The Restoration Of The Arroyo Fresco Community

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Application
What is currently obtained in the Arroyo Fresco community are the services provided to underserved areas in all the 50 states of the United States, unlike time past when the low-income earners or the poor had no access to quality healthcare. Being a non-profit and community-owned organization, they provide high-quality primary care, and even preventive services to the population they serve, irrespective of whether they are in the position to pay or not. The high-quality care provided also include an increased access to care, such as the provision of transportation when needed, translation when demanded, even home visitation (Baldrige National Quality Program, 2006). All these are made possible by the stakeholder groups, which include but not limited to the patients themselves, and their families, the community, volunteers, staff – including physicians and the different partners they are involved. Consequently, the currently practiced solution is the low-cost/high-value of services the communities being serviced enjoys. This is however not without the efforts and support of the different partners who helps with supplies and/or services. The partners include healthcare partners, education partners, community partners and vendor partners (Baldrige National Quality Program, 2006).
A specific example of this type of practice in real-life will be the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured in partnership with the George Washington University’s Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy ("Community Health Centers: A 2013 Profile and Prospects as ACA Implementation Proceeds | RCHN CHF," n.d.). the Affordable Care Act (ACA) made a major contribution in the community health centers (CHCs) program to pave way for mo...

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...colleges and state health education center for health care training and career development.
With all the good intentions of the Arroyo Fresco Community Health Center, there are also some controversies surrounding it. There is the issue of barrier to care, which could be because of geographic location, culture, or income. These are usually associated with patients in rural areas not having access to preventive screening exercises, which would save AF more money than treating diseases instead of nipping them in the bud. There is also the issue of communicable diseases, which is easily passed to someone else. Since AF provides ambulatory medical services, there is a chance that there are safety risks in the ambulatory patient care setting. Safety risks like exposure to communicable diseases, exposure to radiation through x-ray, accidents through chemical, etc.

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