Treatment FAQ

kaiser who is responsible for treatment success

by Mr. Gerhard Hudson PhD Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
image

What is Kaiser Permanente organizational structure?

Kaiser Permanente is composed of three entities united by a common mis- sion: the Permanente Medical Groups (PMGs), Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, and Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, and their respective subsidiaries.

What makes Kaiser Permanente successful?

KP closely coordinates primary, secondary, and hospital care; places a strong emphasis on prevention; and extensively uses care pathways and electronic medical records. By doing so, it provides its 8.7 million members and patients with high-quality, cost-effective care.

Who are Kaiser Permanente stakeholders?

The key stakeholders involved are the Kaiser Permanente NTN Hubs, the Kaiser Permanente home regions, the Permanente Medical Group referring physician, and the NTN Centers of Excellence.

Who regulates Kaiser Permanente in California?

The California Department of Managed Health CareThe California Department of Managed Health Care is responsible for regulating health care service plans. If you have a grievance against your health plan, you should first telephone Kaiser Foundation Health Plan at 1 (800) 464-4000 and use your health plan's grievance process before contacting the department.

Is Kaiser Permanente an accountable care organization?

Kaiser is a fully integrated hospital-doctor-insurance company, kind of an "accountable care organization" on steroids.

Who lead the ground breaking work in electronic medical record for Kaiser Permanente?

Over the years, these records, now considered invaluable and precious, have been the basis for many Kaiser Permanente longitudinal research projects. Collection of detailed patient data from 1964 to 1972 was made possible by the pioneering computer work of Morris Collen, MD, largely funded by the federal government.

Who is the medical director of Kaiser Permanente?

Jeff Convissar, MD is the Medical Director at Kaiser Permanente's Care Management Institute. He has been with Kaiser Permanente since 1992. Jeff was previously the Executive Director of National Risk Management.

How much money does the CEO of Kaiser Permanente make?

The Current State Of Nonprofit Hospital CEO Compensation But the average belies the true dimensions of executive salaries in health care systems. In 2018, Bernard Tyson, then-CEO of nonprofit health care giant Kaiser Permanente, made nearly $18 million, making him the highest-paid nonprofit CEO in the nation.

Can you sue Kaiser?

Kaiser patients cannot usually sue for medical negligence. Instead, they must go through binding arbitration. Kaiser Permanente patients wishing to bring an action against a Kaiser health care provider for medical negligence must usually go through Kaiser's arbitration process.

What is a psychiatrist at Kaiser?

A psychiatrist is a medical doctor who specializes in mental health, including substance use disorders.

How does Kaiser Permanente care?

Your care team will ask specific questions at every visit and use evidence-based tools to interpret your feedback. This enables them to make real-time treatment adjustments, measure your progress over time, and keep you moving in a positive direction. Even if you get some of your care elsewhere, your Kaiser Permanente care team will monitor your symptoms and collaborate with you and your recovery team to keep a detailed record of how your recovery journey is progressing.

What is a nurse specialist?

Nurse specialists and physician assistants. These advanced practice clinicians support patients through the diagnosis and treatment of a variety of conditions. They work closely with doctors and care teams to provide medical services and counseling for mental health, substance misuse, and addiction issues.

What to do if you think you have a psychiatric emergency?

If you think you're having a psychiatric emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room .

Does Kaiser Permanente offer SUD treatment?

Treatment for SUD and addiction is highly personal — there’s not a single path to recovery that works for everyone. Kaiser Permanente offers a full range of evidence-based treatment options for adults and teens, and we’ll work with you to create a care plan that’s specific to your needs.

Why is Kaiser Permanente important?

Kaiser Permanente exists to provide high-quality, affordable health care services and to improve the health of our members and the communities we serve.

How many members does Kaiser Permanente have?

Founded in 1945, Kaiser Permanente is recognized as one of America’s leading health care providers and not-for-profit health plans. We currently serve 12.5 million members in 8 states and the District of Columbia.

What is Permanente Medical Group?

Care for members and patients is focused on their total health and guided by their personal Permanente Medical Group physicians, specialists, and team of caregivers. Our expert and caring medical teams are empowered and supported by industry-leading technology advances and tools for health promotion, disease prevention, state-of-the-art care delivery, and world-class chronic disease management.

Who is responsible for Kaiser care?

An adult who brings a minor (under 18 years of age) to Kaiser Permanente for care or services, or the parent or guardian, is responsible for any payments that are due at the time care or services are received. If a responsible adult is not present or payment has not been arranged in advance, treatment that is not urgent may be rescheduled.

Does Kaiser accept checks?

Kaiser Permanente accepts personal checks as a form of payment. If three or more checks are returned by your bank for insufficient funds, we will ask you to use a different payment method, such as a credit or debit card, for future services and payments on your account.

What does the patient propose in Kaiser's refusal to grant a member's request for medically necessary treatment?

The patient proposes that Kaiser’s refusal to grant a member’s request for medically necessary treatment, and that they are not willing to identify themselves by name, it is the patient’s opinion, that the oral review is without merit, and a member can dispute their decision for the reason in this letter.

