"The Official Blog of the AACM"

Friday, March 16, 2012

Revealing the Best-Kept ‘Secret’ of Case Management from Nurse Together

Amidst all the talk about how to improve quality, efficiency and efficacy in healthcare these days, case management sometimes feels like the best kept secret. Those of us in the field know without question the difference that case management makes to those for whom we advocate, in particular patients with complex cases or multiple co-morbidities. Yet at times case management seems to occupy an understated position while newer and sometimes nearly synonymous terms such as care coordination take the spotlight.

To understand why, we need not look beyond ourselves.

Clarity in Definition

Across the spectrum of health and human services, case management is made up of professionals who, by their nature and vocation, are nurturers and caregivers. We expend so much emotional energy giving to others that self-promotion seems both unnatural and too much work. Few of us have the extra energy it takes even to contemplate the difference we make to our patients, employers, profession and community.

For the full article please go here.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Cancer Care Outcomes Better In Specialized Cancer Centers from Medical News Today

In a review of recent studies, researchers from The Cochrane Library, reveal that specialized cancer centers may help improve survival rates for cancer patients. ,The team discovered that when women with gynecological cancer were treated in specialist centers, they lived longer than those treated in non-specialist cancer centers.

Previously, non-specialist surgeons and hospitals frequently treated individuals with cancer. At present, most cancer care in developed countries is organized into networks of specialized cancer centers. These centers have specialized nursing staff, as well as on-site experts. Even though this centralized strategy is more expensive it could improve outcomes for cancer patients.

The researchers examined data from 5 studies, involving over 62,000 women who received treatment from the late 1990s onwards. The largest study, conducted in 2009, involved more than 48,000 women, whilst the smallest study involved only 250 participants.

For the full article please go here.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Health Care Negligence Affecting Hospitalized Patients from Medical News Today

A recent study, published on bmj.com, states that although lack of necessary hospital equipment and low staff numbers cause problems in the overall well-being of a hospital, insubstantial teaching, low monitoring of staff practices, and workers not following hospital regulations are far more detrimental to the health and treatment of patients in hospitals.

The study claims that an estimated 1 patient per day in a hospital dies due to the negligence of hospital staff. The study claims these deaths could have, and should have been prevented.

During their study, the researchers from the New York City Health and Hospital Corporation analyzed 25 hospitals spreading from Tunisa, Sudan, South African, Yemen, Egypt, Jordan, Kenya and Morocco. They determined that although patients in hospital are obviously admitted because they are sick, many times, patients die because of poor health care, and not actually the health problem they were admitted for.

For the full article please go here.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Surviving Modern Healthcare: Personal Branding from Nurse Together

If asked you what “just do it” means, you would say that is the slogan for Nike. If I said, “Like a good neighbor…” you probably could finish the sentence “State Farm is there.” These are brands that companies have created for themselves to make their products and services memorable. A successful brand can charge a premium. Whoever thought that a company like Starbucks could get 5 dollars for a cup of coffee? Positive perception of a brand begins with a good experience. Think about drinking an ice cold branded beverage like a Pepsi or Coke. What do you think about? Probably how good it tastes and how refreshing it feels while you are drinking it. If you don’t like those two I suggest substitute with your favorite.

For the full article please go here.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Medicare covers yoga for heart disease from CNN

CNN) -- Frank Korona lives near the West Virginia-Pennsylvania border with his wife Kathy, in a house that he built with his own hands, on the same property where he grew up.

He served in the Army Special Forces in Vietnam. The Koronas have a long, proud tradition of military service, but their family's greatest losses have been to heart disease.

"Our family has shrunk tremendously. We've lost so many people through death," Kathy says.

In 1992, Frank's brother Bob died in his arms, suffering a heart attack on their kitchen floor. Parents, siblings, aunts, uncles and cousins have all died from complications from heart disease, too. The Koronas point them out in a graveyard near their home.

For the full article please go here.

Patient Recruiters and the Anatomy of Healthcare Scam from Nurse Together

Healthcare scams are constantly evolving and costing tax payers billions of dollars, most of which will probably never be recovered. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ strike force operations have obtained over 1,000 indictments for individuals who have fraudulently billed Medicare for more than $2.3 billion since March 2007.

