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abbott patient assistance foundation application for medical nutrition products

by Brennon Harber Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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How do I fill out my CA Foundation exam fees offline?

Hello To apply for CA Foundation offline you need to grow through the following procedure:Download Foundation Registration Form from their official website.Foundation registration fee is to be paid in the form of Demand Draft drawn in favor of The Secretary, The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, payable at concerned Regional Office i.e. Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Kanpur or New Delhi. If Registration Form is downloaded from the Institutes website, add Rs. 100/- along with Common Proficiency Course (CPC) Registration fee for supply of a copy of the Prospectus along with the study package.You should fill following details Name in full (As per SSC X certificates)Date of Birth Mothers Name and Fathers Name Address Category: General, ST / SC, OBC, Backward Class or Disabled Nationality: Indian or Foreign National Medium of study: English or Hindi Educational Qualifications Details: 10th and 12th Annual income of Parents Demand draft details Affix recent passport size photoPrint out your registration form, attached the documents required and send it to ICAI.Best of luckHope this help you

Why do patients have to fill out forms when visiting a doctor? Why isn't there a "Facebook connect" for patient history/information?

There are many (many) reasons - so I'll list a few of the ones that I can think of off-hand.Here in the U.S. - we have a multi-party system: Provider-Payer-Patient (unlike other countries that have either a single payer - or universal coverage - or both). Given all the competing interests - at various times - incentives are often mis-aligned around the sharing of actual patient dataThose mis-aligned incentives have not, historically, focused on patient-centered solutions. That's starting to change - but slowly - and only fairly recently.Small practices are the proverbial "last mile" in healthcare - so many are still paper basedThere are still tens/hundreds of thousands of small practices (1-9 docs) - and a lot of healthcare is still delivered through the small practice demographicThere are many types of specialties - and practice types - and they have different needs around patient data (an optometrist's needs are different from a dentist - which is different from a cardiologist)Both sides of the equation - doctors and patients - are very mobile (we move, change employers - doctors move, change practices) - and there is no "centralized" data store with each persons digitized health information.As we move and age - and unless we have a chronic condition - our health data can become relatively obsolete - fairly quickly (lab results from a year ago are of limited use today)Most of us (in terms of the population as a whole) are only infrequent users of the healthcare system more broadly (cold, flu, stomach, UTI etc....). In other words, we're pretty healthy, so issues around healthcare (and it's use) is a lower priorityThere is a signNow loss of productivity when a practice moves from paper to electronic health records (thus the government "stimulus" funding - which is working - but still a long way to go)The penalties for PHI data bsignNow under HIPAA are signNow - so there has been a reluctance/fear to rely on electronic data. This is also why the vast majority of data bsignNowes are paper-based (typically USPS)This is why solutions like Google Health - and Revolution Health before them - failed - and closed completely (as in please remove your data - the service will no longer be available)All of which are contributing factors to why the U.S. Healthcare System looks like this:===============Chart Source: Mary Meeker - USA, Inc. (2011) - link here:http://www.kpcb.com/insights/usa...

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