When did Dina Padilla work at Kaiser?

Dina Padilla November 3, 2007. After working in both Kaiser hospital and clinic in Sacramento, Ca., starting in the mid 1980’s to 1993 it has certainly been never ending nightmare, listening to patients and employees who are patients, that kaiser now entering into decades of operation, gets worse by the day.

What is a physiatrist?

THE PHYSIATRIST (a doctor who specializes in diagnosing and treating problems of the musculoskeletal system, except for those physiatrists that work for Kaiser Permanente):

What is the role of a physician?

A physician shall be dedicated to providing competent medical care, with compassion and respect for human dignity and rights.

Does Kaiser screw up?

Any healthcare is sometimes better than none, and Kaiser doesn’t screw up every single thing . Being forced to go back after harm has been done is actually one of the most horrifying aspects of the Kaiser Victim experience, so it wouldn’t hurt you to have a little compassion. NA February 26, 2017.

Our care

Through our unique model, nation-leading prevention, and cutting-edge treatment, we care for our members like no other health system.

Research and innovation

With one of the nation’s most productive research institutions, we’re making discoveries to help you live a longer, healthier life.

Our people

We hire smart, innovative people who amaze and delight our members every day. Their energy, expertise, and passion help us deliver on our mission.

Our history

Since 1945, we’ve been leading the way with innovative approaches to health care.

How much did Kaiser Malpractice settle?

Walkup’s Kaiser Malpractice attorneys negotiated a settlement in excess of $1,300,000 on behalf of a widow and two surviving children of a man who over a period of more than two years, was repeatedly misdiagnosed with urinary tract infections instead of cancer.

How much did Kaiser pay for the woman who died?

Walkup’s Kaiser team obtained a settlement of $350,000 for the wrongful death of a woman who died due to the administration of a drug contrary to Kaiser policies and protocols. At age fifty the deceased suffered a minor heart attack and was sent to the Kaiser Santa Clara emergency room.

What was the Kaiser Permanente Arbitration claim?

Our Kaiser wrongful death specialists brought a Kaiser Permanente Arbitration claim on behalf of the surviving husband and two adult children of a 58-year-old Permanente member who died from an untreated pulmonary embolism. The deceased Kaiser member had visited a South Bay Kaiser Emergency room complaining of chest pain and shortness of breath. A blood test was elevated. After a referral from the emergency department to the cardiology department, a Permanente Group cardiologist performed a left heart catheterization that ruled out coronary artery disease but failed to perform the right heart catheterization which would have shown a potentially fatal pulmonary embolism. As a result, the patient’s pulmonary embolism was not diagnosed. Blood-thinning medications would have prevented death but were not given. She died leaving her husband and children unsupported.

What did the walkup attorneys do?

Walkup attorneys prosecuted arbitration on behalf of the surviving children of a 34-year old male who went to the emergency room at Kaiser Oakland complaining of flu-like symptoms, fever, pain, and weakness so pervasive that he had difficulty walking from his car to the urgent care center. On arrival, a nurse, rather than a doctor, evaluated the patient. The nurse incorrectly determined that he was not in need of medical care and discharged him home without treatment. The next day the patient returned to the emergency room again, with worsening pain and weakness and a new symptom: unusual spotting on his fingers. He was again sent home with orders to report to the clinic that afternoon. When he returned as ordered, the doctor who saw him gave no significance to the odd spots and attributed all of the patient’s complaints to a viral illness. The member was discovered dead two days later. An autopsy demonstrated that he had been suffering from overwhelming sepsis, which should have been treated sooner with immediate medical attention and IV antibiotics. Walkup attorneys demonstrate that the Kaiser personnel who saw the decedent had breached the standard of care and caused economic loss to the surviving children, aged 9 and 8.

What was the cause of death of a man who died at Kaiser?

Walkup attorneys obtained a settlement in a Kaiser Arbitration proceeding for the wrongful death of a man who suffered a hypoxic brain injury and died following a misdiagnosis at Kaiser Vallejo’s Emergency Room. The man arrived at the Kaiser emergency department complaining of a high fever, severe sore throat and difficulty swallowing and breathing. These symptoms suggested the possibility of supraglottis, a serious inflammation of the upper airway. However, despite the clear symptoms that the man represented a medical emergency, Kaiser’s emergency room triage nurse told the man his case was not severe enough for the Emergency Room and sent the man to an Urgent Care Clinic, where his condition worsened and eventually caused respiratory arrest. Despite resuscitation attempts, the man suffered severe hypoxic brain damage and died three days later. Walkup attorneys negotiated the maximum settlement available by law on behalf of the two surviving children left behind.

Why did Kaiser not settle?

There was no settlement offer before the arbitration because Kaiser claimed that its advice nurse system was without any flaws or problems. susceptible to infection.

What type of cardiologist performed a left heart catheterization?

After a referral from the emergency department to the cardiology department, a Permanente Group cardiologist performed a left heart catheterization that ruled out coronary artery disease but failed to perform the right heart catheterization which would have shown a potentially fatal pulmonary embolism.

image
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9