A healthcare scam is the premeditated fraud carried out by a provider, hospital, clinic, employer group, member, or other group or individual for illegal financial gain. Fraud takes many forms, and can involve what are known as “cappers,” or patient recruiters who literally recruit patients to become part of a healthcare scam designed to bilk millions out of the Medicare program.

For the full article please go here.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Case Managers: How Can You Enrich Your Patient's Life? from Nurse Together

One of the key outcomes case managers strive to achieve is an improved quality of life for the patients they work with. Yet many of the services that can improve a patient’s quality of life may not be reimbursable by traditional payment systems. To get a feel for the impact of this statement, think about the things that you depend on for enjoyment. Things like the ability to dress independently, to drive a car, to gather with friends for a glass of wine, access to cable television, the means to go to a baseball game, movie or a take a vacation.

We all have things that enrich our lives and they are as individual as we are. Yet for the person who is disabled, access to many of these things may be a challenge and take creativity to achieve. Families who have a member who is disabled are the key advocates for their family members. Many are the voice of the person and work to ensure that their family member is included and that accommodations be made if necessary to allow them to participate. Families may also be able to pay for things that we all take for granted, but with expenses mounting for necessities, sometimes funds are limited and have to be put aside.

For the full article please go here.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Readmissions Reporting Methods Explained from Nurse Together

Targeting and reducing hospital readmission rates has become a top priority for the Medicare program, and beginning in October, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will start slashing payments to hospitals with higher than average readmission rates under the new fee-for-service program.

The need for proven readmission strategies has never been more urgent with the regulation taking effect later this year. In fiscal year 2013, the payment decrease can be up to one percent of Medicare reimbursement, rising to two percent in 2014 and three percent in 2015.

A new working paper published in January by America’s Health Insurance Plans, the industry group that represents health insurance companies, says there are many ways to measure readmission rates, some of which may be suitable for certain purposes but not others.

For the full article please go here.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Scientists Repair Heart Attack Damage Using Patient's Own Stem Cells To Regrow Healthy Heart Muscle from Medical News Today

Details of a small clinical trial published in The Lancet on Tuesday reveal how scientists helped patients with hearts damaged by heart attack to re-grow healthy heart muscle and reduce scar tissue with an infusion of stem cells taken from the patients' own hearts.

Leading international cardiologist and heart researcher Dr Eduardo Marbán, who is director of the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles and Mark S. Siegel Family Professor, is senior author of the study. He told the press what they saw in the trial:

"... challenges the conventional wisdom that, once established, scar is permanent and that, once lost, healthy heart muscle cannot be restored."

For the full article please go here.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Are You Standing in the Way of High Performance? from H and HN

PHOENIX— It's possible, Michael Frisina postulated, that when your hospital developed its strategic plan for the coming year, it actually validated a policy that said a certain percentage of your patients will be harmed. If zero errors aren't the goal, Frisina said during a keynote yesterday at the 25th Annual Rural Health Care Leadership Conference, then you're acknowledging that patients will be harmed.

"We say that patient care comes first and the patient is at the center of our care delivery," said Frisina, head of a self-named consulting firm and senior research scholar at The Center for Influential Leadership. "When are we really going to do that?"

Much like Bridget Duffy's presentation the day before, Frisina made the case that all too often our own behaviors stand in the way of us — and our organizations — from achieving more. His most critical assessment was aimed at the C-suite: Leaders set the tone. Their behavior will determine whether an organization strives for high-performance and compassionate care.

For the full article please go here.

The New Health Reform Bill: Do You Know How It Will Affect You? from Nurse Together

Unprecedented evolution of the health system in our country is beginning with the institution of the new health care bill. Over one thousand pages of legal-ease have made it virtually impossible for anyone to understand the changes and far less a chance to predict the outcomes. Most hospitals and healthcare organizations have appointed entire legal teams to attempt to assess the effects of this new legislation on their organizations. There are also many potential effects on the nursing profession that in some cases may be an advantage. Some could also be problematic. To attempt to predict the effects of the bill on nursing, let us attempt to explore the bill in simple terms.

