Posts Tagged ‘Delivery’


The CareGiver Partnership Offers Doorstep Delivery of Adult Diapers and Incontinence Supplies

Thursday, November 15th, 2012

Neenah, Wis. (PRWEB) November 14, 2012

The CareGiver Partnership, a national retailer of incontinence products and other home health care supplies, is addressing the needs of incontinent Americans by offering doorstep delivery on any of its products, with free shipping year-round on orders $ 50+. Founder Lynn Wilson says it?s a convenient alternative to making frequent store trips for adult diapers, wipes, bed pads, bladder control pads and other incontinence supplies.

?With 25 million Americans with transient or chronic urinary incontinence ? including 50 percent of elderly who are homebound ? doorstep delivery is especially convenient for those unable to travel to stores and for family caregivers,? says Wilson. ?Costs can be higher than discount stores, but caregivers tell us when they consider the free home delivery, never running out, the high cost of gas today and the value of their time, it?s worth it.

?In addition, it?s difficult to get answers in stores. Stock clerks often are uninformed and pharmacists are busy behind the counter. Our team is extremely knowledgeable about all the 500 incontinence products we offer ? 10 times more than most stores ? and being out of stock does not happen, unlike stores,? says Wilson. ?First-time buyers often have no idea which product is right for them. Many spend over $ 100 trying bags of products that don?t meet their needs and then settle. That?s why we offer more than 100 products to try before you buy.?

The CareGiver Partnership, rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau, is designed around safety, security and ease. Although it carries 3,000 home health care products, the site?s large pages and absence of clutter and advertisements make it easy to shop, set up an account and order. Free caregiver resources include its first-to-the-world Incontinence Product Finder and thousands of links and articles. The site makes it easy to set up automatically scheduled doorstep delivery, with a patent-pending product-use estimation tool.

The CareGiver Partnership was formed in 2004 by the former global sector president of Kimberly-Clark, who led the development of Depend and Poise incontinence products. It is now led by co-founder Lynn Wilson and a team of women who are current or former caregivers. The company?s offerings go beyond home health care products to include personal service and a library of resources and information for family caregivers, including a blog.

?Thousands of caregivers and their family members count on us for fast, convenient and reliable delivery of incontinence supplies,? Wilson adds.

The CareGiver Partnership is a national direct-to-consumer retailer of home healthcare products for incontinence, skin care, mobility, daily living aids, nutrition support and more. In its sixth year of providing products and services that help caregivers and loved ones maintain personal dignity, the company also offers an online library of more than 1,200 family caregiver resources and personal service by experts in caregiving. Call 1-800-985-1353 or visit online.







Atlanta?s BCA Partners with its Customer Base to Speed Delivery of Better, More Efficient Care

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Atlanta (PRWEB) May 07, 2012

Organizations using Business Computer Applications? (BCA) electronic medical records (EMCs) to speed patient care are also providing feedback that enables the Atlanta-based firm to improve its product line and help others unclog systems choking on paper.

?While the U.S. has the best healthcare in the world the current system, clogged with paper records, makes it difficult to coordinate care, routinely measure quality, or reduce medical errors,? says Albert Woodard, CEO of BCA, a company devoted to digitizing medical records.

He says the situation is getting worse with 80 million aging baby boomers now landing on Medicare roles at a rate of 7,000 a day and the federal government?s planned overhaul of healthcare expected to flood the system with 32 million more patients. ?And this doesn?t even count healthcare for the rapidly increasing prison population which is chewing up an average of 10 percent of every state?s corrections budget,? he says.

He says BCA is continually enhancing its programs with input from its customer base. For example, Jackson Medical Clinic (JMC) in Jackson, Mississippi, a longtime BCA customer, recently beta tested and field-tested the newest version of BCA?s electronic medical record software that enables a new reporting system module to fit into its existing electronic medical record system. The new clinical data analysis and reporting tool enables clinics to practice preventive medicine which improves the quality of patient care through the ability to perform in-depth clinical analysis; create and evaluate productivity comparisons; and develop comprehensive reports. For example, clinics utilizing the enhanced reporting system can generate a list of all patients that require medical procedures. It also produces daily, monthly and yearly comparative reports, as needed. The Jackson tests also discovered that new features will make it easy for public and private health care facilities to report data to federal, state, and local governments.

BCA clients around the U.S. that are using EMR systems to increase efficiencies, save money, generate cash flow and boost productivity including the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) andTexas? CentroMed Health & Wellness Center.

UTMB successfully converted over 120 Texas Department of Criminal Justice facilities including the implementation of ten years? worth of millions of offender health records, updating 3,500 computers, and training over 3,000 users across widely and geographically dispersed facilities in Texas. The statewide system serves some 120 state, 15 youth, and 3 federal prisons and has been recognized for helping the state of Texas realize a 45% reduction in medical tests deemed to be unnecessary. It has also resulted in a 70% reduction in the number of transfers from prison facilities to physician offices and a 38% reduction in transfers from inmate housing to emergency rooms. The EMR system covers 145 locations and handles 19 million interactions a month. Due to the program inmate medical cost-per-day has been drastically reduced to $ 9.67. This compares to $ 41.25 for California, the only state with a higher incarceration rate than Texas.

