MedWell Medical

MedWell Medical keeping seniors medically well. It's what we do!

04/08/2024

Referral Bonus!!!

We are looking for an experienced primary care clinic back office Medical Assistant for our Geriatric Primary Care Clinic in Long Beach.

Clinic Primary Care Experience is a must.

Experience in a managed care (HMO) clinic setting is even more of a plus (like for example you worked at Optum Clinic or Healthcare Partners clinic)!

Pay is competitive.

Send resume to clinic@medwellmedical.com.

Referral Bonus to anyone that refers a successful hire!

02/03/2024

🌟Now Hiring: Nurse Practitioners for Mobile Positions in Long Beach and surrounding areas🌟

Join our growing dedicated team in providing quality geriatric care to our Seniors who live in Assisted Livings! We’re looking for passionate and skilled Nurse Practitioners who want to deliver quality care (over quantity care).

Position Highlights:
• Schedule: Visit about 5 patients per day in 1 to 2 Assisted Livings or SNFs (You manage a Panel of about 100 patients). Chart from one of our offices or your home office.
• Compensation: Competitive Rates with Bonuses. Room for growth. New graduates welcome.
• Benefits: Health Insurance Stipend, 401K, Malpractice, Continuing Medical Education (CME) Allowances.
Qualifications: Board certified Nurse Practitioner or Physician Assistant with California license
Location: Long Beach and surrounding areas.
• Training: Seasoned or New graduates welcome. Training provided by highly passionate MDs and NPs.

Apply Today!

Send your CV to: mobile@medwellmedical.com or DM me.

Join us in delivering exceptional care and be a part of our compassionate team!

Referral bonus of $1,000 for any referrals that are hired!

01/21/2024

🌟Now Hiring: Nurse Practitioners for Mobile Positions in Long Beach and North Orange County🌟

Join our dedicated team in providing quality geriatric care to our Seniors who live in Assisted Livings! We’re looking for passionate and skilled Nurse Practitioners to fill our dynamic mobile roles.

Position Highlights:
• Schedule: Visit about 5 patients per day M-F in Assisted Livings or SNFs. Chart from one of our offices or your home office.
• Compensation: Competitive Rates with Bonuses. Room for growth.
• Benefits: Health Insurance Stipend, 401K, Malpractice, Continuing Medical Education (CME) Allowances
Qualifications:
• Board certified Nurse Practitioner or physician assistant with California license
Location:
• Long Beach, North Orange County and surrounding areas.

Apply Today!

Send your CV to: mobile@medwellmedical.com or DM me

Join us in delivering exceptional care and be a part of our compassionate team!

01/01/2024

Funny moment at the assisted living today wanted to share to make my friends laugh too.

I was out seeing three new patients today and they were all football fans but not of the same teams.

Patient one was a fan of 49ers
Patient three was a fan of Cowboys
Patient two was a fan of Rams

The Rams fan asked the first and second ones
why are they fans of the Fourty-whiners and Cowgirls 🤦🏻‍♂️ 😂 and they asked him why is he a fan of the Lambs 😂 🤦🏻‍♂️. So I asked them what do you guys call the Raiders fans and they said “Dreamers” because raiders are always dreaming of winning 😂

Diabetic meds Ozempic and Wegovy as weight loss medications. Hear Dr. Michael Tehrani’s quick thoughts on it on the radi...
04/28/2023

Diabetic meds Ozempic and Wegovy as weight loss medications. Hear Dr. Michael Tehrani’s quick thoughts on it on the radio. And answers to:

--Can these two drugs change the weight-loss industry?
--Can people just take pills now and lose weight? Is that the best way to do it?
--What are the potential dangers of these two drugs?
--Could these drugs lead to a decrease in the types of bariatric surgeries?

KNX In Depth's Rob Archer and Chris Sedens discuss a diabetes drug that's been found to aid in weight loss. Dr. Michael Tehrani is a southern California-based Geriatric Specialist who treats diabetes patients. He's on the medical board for U.S. News & World Report.

01/01/2022

Happy new year 2022!

May all your dreams turn into reality.
All your efforts into great achievements.
May the new year bring you the gift of peace, the gift of love, the gift of joy, the gift of happiness!

From all of here here at the MedWell Medical team ❤️

Happy Friday!! Don’t forget to laugh. Laughing releases chemicals that does a body good. 💃🕺🏻 MedWell Medical - Keeping S...
10/01/2021

Happy Friday!! Don’t forget to laugh. Laughing releases chemicals that does a body good. 💃🕺🏻

MedWell Medical - Keeping Seniors Medically Well!

Call 📞 us if you test positive for any of these 😂 TGIF!  Hope everyone has an awesome Friday and weekend and don’t forge...
09/25/2021

Call 📞 us if you test positive for any of these 😂

TGIF! Hope everyone has an awesome Friday and weekend and don’t forget it’s the Grand Prix in Long Beach starting today and this weekend and this year Snoop Dogg is here!

08/29/2021

***WARNING GRAPHIC POST***

I hate to share this post written from a hospital respiratory therapist but we can’t run from reality so better to understand what reality really is so we can make an informed decision. What you will read below is graphic but it is the raw reality. As always with how I practice medicine, the ultimate decision is yours but my job is to educate you on your options, risks and benefits, and make sure you understand them then together we make an informed decision.
--
Get vaccinated. If you choose not to, here’s what to expect if you are hospitalized for a serious case of COVID-19.

Stage 1. You’ve had debilitating symptoms for a few days, but now it is so hard to breathe that you come to the emergency room. Your oxygen saturation level tells us you need help, a supplemental flow of 1 to 4 liters of oxygen per minute. We admit you and start you on antivirals, steroids, anticoagulants or monoclonal antibodies. You’ll spend several days in the hospital feeling run-down, but if we can wean you off the oxygen, you’ll get discharged. You survive.

