A

Advanced Foot And Ankle Center

(on shore ste)
Doctors in Rhinelander, WI
Doctors

Hours

Monday
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Tuesday
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Wednesday
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Thursday
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Friday
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Saturday
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Sunday
9:00AM - 5:00PM

Location

2251 N Shore Dr Ste 200
Rhinelander, WI
54501

Photos

Advanced Foot And Ankle Center Photo Advanced Foot And Ankle Center Photo

Latest

Single Podiatrist Visit: $3.5 Billion in US Health-Care Savings Per Year Results Now Published in Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association Bethesda, MD - If every American at risk for developing a diabetic foot ulcer visited a podiatrist once before complications set in, the US health-care system could save $3.5 billion in one year. Closing this gap in podiatric care would reduce health-care waste on preventable conditions, which reportedly starts at $25 billion, by 14 percent. This estimation is a projection based on findings from a Thomson Reuters study published in the March/April 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association (JAPMA). The study's numbers were based upon the American population that has either commercial insurance (116 million) or Medicare (46 million) in the Thomson Reuters MarketScan Research Database. Sponsored by APMA and independently conducted by Thomson Reuters, the study measured the health-care records of nearly 500,000 patients with commercial insurance and/or Medicare. "The study's findings are astounding. If just one individual at risk for a foot ulcer sees a podiatrist once before a foot ulcer becomes apparent, they will have singlehandedly saved our country nearly $20,000 over three years," said Kathleen Stone, DPM, president of APMA. "This data does not even include the 47 million uninsured Americans or the 58 million currently on Medicaid, who have a higher incidence of diabetes and complications. The bottom line is that seeing a podiatrist saves limbs and lives, and equates to billions of needed dollars saved for America's health-care system." After comparing health and risk factors for those who had seen a podiatrist for care to those who did not, the commercial insurance group saved $19,686 per patient over a three-year period. The Medicare group saved $4,271 per patient over the same three years. Conservatively projected, these per-patient numbers support an estimated $10.5 billion in savings over three years ($3.5 billion a year). Including today's podiatrist in the diabetes management team is a vital step to preventing ulcers and amputation. Recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that in 2006, more than 65,000 lower limb amputations were performed in the US due to diabetes-related complications. Diabetes currently affects nearly 26 million people in the US, seven million of whom are undiagnosed. For additional information on the study, visit www.apma.org/study-summary. APMA.ORG http://www.apma.org/study-summary
BLOGTALKRADIO.COM Put Your Best Foot Forward...But Not Always In High Heels!
Single Podiatrist Visit: $3.5 Billion in US Health-Care Savings Per Year Results Now Published in Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association Bethesda, MD - If every American at risk for developing a diabetic foot ulcer visited a podiatrist once before complications set in, the US health-care system could save $3.5 billion in one year. Closing this gap in podiatric care would reduce health-care waste on preventable conditions, which reportedly starts at $25 billion, by 14 percent. This estimation is a projection based on findings from a Thomson Reuters study published in the March/April 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association (JAPMA). The study's numbers were based upon the American population that has either commercial insurance (116 million) or Medicare (46 million) in the Thomson Reuters MarketScan Research Database. Sponsored by APMA and independently conducted by Thomson Reuters, the study measured the health-care records of nearly 500,000 patients with commercial insurance and/or Medicare. "The study's findings are astounding. If just one individual at risk for a foot ulcer sees a podiatrist once before a foot ulcer becomes apparent, they will have singlehandedly saved our country nearly $20,000 over three years," said Kathleen Stone, DPM, president of APMA. "This data does not even include the 47 million uninsured Americans or the 58 million currently on Medicaid, who have a higher incidence of diabetes and complications. The bottom line is that seeing a podiatrist saves limbs and lives, and equates to billions of needed dollars saved for America's health-care system." After