This is responsible, professional, administrative public health work in varied programs of the state. Employees assist
administrators in planning, organizing, coordinating, and implementing programs and services of the local health department
or a state program; compile data for use in preparing county or program budgets; prepare proposals for budget with
justification and estimates for an administrator; provide information to the general public, clients, and civic organizations
concerning services offered; speak at meetings regarding services for a variety of programs such as family planning,
maternity and children's services, health screenings, environmental health, communicable disease, immunization,
hypertension, and other public health programs; prepare and maintain records and specialized information for health
programs and support operations; gather statistics; calculate costs and revenue data; and write reports with findings,
recommendations, and conclusions. Work is performed in several special areas to develop expertise and expose employees
to all facets of program administration.
2006-10-17 06:58:46
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answer #1
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answered by Still_21_nheart 4
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For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/awJ3L
Right now the health care field is shrinking due in large part to state government deficits, low lever federal subsidy, and commerical payer restraints. Hospitals, clinics, and nursing homes are either in a belt tightening mode or will be. Having said that, opportunities will exist for sharpe management that can redesign patient care models, contract effectively with employee unions, and squeeze a decimal or two more out of commercial payer contacts. All this is based on my experience in health care administration over the last 25 years. Most recently, my hospital has reduced 388 employees in December 2008 (about 2/3's RN, but just about from every job class - even senior managemet). My hospital is in a top 20 metropolitan area within the U.S., we are also now looking at implementing a second wave of between 150 to 200. I belive health care administration can be a very rewarding job (it is however, more about what the person draws from it and not really about money). If you like to work hard, help people, and have a pretty thick skin go get into the field. Good luck and I hope you find what your looking for.
2016-04-04 21:26:28
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
what does a health care administrator do?
2015-08-10 16:39:37
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answer #3
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answered by ? 1
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Are you being suckered into enrolling in MHA or BSHA at the University of Phoenix?
Health care administrators can run nursing homes, hospitals, departments within health care agencies. They can work for insurance companies, the federal or state health departments. They tend to deal more with the functioning of the overall department or facility verses someone with a MBA who is only concerned with the bottom line of finances.
For example, a Health care administrator would not only budget for the facility or dept, but would have concern with hiring practices, employee concerns, and quality of patient care.
2006-10-17 06:52:01
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answer #4
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answered by Laughing Libra 6
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The health care administrator administers the health program for a county, hospital or other entity. For example, let's say the county offers health services and has several programs on drug use, pregnancy testing, AIDs testing, etc, etc. It's the health care administrator that sets the budget, hires and fires, and sees that the programs are carried out according to the rules of the county.
2006-10-17 06:52:49
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answer #5
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answered by Arnold M 4
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What Do Healthcare Administrators Do
2016-12-18 04:16:08
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answer #6
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answered by mccunn 4
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The health care administration usually works in the business office of a hospital or medical care facility. He is in charge of the budgetary matters of the facility, such as accounts payable, facilities management, supplies, administrative staff, etc. Not very exciting if you ask me.
2006-10-17 06:53:02
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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blocks access to necessary health care.in too many cases.
the paperwork.
here's for the official explanation:
Medical and health services managers
Medical and health services managers, also referred to as health care executives or health care administrators, plan, direct, coordinate, and supervise the ...
www.bls.gov/oco/ocos014.htm
2006-10-17 06:53:11
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answer #8
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answered by macdoodle 5
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This job is in a pretty high demand. you'd do billing, insurance claims, office work,coordinate between departments etc.
2017-02-01 20:48:23
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answer #9
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answered by ? 1
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Some one has to find a way to make the income and the bills match up, and that would be you, the one who says yes, but much more frequently, no. People will die because of your decisions, but everyone who gets better has benefitted from your decisions.
The definition of a tough, thankless, and very neccessary job.
2006-10-17 06:53:20
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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