Category: M

  • Medical records institute

    An independent organization promoting electronic health records as a part of a seamless, patient-centered information system. Provides educational programs and publications in the field.  

  • Medical director

    A physician who contracts with or is employed by a health care plan (or other managed care organization) to provide medical direction. Responsibilities will include review of authorizations for referrals and admissions, review of cases for quality and utilization issues, formulation of clinical policies, criteria, and standards, and so forth. A physician, usually employed by…

  • Medical center

    An essentially undefined term which may refer to a single institution, but is usually taken to mean that there is more to the institution than merely a single hospital—perhaps several hospitals in a complex, or perhaps a wider range of facilities and services than an ordinary hospital is likely to offer. The term does not…

  • Medical care hotel

    A hotel for patients who need certain hospital services, but who can live in hotel surroundings, that is, without round-the-clock nursing. This is not a hotel for the families of patients.  

  • Medical care evaluation

    Usually refers to the patient care audit (medical audit), which is a retrospective review of the quality of care of a group of patients, ordinarily a group with the same diagnosis or therapy.  

  • Medical care

    Traditionally, care which was under the direction of a physician. For a time, “medical care” came to refer only to those portions of the care provided directly or personally by a physician, with the care given by other professionals (such as nursing care, rehabilitation, and the like) excluded, or at least semi-independent, from the definition…

  • Materiel

    The tools, equipment, and supplies necessary to do any given work, as contrasted with the personnel needed to do the work.  

  • Marshfield clinic case

    A federal antitrust case in which the appellate opinion suggests that providers can freely deal with (or even refuse to deal with) insurance companies even where the providers have a “natural monopoly” (the market is just too small to support additional providers). At trial it was argued that a provider (Marshfield Clinic and its wholly-owned…

  • Managed competition

    A strategy for purchasing health care in a manner which, it is proposed, would obtain maximum value for the price for the purchasers of the health care and the recipients. The concept was developed primarily by Alain Enthoven (Stanford University), and has been promulgated by the Jackson Hole Group. In health care practice, the requirement…

  • Managed care plan

    An organization providing managed care. A managed care plan has a defined group of providers and an identified group of enrollees to be served. Forward-looking plans develop explicit standards of care to be required of its providers, and are concerned not only with treatment and amelioration of disease, but also with prevention. The plan may…