II. Definitions
- Invastigating Complaints
- Standard criteria
- Criteria to referr - Decision Making
- Associated conditions
- Ruling out through Lab investigation
III. Pathophysiology
IV. Classification
- Patients having chronic conditions
- Secondary Prevention Actions
- Real Time continuous Care
- Continuing Education
- Treating the most common cause
- Rouling out Anxiety and or Depression
- Accepting the nature of the main complaint
- Invastigating more
- Making sure it is not an Emergency
- Making a plan accepted by Consultant, the Patient and his / her relatives
V. Causes: Common Non-Infectious Causes of Low Grade Fever
VI. Management
A primary care practice serves as the patient's first point of entry into the health care system and as the continuing focal point for all needed health care services. Primary care practices provide patients with ready access to their own personal physician, or to an established back-up physician when the primary physician is not available.
Primary care practices provide health promotion, disease prevention, health maintenance, counseling, patient education, diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic illnesses in a variety of health care settings (e.g., office, inpatient, critical care, long-term care, home care, day care, etc.).
Primary care practices are organized to meet the needs of patients with undifferentiated problems, with the vast majority of patient concerns and needs being cared for in the primary care practice itself. Primary care practices are generally located in the community of the patients, thereby facilitating access to health care while maintaining a wide variety of specialty and institutional consultative and referral relationships for specific care needs. The structure of the primary care practice may include a team of physicians and non-physician health professionals.