comparing health and risk factors for those who had seen a podiatrist for care to those who did not, the commercial insurance group saved $19,686 per patient over a three-year period. The Medicare group saved $4,271 per patient over the same three years. Conservatively projected, these per-patient numbers support an estimated $10.5 billion in savings over three years ($3.5 billion a year). Including today's podiatrist in the diabetes management team is a vital step to preventing ulcers and amputation. Recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that in 2006, more than 65,000 lower limb amputations were performed in the US due to diabetes-related complications. Diabetes currently affects nearly 26 million people in the US, seven million of whom are undiagnosed. For additional information on the study, visit www.apma.org/study-summary. APMA.ORG http://www.apma.org/study-summary
BLOGTALKRADIO.COM Put Your Best Foot Forward...But Not Always In High Heels!
Single Podiatrist Visit: $3.5 Billion in US Health-Care Savings Per Year Results Now Published in Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association Bethesda, MD - If every American at risk for developing a diabetic foot ulcer visited a podiatrist once before complications set in, the US health-care system could save $3.5 billion in one year. Closing this gap in podiatric care would reduce health-care waste on preventable conditions, which reportedly starts at $25 billion, by 14 percent. This estimation is a projection based on findings from a Thomson Reuters study published in the March/April 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association (JAPMA). The study's numbers were based upon the American population that has either commercial insurance (116 million) or Medicare (46 million) in the Thomson Reuters MarketScan Research Database. Sponsored by APMA and independently conducted by Thomson Reuters, the study measured the health-care records of nearly 500,000 patients with commercial insurance and/or Medicare. "The study's findings are astounding. If just one individual at risk for a foot ulcer sees a podiatrist once before a foot ulcer becomes apparent, they will have singlehandedly saved our country nearly $20,000 over three years," said Kathleen Stone, DPM, president of APMA. "This data does not even include the 47 million uninsured Americans or the 58 million currently on Medicaid, who have a higher incidence of diabetes and complications. The bottom line is that seeing a podiatrist saves limbs and lives, and equates to billions of needed dollars saved for America's health-care system." After comparing health and risk factors for those who had seen a podiatrist for care to those who did not, the commercial insurance group saved $19,686 per patient over a three-year period. The Medicare group saved $4,271 per patient over the same three years. Conservatively projected, these per-patient numbers support an estimated $10.5 billion in savings over three years ($3.5 billion a year). Including today's podiatrist in the diabetes management team is a vital step to preventing ulcers and amputation. Recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that in 2006, more than 65,000 lower limb amputations were performed in the US due to diabetes-related complications. Diabetes currently affects nearly 26 million people in the US, seven million of whom are undiagnosed. For additional information on the study, visit www.apma.org/study-summary. APMA.ORG http://www.apma.org/study-summary
BLOGTALKRADIO.COM Put Your Best Foot Forward...But Not Always In High Heels!
Single Podiatrist Visit: $3.5 Billion in US Health-Care Savings Per Year Results Now Published in Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association Bethesda, MD - If every American at risk for developing a diabetic foot ulcer visited a podiatrist once before complications set in, the US health-care system could save $3.5 billion in one year. Closing this gap in podiatric care would reduce health-care waste on preventable conditions, which reportedly starts at $25 billion, by 14 percent. This estimation is a projection based on findings from a Thomson Reuters study published in the March/April 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association (JAPMA). The study's numbers were based upon the American population that has either commercial insurance (116 million) or Medicare (46 million) in the Thomson Reuters MarketScan Research Database. Sponsored by APMA and independently conducted by Thomson Reuters, the study measured the health-care records of nearly 500,000 patients with commercial insurance and/or Medicare. "The study's findings are astounding. If just one individual at risk for a foot ulcer sees a podiatrist once before a foot ulcer becomes apparent, they will have singlehandedly saved our country nearly $20,000 over three years," said Kathleen