Acute care facilities

Respond separately to the 5 posts. Agree/disagree/provide feedback.
The subject of discussion: acute care and ambulatory care.  How do you see these two different types of treatment facilities competing in the market for patients?  How can they work together to assist in providing care to focused patient needs?

1) Acute care facilities are facilities that provide short-term inpatient care for patients with injuries, illness, and surgeries where the patient may need close monitored care. Such facilities would include hospitals and rehabilitation centers.
Ambulatory care facilities provide care for patients in an outpatient setting. These settings include surgery centers, urgent care, doctor’s offices, and clinics.
I feel like both acute care and ambulatory care centers are competing in the market for patients because both facilities provide similar care. For many years hospitals were the go-to for all care necessities. Hospitals provide many services such as lab collection, x-rays, major surgeries, minor ambulatory surgeries, and extensive care. Some hospitals also serve as locations for doctor’s offices and clinics such as cancer clinics and dialysis clinics. In some rural areas hospitals are still the main location for all medical care. In the last 15 years or so this has begun to change. As towns and cities begin to grow there is a need for more care options. Areas began opening separate lab facilities, imaging centers, urticates, and surgery centers. Some people still prefer the traditional hospital setting but others have preferred the convenience and accessibility of ambulatory service.
2) Starting off with acute care, it is best known as inpatient care and ambulatory care, is the opposite,  it is the fast food of health care, that can provide care by health care professionals in outpatient settings, examples include medical offices and clinics, ambulatory surgery centers, hospital outpatient departments, and dialysis centers.
These two really can’t compete much for patients due to the quality of care that is expected from each. Acute is more impersonal care like one-on-one and some are even monitored by a health care professional. While ambulatory care is more of an in-and-out type of care with home-sent instructions to follow. Certain procedures fall into one of these categories but not both, so to compete would be strange but it can occur. Now when Covid hit a lot of acute care was turned into ambulatory care for various reasons, but now with a surge in the hospitals and staff care a lot of the emergency rooms are referring patients to a minute clinic for simple cold remedies, etc.  This can help with the long waits in the ER and can aid in the simple medications for the cold or flu season.
3) Acute Care and Ambulatory care can often overlap, or a patient may receive initial treatment through acute care and transition to ambulatory care. Some similarities are that both revolve around patients and their needs. Both strive to provide the best possible care for the well-being of the patient. Both Acute and Ambulatory Care can experience high levels of stress, though acute care may encounter more frequent life-threatening conditions.
Acute Care can be competitive in the attribution to increasing cases of chronic pain and a growing number of needs for acute care. The rising number of elderly people usually suffer from various acute diseases like viral infections and cardiovascular diseases which grow the market for acute care. According to Heart Foundation and World Health Organization, Cardiovascular Disease is the leading global cause of death accounting for 17 million deaths per year. On the hand, Ambulatory Care competes in the market with innovative technologies that improve recovery times. These settings are also convenient and have quicker access to care with shorter visits. They also tend to be on the lower cost of care than in an acute setting and probably why it drives more patients towards an ambulatory care setting.
4) Acute care is a medical setting where a patient gets short-term treatment for a serious injury, illness or emergency health situation, or recovery care following surgery. Acute care involves patients who get admitted to the hospital, either for emergency situations or for scheduled surgeries, for example. The goal of acute care is to discharge patients as soon as they are healthy and stable, though some situations may require long-term acute care, averaging 20-30 days for situations like open heart surgery recovery.
Ambulatory care is medical care provided on an outpatient basis, often in non-hospital environments that do not require overnight stays. Ambulatory care still involves the diagnosis, observation, consultation, treatment, intervention, or rehabilitation services for patients, however. It can range from a visit to your doctor for an annual exam to being treated in the emergency room for stitches and leaving the same day without being admitted.
I do not see these types of care as competing against each other for patients. Both acute and ambulatory care revolves around the patient and their needs. Acute care and ambulatory care can often overlap, or a patient may get initial treatment through acute care and transition to ambulatory care. I believe these two types of care facilities work well together to provide care for patients. Many hospitals have ambulatory care clinics to provide services for their patients post-hospitalization. Often, the social services department makes follow-up appointments for patients before discharging them.
5) Ambulatory services and acute services within the health field serve different patient needs. Ambulatory services are one-day procedures or services that operate on an outpatient basis. The patient enters and leaves the site without the need for continued monitoring. Acute services in healthcare are for treating illnesses and injuries that might require short-term monitoring or services and typically deals with inpatients.
When I think of competition between these two service facilities, I picture ambulatory surgery centers and hospitals. Ambulatory service centers take business away from hospitals, and in return, Hospitals have begun to offer ambulatory surgeries as well as building their own centers independent of the hospital but still under the same health system. I can also see the competition present within my own job working in IR. In IR a lot of the procedures that we perform are alternatives for surgery. Some of these procedures require a stay in the hospital, however, a lot do not. By doing this we are presenting an alternative treatment for the patient and taking business away from the surgeons and the OR. Another way I see competition working in IR is in outpatient vascular labs. They can offer more convenient scheduling.
I believe both ambulatory and acute facilities are needed in the healthcare field. Both are good options for treating patients depending on the severity of the issue. I believe both facilities can work together for the patient’s best interest. Ambulatory services can free up time and space from procedures that might be considered minimal in level-one trauma centers that are dealing with more serious situations. Also, continuity of care could be created between hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers to provide the best possible and cost-effective treatment for the patient.