Another Texas organization, CentroMed Health & Wellness Center, has shown significant improvement in their cash flow and productivity. In just over two years, the nonprofit center went from 12 days in cash reserves to more than 80 days, reflecting an additional $ 5 million in cash.

?We need dramatic change in the U.S. healthcare system to overcome one of the most inefficient and deadly aspects of the current system: the fragmentation of care, where treatment occurs in isolation with virtually no information about a patient?s past,? Woodard says. ?Organizations such as UTMB and CentroMed are examples of how EMRs can help reduce errors, provide better access to health information, save millions of dollars and make it easier to retrieve test results and review medical records.

?Tools like electronic medical records (EMR) are the ?grease? because they enable primary care physicians to connect with other stakeholders in the system, share information, and better coordinate the delivery of care,? he says. He backs up his comments saying that studies show the United States trails a number of other countries in the use of EHR systems with only 15?20 percent of U.S. physicians? offices and 20?25 percent of hospitals adopting such systems.

?Hospitals, doctors, clinics and others are reluctant to adopt systems due to standardization; concerns about privacy; but mostly uncertainty about what?s happening in the health care industry, particularly the health care law currently being reviewed by the Supreme Court,? Woodard says. ?But regardless of what happens it will not change the deluge of patients the system will be forced to cope with the next few years.

?It is obvious then that system will still be forced to turn to more efficient measures to reduce errors, realize cost efficiencies and improve patient?s health and we have those tools,? said Woodard. Hospitals, private practices and government agencies are increasingly turning to electronic medical records. For example, physicians can take laptops, iPads and smart phones from room to room or building to building. On-call staff can log in from anywhere?home, office, hospitals, or elsewhere?via a secure virtual private network to access patient information. The tools exist now to give every provider and patient access to all information necessary to prevent errors, improve patient satisfaction and improve outcomes.

?We will continue to see more marriages between computers and healthcare with hospitals and clinics as information technology begins to move from the billing departments and other back office functions into the examining room. The 2008 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act directs the healthcare industry to transition from being paper dependent to Information Technology (IT).

So far the transition has been slow. Less than 10 percent of U.S. hospitals have adopted electronic medical records even in the most basic way, according to a study authored by Ashish Jha, associate professor of health policy and management at Harvard School of Public Health, and published in the April 16, 2009 New England Journal of Medicine. The report says only 1.5 percent had adopted a comprehensive system of electronic records that includes physicians’ notes and orders and decision support systems that alert doctors of potential drug interactions or other problems that might result from their intended orders.

The Department of Health and Human Services is offering financial incentives to hospitals and doctors’ practices that can achieve what it calls “meaningful use” of electronic records by certain dates. On the other hand, doctors and institutions that don?t comply or fall behind in the ?meaningful use? category will receive lower reimbursement rates for treating Medicare patients.

About BCA

Business Computer Applications, Inc. (BCA) is a leading provider of health information technology solutions and has served hundreds of clients in public, private, and correctional healthcare. The company offers electronic medical record, practice management, financial management, scheduling, accounting, and case management information systems along with a wide range of consulting and technical services. For more information on BCA visit http://www.bca.us.







New Baby Food Delivery Service Launched by Beth Stollman

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Rockville, MD (PRWEB) December 15, 2011

Beth Stollman, mother of two and qualified nutritionist has launched a new baby food delivery service. The service specializes in freshly prepared, organic baby food and baby meals. Beth Stollman was a nutritional consultant when she decided to set up the new delivery service. “I realized that many parents today find themselves having to juggle child care and a career. To most mothers, time is very precious, and so is the nutrition of their children,” comments Stollman.

With an emphasis on healthy balanced meals, Beth Stollman provides freshly prepared baby foods, from purees made with organic vegetables, to balanced healthy meals for toddlers. The pre-ordered foods are delivered directly to the customer’s house. Stollman also offers clients a baby and toddler meal planning service, tailored to suit any specific nutritional requirements and family preferences. The meals are all freshly prepared so that they can then be frozen by the customer, and defrosted and used as needed.

The new service can be split into three main areas: The first focuses on delivering pre-ordered, freshly prepared baby purees and meals. The second specializes in taking the groceries to the customer’s house, and preparing a week worth of baby foods and meals actually on the premises. The third is providing families with meal plans and recipes to enable them to recreate the foods that Beth Stollman delivers.

Beth Stollman set up the new business with working mothers in mind. “I know that when my children were very small, this was a service I could have done with. As more and more mothers are trying to juggle a full time job with caring for their children, this seemed like something that would be very useful and needed by many families” remarks Stollman. Families throughout the Rockville area are able to enjoy the baby food delivery service.

About Beth Stollman

Beth Stollman has been a private nutritional consultant for more than 11 years. Her new baby food delivery service adds to a host of nutrition orientated services including nutritional consultancy and giving lectures on nutrition and healthy eating. Beth was born in Chicago and has lived in Rockville since 1993. She lives with her husband, two children and four dogs. Beth Stollman has many hobbies including baking as well as hiking. She is also an avid reader and her next venture is to write a book about children’s nutrition and easy ways for parents to ensure their children are eating correctly and developing healthy eating habits that will stay with them for the rest of their lives.

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