There are three main problems with the current health system that this bill will attempt to address. These include rising costs secondary to insurance premiums and aging population, holes in coverage for most people with preexisting conditions, lifetime limits on benefits and rising costs to employers who are reducing coverage and individuals without access to healthcare at all. The bill will be phased in over time beginning now. The following will be the highlights of each phase.

For the full article please go here.

Employing Docs Without a Strategy? Think Again from H and HN

Click here to view and excellent video on doctor hiring strategies.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Reducing Hospital Readmissions from H and HN

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services have been focusing on reducing acute care readmissions within 30 days of discharge through its Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program. Hospitals with higher than expected 30-day readmission rates will incur penalties against their total Medicare payments beginning in federal fiscal 2013.

Commercial payers likely will follow suit, as organizations such as the Joint Commission, Partnership for Patients and the National Quality Forum support this program.

To meet the challenge, hospitals need to take a structured approach to reducing readmissions — an assessment of the organization's risk and a comprehensive strategy that transitions the patient from the hospital to post-hospital care.

For the full article please go here.

In Focus: Rural Health from H and HN

Last month, regular H&HN Daily contributor Ian Morrison wrote a compelling column (aren't they all?) on reinventing rural health. In it he discussed the multitude of challenges facing rural providers — staff shortages, payer mix, capital and IT gaps, and more. The column also spends a fair amount of time discussing the hurdles rural providers will face as we move to a value-based, accountable care system.

In a bit of an understatement, he wrote: "Rural health is tough to manage, from both a policy and practical point of view." But he's then quick to note: "As we redesign the overall health care delivery system from volume to value, we raise the question of what happens to rural health care. While the challenges described here are real, in my travels I detect a growing openness to reinvention of rural health among community leaders and hospital CEOs across the country."
I couldn't agree more. I'm always amazed by the can-do attitude exhibited by rural health care leaders. They approach the hurdles in front of them head on, knowing that in so many cases they are the lifelines of their communities. That's part of the reason that I'm eager to board a plane Saturday afternoon and head to Phoenix for the 25th Annual Rural Health Care Leadership Conference. Year in, year out, it is one of my favorite meetings (and I'm not just saying that because it's our meeting).

For the full article please go here.

States Under Pressure As Health Law Deadlines Approach from Kaiser Health News

The health law's biggest changes don't take effect until 2014, when states and insurers must be ready to begin signing up an estimated 32 million people in Medicaid and private insurance. But a successful rollout in two years hinges on critical decisions that states must make – and take quick action on – this year.

It will be difficult for many states to meet fast-approaching deadlines, and some may not make it, says Brett Graham, a managing director at Leavitt Partners, a consulting firm working with states on implementation of the law.

Time is short, and states are missing key pieces of how-to guidance from the federal government about everything from what various insurance exchange options will look like to which benefits must be included in health plans, he says. To make matters worse, states are competing for a limited pool of information technology vendors to help them get started.

"It's a pressure cooker," said Graham. States are "in a position where they have to act with imperfect information."

One of the most pressing tasks for states this year has to do with the creation of exchanges, through which individuals and small businesses can buy insurance starting in 2014.

For the full article please go here.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Riding Herd on the Silver Stampede from H and HN

Are you ready for the "Silver Stampede?" That's the question contributing editor Geri Aston asked hospital leaders in her December Hospitals & Health Networks article on the onslaught of older patients, which will have — indeed, already is having — an enormous impact on our health care system. Like most of the stories we run in H&HN, the focus of Geri's article was on real-world solutions — positive, practical ways health care organizations are confronting a difficult issue, in this case senior care, so that other hospital leaders can decide whether those strategies might be worth adapting in their own organizations.

I write frequently in this space about generational issues in health care, and after Geri's article ran, I heard from a number of readers wanting to let me know that they and their colleagues also are taking creative steps to confront this issue. Here are four you might find interesting and useful:

For the full article please go here.

Medication Errors In Hospitals Reduced By e-Prescribing from Medical News Today

A study published in this week's PLoS Medicine shows that commercial electronic prescribing systems (commonly known as e-prescribing, in which prescribers use a computer to order medications for their patients through a system with the help of prompts, aids, and alerts) could substantially reduce prescribing error rates in hospital in-patients.

