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Published on Taking Charge Of Your Health (http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu)

Navigate the Healthcare System Resources

Websites

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [1] (AHRQ) has helpful online guides:

The American Cancer Society provides the NexProfiler Treatment Tools [5]. This tool feeds details of your condition into a search of the research literature and gives statistical results for various treatments. It then suggests topics for you to discuss with your provider.

Blue Cross and Blue Shield offers Healthcare Facts [6]

Complementary and Alternative Medicine on Pubmed [7]

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [8]

Learn about your eligibility for low-cost insurance at Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services [9]

Food and Drug Administration [10] (FDA)

FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition [11]

FDA's Recalls and Safety Alerts [12]

Federal Trade Commission [13] (FTC)

The Harvard Medical School offers lists of questions to ask for specific situations [14].

Institute of Medicine Study. (1999) To Err is Human: Building A Safer Health System [15].

Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) brochure that provides information on how you can avoid being the victim of medical errors, Speak Up: Help Prevent Errors In Your Care [16].

Kaiser Family Foundation. Trends and Indicators in the Changing Health Care Marketplace [17], 2004 Update.

Medline Plus [18] offers a number of articles [19], including Getting the Most Out of Your A Visit to Your Doctor and Tips for Talking to Healthcare Professionals. There are a number of resources for specific health situations, such as cancer and heart disease.

National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
[20]

National Center for Health Statistics. Fact Sheet: Actual Causes of Death in the United States [21], 2000 [22].

National Coalition on Health Care. Health Insurance Cost [23].

The National Institute on Aging suggests ways to discuss health concerns, medicines, and issues important to older people [24].

National Institutes of Health [25] (NIH)

NCCAM offers information on paying for complementary therapies. Get the Facts: Consumer Financial Issues in Complementary and Alternative Medicine [26].

NIH National Library of Medicine [27]

Pubmed [28], a website used to research articles.

Books

American Medical Association. American Medical Association Guide to Talking to Your Doctor. John Wiley and Sons, NY. 2001.

Edward T. Creagan (Mayo Clinic physician). How NOT to Be My Patient. Health Communications, Inc. FL. 2003.

John Knowles. Doing Better and Feeling Worse. W.W. Norton & Company: New York. 1977.

Parker-Pope, T. Wall Street Journal. 2005. Published in the Minneapolis Star & Tribune:

Bernie Seigal MD and Yosaif August. Help Me to Heal: A Practical Guidebook for Patients, Visitors and Caregivers. Hay House, Inc., CA. 2003.

Soden, Kevin and Christine Dumas. Special Treatment: Ten Way to Get the Same Special Health Care Your Doctor Gets. Berkley Publishing. NY. 2003.


Source URL:
http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/healthcare_system/resources