aims of the support provided by WHO/Mozambique within the area of essential drugs. (who.int)
  • Volunteers began unloading medical equipment and supplies to fulfill a 48-hour mission to provide free medical, dental, and vision services to the uninsured and underinsured rural community. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Remote Area Medical (RAM)-a major nonprofit of free pop-up clinics-coordinated with Rappahannock Area Health Education Center (AHEC), Rappahannock Community College (RCC), Westmoreland High School, and other community organizations to host the clinic. (rappahannock.edu)
  • An abortion clinic or abortion provider is a medical facility that provides abortions. (wikipedia.org)
  • Such clinics may be public medical centers, private medical practices or nonprofit organizations such as Planned Parenthood. (wikipedia.org)
  • The navigator asks the caller about her medical history, enrolls her in the program if qualified, and refers her to a clinic for cancer screening. (cdc.gov)
  • The medical center nearly shut its doors in 2013, due in large part to the declining population of the area it serves. (cnn.com)
  • Amatitlán Health Center is one of two medical facilities in Amatitlán, Guatemala, and serves the people living in the surrounding rural area, most of whom have few resources, if any at all . (hearttoheart.org)
  • Rural Mali has long faced the challenges of limited health care infrastructure, scarcity of medical professionals and inadequate resources. (borgenproject.org)
  • These clinics, staffed with medical professionals, traversed difficult terrains to reach isolated villages that were previously cut off from health care services. (borgenproject.org)
  • In the area of capacity building, we work with China's National Medical Products Administration (NMPA), universities, and research institutes to enhance the country's ability to navigate challenges with multidisciplinary drug review, including by providing expert and technical support for drug review and approval reform. (gatesfoundation.org)
  • The clinics also have a medical residency program to bring new doctors into the region. (kltv.com)
  • A free medical clinic opened in rural East Texas. (ksat.com)
  • They'd combine the clinics with a medical residency program to bring desperately needed new doctors into the region. (ksat.com)
  • But perhaps reflecting recent investments in rural care, rural Chinese (16%) were no more likely than urban Chinese (14%) to report traveling outside their city or community for medical care. (gallup.com)
  • The pregnancy and birth care options available in Victoria vary according to where you live, the models of care available at the services in your area, your medical history and risk factors such as weight, age and experience during previous pregnancies. (vic.gov.au)
  • The author's experiences as a family practitioner practicing in Benson, Arizona under the the auspices of the National Health Service Corps (NHSC) were discussed with reference to the problems of obtaining health and medical manpower for rural areas. (cdc.gov)
  • The author concludes that the NHSC is helping to solve the medical manpower shortage in rural areas and that physician extenders are helping to alleviate the rural health care delivery problem. (cdc.gov)
  • In the Taro District (population: 4434), the great tsunami of 11 March 2011 destroyed the central region including the clinic, the sole medical facility (one physician, 13 nurses and other staff) in the district, and many citizens were forced to live in evacuation centres. (who.int)
  • The Taro National Health Insurance Clinic, the sole medical facility in the Taro District, was required to play a central role in a variety of activities to care for residents in severely affected areas. (who.int)
  • Although the whole health care system returned to near-normal six months after the disaster, it is important to plan how to develop more resilient medical systems to respond to disasters, especially in rural areas. (who.int)
  • There are 13 Medical Officer of Health (MOH) areas in the Nuwara Eliya district, categorized as predominantly rural, estate, urban, or mixed (rural/estate). (who.int)
  • In addition, they transformed the gymnasium into a 20-unit dental clinic, complete with space for an x-ray team. (rappahannock.edu)
  • The Tree of Life Center – with 174 units, community and retail space, and a full-service health center and dental clinic – opened on Dec. 9 in Jamaica, Queens. (cornell.edu)
  • Computerized CBT (CCBT) can be used to effectively treat depression and anxiety and may be particularly useful in rural settings where there are a lack of suitably trained practitioners. (jmir.org)
  • They have clinics in Hobart and Launceston with rural and remote areas being served by a mobile unit. (health.gov.au)
  • The main objective for Pam White to starting her own clinic was to better provide culturally specific health care for Black women and girls. (spokesman-recorder.com)
  • Deweyville Rural Health Clinic is an urgent care provider located in Orange, Texas at 2493 TX-12. (findurgentcarenearme.com)
  • Most urgent care clinics are equipped to take x-rays and run EKG tests, urinalysis, blood tests, STD tests, pregnancy tests, drug tests, as well as flu and step tests. (findurgentcarenearme.com)
  • While most urgent care clinics accept health insurance, we recommend confirming that Deweyville Rural Health Clinic is in-network with your insurance. (findurgentcarenearme.com)
  • Evaluation of the use of rural health clinics: attitudes and behaviors of primary care physicians in service areas of nurse practitioner clinics. (cdc.gov)
  • Rural hospitals are facing one of the great slow-moving crises in American health care. (cnn.com)
  • They show that, despite daunting obstacles, rural America need not be left behind when it comes to health care. (cnn.com)