Stage 2. It becomes harder and harder for you to breathe. “Like drowning,” many patients describe the feeling. The bronchodilator treatments we give you provide little relief. Your oxygen requirements increase significantly, from 4 liters to 15 liters to 40 liters per minute. Little things, like relieving yourself or sitting up in bed, become too difficult for you to do on your own. Your oxygen saturation rapidly declines when you move about. We transfer you to the intensive care unit.

Stage 3. You’re exhausted from hyperventilating to satisfy your body’s demand for air. We put you on noninvasive, “positive pressure” ventilation — a big, bulky face mask that must be Velcro’d tightly around your face so the machine can efficiently push pressure into your lungs to pop them open so you get enough of the oxygen it delivers.

Stage 4. Your breathing becomes even more labored. We can tell you’re severely fatigued. An arterial blood draw confirms that the oxygen content in your blood is critically low. We prepare to intubate you. If you’re able to and if there’s time, we will suggest that you call your loved ones. This might be the last time they’ll hear your voice.

We connect you to a ventilator. You are sedated and paralyzed, fed through a feeding tube, hooked to a Foley catheter and a re**al tube. We turn your limp body regularly, so you don’t develop pressure ulcers — bed sores. We bathe you and keep you clean. We flip you onto your stomach to allow for better oxygenation. We will try experimental therapeutics.

Stage 5. Some patients survive Stage 4. Unfortunately, your oxygen levels and overall condition have not improved after several days on the ventilator. Your COVID-infested lungs need assistance and time to heal, something that an ECMO machine, which bypasses your lungs and oxygenates your blood, can provide. But alas, our community hospital doesn’t have that capability.

If you’re stable enough, you will get transferred to another hospital for that therapy. Otherwise, we’ll continue treating you as best we can. We’re understaffed and overwhelmed, but we’ll always give you the best care we can.

Stage 6. The pressure required to open your lungs is so high that air can leak into your chest cavity, so we insert tubes to clear it out. Your kidneys fail to filter the byproducts from the drugs we continuously give you. Despite diuretics, your entire body swells from fluid retention, and you require dialysis to help with your renal function.
The long hospital stay and your depressed immune system make you susceptible to infections. A chest X-ray shows fluid accumulating in your lung sacs. A blood clot may show up, too. We can’t prevent these complications at this point; we treat them as they present.
If your blood pressure drops critically, we will administer vasopressors to bring it up, but your heart may stop anyway. After several rounds of CPR, we’ll get your pulse and circulation back. But soon, your family will need to make a difficult decision.

Stage 7: After several meetings with the palliative care team, your family decides to withdraw care. We extubate you, turning off the breathing machinery. We set up a final FaceTime call with your loved ones. As we work in your room, we hear crying and loving goodbyes. We cry, too, and we hold your hand until your last natural breath.

I’ve been at this for 17 months now. It doesn’t get easier. These COVID stories rarely end well.
--
My opinion on this post? Sadly much of this is preventable.

Thank you to all the brave men and women who not only fought but ended up making the ultimate sacrifice so we can have t...
05/31/2021

Thank you to all the brave men and women who not only fought but ended up making the ultimate sacrifice so we can have the freedom we have today. We don’t know them all but we owe them all. Thank you for giving us the freedom we have had and continue to have everyday ❤️

03/09/2021

CDC issues first set of guidelines on how fully vaccinated people can visit safely with others:

March 8, 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued its first set of recommendations on activities that people who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can safely resume.

The new guidance—which is based on the latest science — includes recommendations for how and when a fully vaccinated individual can visit with other people who are fully vaccinated and with other people who are not vaccinated. This guidance represents a first step toward returning to everyday activities in our communities. CDC will update these recommendations as more people are vaccinated, rates of COVID-19 in the community change, and additional scientific evidence becomes available.

“We know that people want to get vaccinated so they can get back to doing the things they enjoy with the people they love,” said CDC Director Rochelle P. Walensky, MD, MPH. “There are some activities that fully vaccinated people can begin to resume now in their own homes. Everyone – even those who are vaccinated – should continue with all mitigation strategies when in public settings. As the science evolves and more people get vaccinated, we will continue to provide more guidance to help fully vaccinated people safely resume more activities.”

Visit with other fully vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks or staying 6 feet apart.
Visit with unvaccinated people from one other household indoors without wearing masks or staying 6 feet apart if everyone in the other household is at low risk for severe disease.
Refrain from quarantine and testing if they do not have symptoms of COVID-19 after contact with someone who has COVID-19.
A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after receiving the last required dose of vaccine. Although vaccinations are accelerating, CDC estimates that just 9.2% of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated with a COVID-19 vaccine that the FDA has authorized for emergency use.

While the new guidance is a positive step, the vast majority of people need to be fully vaccinated before COVID-19 precautions can be lifted broadly. Until then, it is important that everyone continues to adhere to public health mitigation measures to protect the large number of people who remain unvaccinated.

CDC recommends that fully vaccinated people continue to take these COVID-19 precautions when in public, when visiting with unvaccinated people from multiple other households, and when around unvaccinated people who are at high risk of getting severely ill from COVID-19:

Wear a well-fitted mask.
Stay at least 6 feet from people you do not live with.
Avoid medium- and large-sized in-person gatherings.
Get tested if experiencing COVID-19 symptoms.
Follow guidance issued by individual employers.
Follow CDC and health department travel requirements and recommendations.

Address

Long Beach, CA

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+15624982481

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