Stone, DPM, president of APMA. "This data does not even include the 47 million uninsured Americans or the 58 million currently on Medicaid, who have a higher incidence of diabetes and complications. The bottom line is that seeing a podiatrist saves limbs and lives, and equates to billions of needed dollars saved for America's health-care system." After comparing health and risk factors for those who had seen a podiatrist for care to those who did not, the commercial insurance group saved $19,686 per patient over a three-year period. The Medicare group saved $4,271 per patient over the same three years. Conservatively projected, these per-patient numbers support an estimated $10.5 billion in savings over three years ($3.5 billion a year). Including today's podiatrist in the diabetes management team is a vital step to preventing ulcers and amputation. Recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that in 2006, more than 65,000 lower limb amputations were performed in the US due to diabetes-related complications. Diabetes currently affects nearly 26 million people in the US, seven million of whom are undiagnosed. For additional information on the study, visit www.apma.org/study-summary. APMA.ORG http://www.apma.org/study-summary
BLOGTALKRADIO.COM Put Your Best Foot Forward...But Not Always In High Heels!
Single Podiatrist Visit: $3.5 Billion in US Health-Care Savings Per Year Results Now Published in Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association Bethesda, MD - If every American at risk for developing a diabetic foot ulcer visited a podiatrist once before complications set in, the US health-care system could save $3.5 billion in one year. Closing this gap in podiatric care would reduce health-care waste on preventable conditions, which reportedly starts at $25 billion, by 14 percent. This estimation is a projection based on findings from a Thomson Reuters study published in the March/April 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association (JAPMA). The study's numbers were based upon the American population that has either commercial insurance (116 million) or Medicare (46 million) in the Thomson Reuters MarketScan Research Database. Sponsored by APMA and independently conducted by Thomson Reuters, the study measured the health-care records of nearly 500,000 patients with commercial insurance and/or Medicare. "The study's findings are astounding. If just one individual at risk for a foot ulcer sees a podiatrist once before a foot ulcer becomes apparent, they will have singlehandedly saved our country nearly $20,000 over three years," said Kathleen Stone, DPM, president of APMA. "This data does not even include the 47 million uninsured Americans or the 58 million currently on Medicaid, who have a higher incidence of diabetes and complications. The bottom line is that seeing a podiatrist saves limbs and lives, and equates to billions of needed dollars saved for America's health-care system." After comparing health and risk factors for those who had seen a podiatrist for care to those who did not, the commercial insurance group saved $19,686 per patient over a three-year period. The Medicare group saved $4,271 per patient over the same three years. Conservatively projected, these per-patient numbers support an estimated $10.5 billion in savings over three years ($3.5 billion a year). Including today's podiatrist in the diabetes management team is a vital step to preventing ulcers and amputation. Recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics show that in 2006, more than 65,000 lower limb amputations were performed in the US due to diabetes-related complications. Diabetes currently affects nearly 26 million people in the US, seven million of whom are undiagnosed. For additional information on the study, visit www.apma.org/study-summary. APMA.ORG http://www.apma.org/study-summary
BLOGTALKRADIO.COM Put Your Best Foot Forward...But Not Always In High Heels!
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/bridgetteraes/2012/02/17/where-you-going-in-that BLOGTALKRADIO.COM Put Your Best Foot Forward...But Not Always In High Heels!
Greenpoint Foot and Ankle Associates / Foot & Ankle Surgery / Podiatry added 3 new photos. July 17, 2012 at 3:13 AM ·

Information

Company name
Advanced Foot And Ankle Center
Category
Doctors

FAQs

  • What is the phone number for Advanced Foot And Ankle Center in Rhinelander WI?
    You can reach them at: 715-369-3691. It’s best to call Advanced Foot And Ankle Center during business hours.
  • What is the address for Advanced Foot And Ankle Center on shore ste in Rhinelander?
    Advanced Foot And Ankle Center is located at this address: 2251 N Shore Dr Ste 200 Rhinelander, WI 54501.
  • What are Advanced Foot And Ankle Center(Rhinelander, WI) store hours?
    Advanced Foot And Ankle Center store hours are as follows: Mon-Sun: 9:00AM - 5:00PM.