Margaret Kelly Burkhead, MD - Adjunct Professor at UNC Chapel Hill
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
What is an Accountable Care Organization?
As an independent medical consultant, Margaret Kelly Burkhead, MD, provides medical advice to people in the Raleigh, North Carolina, area. She previously worked as a physician at Raleigh Family Practice, treating patients that ranged in age from newborn to 95 years old. An active participant in the medical community, Margaret Kelly Burkhead, MD, is involved with the North Carolina Medical Society (NCMS). She worked with the NCMS to further its Accountable Care Organization initiative (ACO).
The purpose of the initiative is to create an ACO comprised of healthcare professionals, hospitals, and clinics in rural areas in North Carolina. Overseen by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, ACOs band together on a volunteer basis to streamline their processes and care programs. The ideal result is that all patients under ACO providers receive the right treatment at the right time with no duplicated efforts or errors. Currently, Medicare offers three different ACO programs: the Medicare Shared Savings Program, the Advance Payment ACO Model, and the Pioneer ACO Model. The Medicare Shared Savings Program is the only one of the three that accepts applicants on an ongoing basis.
To learn more about ACOs and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, visit goo.gl/wPvKpd.
Monday, June 20, 2016
The Wake County Medical Society Community Health Foundation
Margaret Kelly Burkhead, MD, serves as an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill while concurrently working as an independent consultant. As part of her commitment to patient well-being, Margaret Kelly Burkhead, MD, is affiliated with both the Wake County Medical Society and the Wake County Medical Society Community Health Foundation.
The Wake County Medical Society is a network of physicians who are dedicated to improving health care for their patients in North Carolina. The society focuses on increasing access to care, improving quality of care, and reducing the cost of medical treatment for patients. More than 500 Wake County physicians have joined together to become advocates for the men and women they treat.
The Community Health Foundation is an offshoot of the Medical Society itself. It was organized as a tool for physicians, allowing them to fund and carry out important projects within the community. Current programs run by the foundation include Project Access, Community Care of Wake and Johnston Counties, and CapitalCare Collaborative, all of which work to serve patients from disadvantaged backgrounds.
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