  • We were the poster child for everything that was wrong with rural health care," he said. (cnn.com)
  • 1 Although declining in number, they remain a critical part of the health care ecosystem, 2 particularly in rural areas and in densely populated urban areas. (annfammed.org)
  • The stigma at that time was very high and there was very little care in the clinics. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • But there are also challenges to living in a rural area, including when it comes to taking care of your health. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Clinics offering telehealth to provide care for people who live far away from specialists or can't easily get to their providers' offices. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Women living on farms and in rural areas faced a number of difficulties, including water scarcity and inadequate health care staff and resources. (iol.co.za)
  • Services provided will enhance the provision of primary care services in underserved urban and rural communities. (kltv.com)
  • This opportunity was facilitated by Unite For Sight (UFS), an NGO that supports eye clinics worldwide by investing human and financial resources in their social ventures to eliminate patient barriers to eye care. (uvm.edu)
  • Obstetricians provide some of the care at a public hospital antenatal clinic. (vic.gov.au)
  • For example, some rural hospitals do not offer antenatal or birth care. (vic.gov.au)
  • Your GP or community health clinic might provide shared antenatal care. (vic.gov.au)
  • Traditional doctor-led clinics may not be an efficient model of care. (stir.ac.uk)
  • This two-armed open-label randomized controlled trial compares in individuals tested HIV -positive during community -based HTC the proposition of same-day community -based ART -initiation to the standard of care pre- ART assessment at the clinic. (bvsalud.org)
  • In the standard of care group individuals receive post-test counselling and referral to the nearest clinic for pre- ART assessment and counselling. (bvsalud.org)
  • First primary outcome is linkage to care (individual presents at the clinic at least once within 3 months after the HIV test). (bvsalud.org)
  • 34 of the 197 providers in Canada in 2001 were clinics and 167 were hospitals. (wikipedia.org)
  • The provinces with the most providers were Ontario (76 hospitals, 6 clinics), Quebec (30 hospitals, 19 clinics), and British Columbia (37 hospitals, 3 clinics) in 2001. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hallways were filled with community resources and a book and food pantry, and classrooms became exam rooms, vaccine clinics, and even an area to order prescribed eyeglasses. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Some of these include: 5 spacious exam rooms Comfort room for end-of-life situations Separate surgical and dental suites Digital records with Ezyvet Digital Radiographs Digital Dental Radiographs Ultrasound Endoscopy and Rhinoscopy Therapy Laser Full in house lab including IDEXX Blood & Urinalysis Machines Additional Services will be offered depending on the successful candidate s interest areas. (aabp.org)
  • Applicants can use resources like CAHMPAS and the Small Rural Hospital and Clinic Finance 101 guide to help determine financial stability. (ruralcenter.org)
  • Must not be a current participant in the Delta Region Community Health Systems Development Program, the Targeted Technical Assistance for Rural Hospitals Program, the Small Rural Hospital Transition Project, or any other program that is duplicative in services. (ruralcenter.org)
  • the district hospital was restructured into a municipal clinic with inpatient facilities (19 beds) in 2010. (who.int)
  • People living in rural and remote communities have greater difficulty accessing mental health services and evidence-based therapies, such as cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), than their urban counterparts. (jmir.org)
  • Further work is required to confirm these results across a wider range of countries, and to determine the most feasible model of CCBT delivery, in partnership with people who live and work in rural and remote communities. (jmir.org)
  • The program intended to address health equity gaps by offering support and resources to medically underserved rural communities. (hrsa.gov)
  • In the Andean region, Spanish conquerors perturbed the indigenous society, pulverized rural communities, installed institutions like the Catholic Church, and imposed a different language and moral values that were not present before. (bvsalud.org)
  • Eligible children were listed from the register and identified the PHM area they belong to. (who.int)
  • One PHM area was considered as a cluster, totalling 102 eligible PHM areas. (who.int)
  • The Rural Health Information Hub is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under Grant Number U56RH05539 (Rural Assistance Center for Federal Office of Rural Health Policy Cooperative Agreement). (ruralhealthinfo.org)
  • A high prevalence and incidence of HBV infection, seen in STD clinic attendees underscore the need to provide HBV vaccine to commercial sex workers and their clients in India. (bmj.com)
  • mosquitoes may also be competent clinic physician empirically diagnosed typhoid and admin- vectors ( 4 , 5 ). (cdc.gov)
  • It was noted that providing treatment to residents of the Benson area would be impossible without physician extenders. (cdc.gov)
  • Bringing RAM to the area provides the necessary services for uninsured or underinsured community members. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Health profession students from RCC, William and Mary, University of Connecticut, University of Maryland, University of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Germanna Community College, Mary Washington University, and more contributed long hours to assist with all areas of the clinic. (rappahannock.edu)
