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Related Concept Videos

Capillarity in Fluid01:19

Capillarity in Fluid

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Capillarity describes the movement of liquid in small spaces without external forces acting on it. The capillarity is driven by surface tension and adhesive interactions between the liquid and surrounding solid surfaces. This effect is often seen in narrow tubes, porous materials, and fine particles.
Surface tension is crucial to capillarity. It results from cohesive forces between liquid molecules at the liquid-air boundary, forming a skin that resists external forces. When the capillary tube...
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Capillary Beds01:20

Capillary Beds

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Capillary beds are networks of tiny blood vessels that play a crucial role in the circulatory system. These beds are where the exchange of gases, nutrients, and waste products occurs between the blood and surrounding tissues. Each capillary bed consists of numerous capillaries, which are the smallest blood vessels in the body, typically only one cell-thick. This thinness allows for the efficient diffusion of substances.
Capillaries connect arterioles, small branches of arteries, to venules,...
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Rise of Liquid in a Capillary Tube01:18

Rise of Liquid in a Capillary Tube

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When very thin cylindrical tubes, called capillaries, are dipped in a liquid, the liquid rises or falls in the tube compared to the surrounding liquid. This phenomenon is called capillary action. Capillary action occurs due to the combination of two opposing forces: the cohesive forces of the liquid, which cause it to stick to itself and form a rounded shape, and the adhesive forces between the liquid and the walls of the container, which cause the liquid to be attracted to the container walls.
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Pinocytosis00:43

Pinocytosis

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Cells use energy-requiring bulk transport mechanisms to transfer large particles, or large amounts of small particles, into or out of the cell. The cells envelop the particles in spherical membranes called vesicles or vacuoles. Vesicles that transport material into the cell are built from the cell membrane. These vesicles encapsulate external molecules and transport them into the cell in a process called endocytosis.
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Pinocytosis00:38

Pinocytosis

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Cells use energy-requiring bulk transport mechanisms to transfer large particles or large numbers of small particles into or out of the cell. The cells envelop the particles in spherical membranes called vesicles or vacuoles. Vesicles that transport material into the cell are built from the cell membrane. These vesicles encapsulate external molecules and transport them into the cell in a process called endocytosis.
Pinocytosis ("cellular drinking") is one of three main types of...
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Capillary Exchange01:28

Capillary Exchange

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The cardiovascular system's chief role is to disseminate gases, nutrients, waste, and other substances to the body's cells. Small molecules like gases, lipids, and lipid-soluble substances directly diffuse through capillary wall endothelial cell membranes. Glucose, amino acids, and ions, including sodium, potassium, calcium, and chloride, use transporters for facilitated diffusion via membrane-specific channels. Glucose, ions, and bigger molecules may also pass through intercellular...
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The Case for Capitation.

Brent C James, Gregory P Poulsen

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    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Population-based payment (PBP) offers a solution to healthcare waste by providing fixed per-person payments. This model incentivizes providers to reduce costs and improve efficiency, unlike fee-for-service models.

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    Area of Science:

    • Health Economics
    • Healthcare Management
    • Public Health Policy

    Background:

    • Significant healthcare spending in the U.S. is attributed to waste, including inadequate, unnecessary, and inefficient care.
    • Current payment models, primarily fee-for-service, do not incentivize providers to reduce costs, as savings primarily benefit insurers.
    • Providers are financially penalized for implementing cost-saving innovations due to payment structures based on service volume.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To propose and evaluate population-based payment (PBP) as an alternative healthcare reimbursement model.
    • To demonstrate how PBP can align provider incentives with cost reduction and waste elimination.
    • To highlight the key differences and advantages of PBP over previous capitation models like HMOs.

    Main Methods:

    • Implementing a population-based payment (PBP) model within a segment of the Intermountain Healthcare system.
    • Shifting from volume-based payments to a fixed per-person annual payment for all healthcare services.
    • Establishing direct payments to care delivery groups, with physicians managing treatment costs and adhering to quality standards.

    Main Results:

    • The implementation of PBP led to a reduction of $688 million in annual waste.
    • Total healthcare costs were reduced by 13% within the studied population.
    • Providers were incentivized to identify and eliminate inefficiencies, leading to significant cost savings.

    Conclusions:

    • Population-based payment (PBP) is an effective model for reducing healthcare waste and controlling costs.
    • PBP aligns provider incentives with value-based care, encouraging innovation in cost-effective treatments.
    • This reimbursement strategy can improve financial sustainability for providers while enhancing patient care quality.