Clinic

This article is about those outpatient clinics that are not connected with hospitals. For outpatient clinics of hospitals, see Outpatient clinic (hospital department). For inpatient healthcare facilities, see general hospital. For the British political term, see Surgery (politics). For other uses, see Clinic (disambiguation).
A medpunkt (health care access point) delivers primary health care to the residents of the village of Veliki Vrag in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, Russia.
The entrance to a surgery clinic in Greenwich, London.
Polyclinic in Písek, Czech Republic.
Children Polyclinic in Moscow-Novokosino.
Military Polyclinic in Legionowo, Poland.

A clinic (or outpatient clinic or ambulatory care clinic) is a healthcare facility that is primarily focused on the care of outpatients. Clinics can be privately operated or publicly managed and funded. They typically cover the primary healthcare needs of populations in local communities, in contrast to larger hospitals which offer specialised treatments and admit inpatients for overnight stays.

Most commonly, the word clinic in English refers to a general medical practice, run by one or more general practitioners, but it can also mean a specialist clinic. Some clinics retain the name “clinic" even while growing into institutions as large as major hospitals or becoming associated with a hospital or medical school.

Overview

Clinics are often associated with a general medical practice run by one or several general practitioners. Other types of clinics are run by the type of specialist associated with that type: physical therapy clinics by physiotherapists and psychology clinics by clinical psychologists, and so on for each health profession. (This can even hold true for certain services outside the medical field: for example, legal clinics are run by lawyers.)

Some clinics are operated in-house by employers, government organizations, or hospitals, and some clinical services are outsourced to private corporations which specialize in providing health services. In China, for example, owners of such clinics do not have formal medical education. There were 659,596 village clinics in China in 2011.[1]

Health care in India, China, Russia and Africa is provided to those countries' vast rural areas by mobile health clinics or roadside dispensaries, some of which integrate traditional medicine. In India these traditional clinics provide ayurvedic medicine and unani herbal medical practice. In each of these countries, traditional medicine tends to be a hereditary practice.

Etymology

The word clinic derives from Ancient Greek κλίνειν klinein meaning to slope, lean or recline. Hence κλίνη klinē is a couch or bed and κλινικός klinikos is a physician who visits his patients in their beds.[2] In Latin, this became clīnicus.[3][4]

An early use of the word clinic was "one who receives baptism on a sick bed".[5]

Function

The function of clinics differs from country to country. For instance, a local general practice run by a single general practitioner provides primary health care and is usually run as a for-profit business by the owner, whereas a government-run specialist clinic may provide subsidised or specialised health care.

Some clinics function as a place for people with injuries or illnesses to come and be seen by a triage nurse or other health worker. In these clinics, the injury or illness may not be serious enough to require a visit to an emergency room (ER), but the person can be transferred to one if needed.

Treatment at these clinics is often less expensive than it would be at a casualty department. Also, unlike an ER these clinics are often not open on a 24 x 7 x 365 basis. They sometimes have access to diagnostic equipment such as X-ray machines, especially if the clinic is part of a larger facility. Doctors at such clinics can often refer patients to specialists if the need arises.

Large outpatient clinics

Large outpatient clinics vary in size, but can be as large as hospitals.

Function

Typical large outpatient clinics house general medical practitioners (GPs) such as doctors and nurses to provide ambulatory care and some acute care services but lack the major surgical and pre- and post-operative care facilities commonly associated with hospitals.

Besides GPs, if a clinic is a polyclinic, it can house outpatient departments of some medical specialties, such as gynecology, dermatology, ophthalmology, otolaryngology, neurology, pulmonology, cardiology, and endocrinology. In some university cities, polyclinics contain outpatient departments for the entire teaching hospital in one building.

Internationally

Large outpatient clinics are a common type of healthcare facility in many countries, including France, Germany (long tradition), Switzerland, and most of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe (often using a mixed Soviet-German model), as well as in former Soviet republics such as Russia and Ukraine;[6] and in many countries across Asia and Africa.[7]

Recent Russian governments have attempted to replace the polyclinic model introduced during Soviet times with a more western model. However, this has failed.[8]

India has also set up huge numbers of polyclinics for former defence personnel. The network envisages 426 polyclinics in 343 districts of the country which will benefit about 33 lakh (3.3 million) ex-servicemen residing in remote and far-flung areas.[9]

Polyclinics are also the backbone of Cuba's primary care system and have been credited with a role in improving that nation's health indicators.[10]

Types

Storefront clinic in Manhattan.

There are many different types of clinics providing outpatient services. Such clinics may be public (government-funded) or private medical practices.

Examples

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clinics.

References

  1. "Statistical Communiqué on the 2011 National Economic and Social Development". stats.gov.cn. National Bureau of Statistics of China. 22 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-09-05.
  2. κλινικός in A Greek–English Lexicon. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  3. clinicus in A Latin Dictionary. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  4. Partridge, Eric. Origins: A short etymological dictionary of modern English. Book Club Associates, 1966.
  5. Clinic, Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, 1913.
  6. NLH - Health Management - Policlinics. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  7. Google
  8. Ershova I, Rider O, Gorelov V (December 2007). "Policlinics in London". Lancet. 370 (9603): 1890–1. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61793-0. PMID 18068500.
  9. "199 Additional Polyclinics For Ex-Servicemen". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 2010-05-26.
  10. Cuba’s primary health care revolution: 30 years on, Bulletin of the World Health Organization
  11. http://www.bprc.in/page/1
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