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  2. Urgent care center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urgent_care_center

    An urgent care center (UCC), also known as an urgent treatment centre (UTC) in the United Kingdom, is a type of walk-in clinic focused on the delivery of urgent ambulatory care in a dedicated medical facility outside of a traditional emergency department located within a hospital.

  3. Medical emergency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_emergency

    Any response to an emergency medical situation will depend strongly on the situation, the patient involved, and availability of resources to help them. It will also vary depending on whether the emergency occurs whilst in hospital under medical care, or outside medical care (for instance, in the street or alone at home).

  4. Emergency medical services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical_services

    In some areas, private companies may provide only the patient transport elements of ambulance care (i.e. non-urgent), but in some places, they are contracted to provide emergency care, or to form a 'second tier' response, where they only respond to emergencies when all of the full-time emergency ambulance crews are busy.

  5. Walk-in clinic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walk-in_clinic

    Urgent care centers make up the largest percentage of walk-in clinics in America with an estimated 9,000 locations nationwide. In fact, consumers often erroneously refer to all walk-in clinics as urgent care centers, and vice versa. Retail clinics are the next most prevalent in the industry with 1,443 locations as of July 1, 2013. [1]

  6. Pre-hospital emergency medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-hospital_emergency...

    Pre-hospital emergency medicine (abbreviated PHEM), also referred to as pre-hospital care, immediate care, or emergency medical services medicine (abbreviated EMS medicine), is a medical subspecialty which focuses on caring for seriously ill or injured patients before they reach hospital, and during emergency transfer to hospital or between hospitals.

  7. Emergency department - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_department

    The main patient area inside the Mobile Medical Unit operated in Belle Chasse, Louisiana. An emergency department (ED), also known as an accident and emergency department (A&E), emergency room (ER), emergency ward (EW) or casualty department, is a medical treatment facility specializing in emergency medicine, the acute care of patients who present without prior appointment; either by their own ...

  8. Emergency medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medicine

    Emergency medicine may separate from urgent care, which refers to primary healthcare for less emergent medical issues, but there is obvious overlap, and many emergency physicians work in urgent care settings. Emergency medicine also includes many aspects of acute primary care and shares with family medicine the uniqueness of seeing all patients ...

  9. Ambulatory care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambulatory_care

    Clinics: Including ambulatory care clinics, polyclinics, ambulatory surgery centers, and urgent care centers. In the United States, the Urgent Care Association of America (UCAOA) estimates that over 15,000 urgent care centers deliver urgent care services. These centers are designed to evaluate and treat conditions that are not severe enough to ...