  • Though she may not be as well known as some physicians or others working in the community, "As far as I am aware, I'm the only nurse practitioner [with a] privately owned clinic in the state. (spokesman-recorder.com)
  • Students meet with clients and assist in connecting them with community services and LGBT-friendly practitioners in the greater Sacramento area. (americanbar.org)
  • There are many different reasons why you might choose to live in a rural community. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Members in the club are provided information on how they can engage with the health of the community in Burlington and the greater Vermont area. (uvm.edu)
  • There are opportunities to participate in community outreach projects with the goal of fostering sustainable change in these areas. (uvm.edu)
  • 16:01 By 1975, abortion clinic network Stimezo (an abbreviation of Stichting Medisch Verantwoorde Zwangerschapsonderbreking, "Medically Responsible Pregnancy Termination Foundation", set up in 1969) ran nine clinics throughout the country. (wikipedia.org)
  • These bills, referred to as TRAP laws (Targeted Regulation of Abortion Provider) implement medically unnecessary restrictions for clinics that will be difficult or impossible for providers to meet, therefore forcing clinics to close under the guise of increasing the safety of the procedure. (wikipedia.org)
  • In our clinic, we have social workers, counselors, nurse practitioners, gastroenterologists, and dietitians to address all the different facets of the disease. (medscape.com)
  • [5] Additionally, there is a highly apparent contrast between maternal health in rural (poor) versus urban environments. (wikipedia.org)
  • We have developed skills using telehealth during COVID-19 so we can provide services to regional and rural areas. (standard.net.au)
  • Being in a rural place does not preclude high-quality medicine," said Tom Ricketts, senior policy fellow at the Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. (cnn.com)
  • Rural schools can offer counseling and mental health services for their students. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Portable Hydraulic Chute Tilt chute for foot work Separate chute for OB and other exams Ultrasound Clinic provided pickup AI equipment Additional Services will be offered depending on successful candidate s interest areas. (aabp.org)
  • Our clinic services a vast area with a 60 mile radius in the heart of North Dakota. (aabp.org)
  • For long-term funding they set out to apply to a federal agency, the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, which offers millions of dollars in grants and enhanced Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements to qualified clinics in poorly served areas. (ksat.com)
  • The present study aimed to estimate the prevalence of self-reported chronic low back pain and to identify the associated factors in elderly people living in rural riverside areas in the Amazon. (rrh.org.au)
  • The allure of rural life, with its open spaces, tranquil pace, and the promise of a deeper connection with nature, is a temptation many urban dwellers find hard to resist. (johnnyholland.org)
  • Protesters often engage in what is known as "sidewalk counseling", in which they warn people entering the clinic about risks of abortion, attempt to offer alternatives to abortion or show pictures of fetuses. (wikipedia.org)
  • It is the only health clinic for people experiencing homelessness in North Dakota. (cdc.gov)
  • To systematically review the global evidence regarding the clinical effectiveness and acceptability of CCBT interventions for anxiety and/or depression for people living in rural and remote locations. (jmir.org)
  • It is not just the volume of people with IBD, but also the aging population that is creating a challenge to gastroenterology clinics, said Kaplan. (medscape.com)
  • People who live in rural areas may find it difficult to make it to the clinic in person. (medscape.com)
  • Around 15% of people in the United States live in rural areas. (medlineplus.gov)
  • A local partnership between multiple organizations has been formed to meet the need for personal protective equipment in the area. (weau.com)
  • The Wilma P. Mankiller Health Center is in a very rural area of northeastern Oklahoma. (cdc.gov)
  • Twice per month, Pacific McGeorge students partner with students from U.C. Davis to run the LGBT Legal Referral Clinic at the Sacramento Gay and Lesbian Center. (americanbar.org)
  • The NHSC and the NHSC clinic system were discussed. (cdc.gov)
  • According to the Guttmacher Institute, 31% of women in rural areas traveled over 100 miles in order to receive an abortion while another 43% traveled between 50-100 miles. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, the country has seen success in distributing and keeping health workers in more rural and remote regions through a decentralized human resources for health (HRH) retention plan. (wikipedia.org)
  • Professor Leslie said: "There may be several potential barriers to the widespread implementation of communication technology to a general cardiology clinic population, particularly in remote and rural areas. (stir.ac.uk)
  • You might want to enclose a part of your yard with a fence, clear out any plants that might be harmful to your pet, and provide a cozy, shaded area for your dog to unwind. (johnnyholland.org)
  • He suggested the money be given to health workers in rural areas of the country. (cdc.gov)
  • The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. (who.int)
  • In addition, there are 13 nurses, one clinical laboratory technician and one radiation technician in the clinic. (who.int)
  • The area is occupied by modern productive livestock producers. (aabp.org)
  • About 14% of the U.S. population lives in rural counties, a proportion that has dropped as the number of urban dwellers grows. (cnn.com)