Empowering Patients.
Ensuring Quality Care.
Welcome
Delmarva Patient Advocacy Group offers personalized healthcare management and advocacy services to help individuals navigate the complex healthcare and insurance systems. Our experienced healthcare advocates provide support, resources, and up-to-date information to help you make informed healthcare decisions. We work with patients, caregivers, family members, and providers to ensure the best care possible and overcome obstacles to quality healthcare.
aBOUT uS
MISSION
Simplifying Our Mission: Your Partner in Health
At Delmarva Patient Advocacy Group, our mission is clear: we aim to empower you, our valued clients, with the knowledge and support necessary to maneuver the intricate healthcare system effortlessly and with utmost assurance. Our dedicated team is committed to assisting you in attaining optimal health and wellness through personalized healthcare management and advocacy services that cater to your individual needs and aspirations. We strive to be the trusted partner you can count on to help you live a long, happy, and healthy life.
aPPROACH
At Delmarva Patient Advocacy Group, we understand the potential for misinterpretation, ambiguity, and error in our fast-paced, opaque healthcare system. That's why our dedicated healthcare advocates prioritize thorough data collection, effective communication, and comprehensive exploration of options. We strive to impart valuable knowledge by connecting you to vital resources and referrals. Embracing transparency, we aim to navigate the system's fragmentation and ensure your health and well-being.
Obstacles to Quality Healthcare
Doctors spend less time with patients (8 minutes on average), which makes it more difficult for doctors to provide patient-centered care.
Insurance companies are increasingly refusing to fund tests, prescriptions, treatments, and hospital costs, among other things.
Because family members frequently live away and/or cannot take time off work, they are unable to give hands-on help.
People are commonly diagnosed with many medical conditions and take multiple medications, making it difficult for clinicians (especially in an emergency context) to make fully informed decisions for patients without a clear and immediately available medical record.
In the United States, medical errors are the third largest cause of mortality, with communication issues being the most prevalent cause.