In the study, led by Professor Johanna Westbrook from the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, the authors studied the introduction of the Cerner Millennium e-prescribing system into one ward in one hospital (Hospital A), and used three other wards as controls. At another hospital, the authors compared the error rates on two wards before and after the introduction of the e-prescribing system iSoft MedChart.

For the full article please go here.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

New Health Care Articles Blog

Please visit our new "health care articles" BLOG

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We are accepting articles for review and consideration for publication on our Blog.
Email inquiries to: info@aihcp.org

Monday, January 30, 2012

Doctor, Did You Check Your Checklist? from Kaiser Health News

When Frances Barnes had a stroke in August 2008, she was taken by ambulance to Howard University Hospital. The 80-year-old grandmother was there for about two weeks when she began complaining about pain in her legs. Her daughter Althea Hart pulled back her mother’s blankets and noticed a strange odor.

Hart thought the smell was coming from the compression stockings wrapped around Barnes’s legs to help with circulation, so she took them off. She found that her mother’s left foot had turned black.

Hospital staff had failed to follow physician orders, which required taking off the compression stockings after each shift for at least 30 minutes, according to a DC Department of Health investigation.

"We called a nurse right away, and they tried to heal her infection," says Patricia Moss, another of Barnes's daughters. "But they couldn't."

For the full article please go here.

Protecting Yourself from Hospital Complications from Bettermedicine.com

Protecting Yourself from Hospital Complications

People are born, mended, and consoled in hospitals, hopefully without incident and undue harm. Doing no harm is the ethical guiding principle of doctors, nurses and hospitals. It is what we, as patients and consumers of healthcare, hope for the moment we walk through the hospital door.

But not all hospitals are created equal and on occasion complications arise – in both good and inadequate medical facilities.

What Is a Hospital Complication?

A hospital complication is any condition that arises while you are in the hospital that is unlikely to be related to your condition when you were first admitted. Complications often prolong your stay or cause you to be readmitted to the hospital. One measure used as a marker to evaluate hospital effectiveness is to compare complication rates among hospitals side by side. In this way, you can determine if one hospital has more or less complications than another hospital for a specific procedure or surgery.

For the full article please go here.

Electronic Medical Records Still Need Work, Report Says from Huffington Post

WASHINGTON — America may be a technology-driven nation, but the health care system's conversion from paper to computerized records needs lots of work to get the bugs out, according to experts who spent months studying the issue.

Hospitals and doctors' offices increasingly are going digital, the Bipartisan Policy Center says in a report being released Friday. But there's been little progress getting the computer systems to talk to one another, exchanging data the way financial companies do.

"The level of health information exchange in the U.S. is extremely low," the report says.

At the consumer level, few people maintain a personal health record on their laptop or electronic tablet, partly due to concerns about privacy, security and accuracy that the government hasn't resolved.

"How will sensitive health data be kept confidential and secure in digital data-sharing environments?" the report asks. "Many consumers ... are waiting for a reassuring answer to this question."

For the full article please go here.

Friday, January 27, 2012

5 Common Marketing Blunders that Health Care Providers Make from Nurse Together

Most health care providers who have a clinical practice, or any type of business where they rely on clients, will need to market in order to sustain and grow that practice and business. While knowing how to market is essential, it's also just as valuable to know what you should not be doing when you are marketing. Today let's focus on the five of the most common marketing blunders I see health care providers make.

For the full article please go here.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Data: Medicaid Eligibility Remained Stable in 2011 from H and HN

The number of Americans eligible for Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program remained relatively stable in 2011, a new report from the Kaiser Commission on the Uninsured finds. The report found that 11 states expanded eligibility for Medicaid or CHIP in 2011, which was attributed in part to Affordable Care Act provisions that require states to maintain existing coverage. Eight states expanded eligibility for children, while three offered increased coverage of parents and other adults.

Among the other findings:

For the full article please go here.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Using Evidence to Motivate Hospital Employees from H and HN

All too often, we miss out on opportunities to learn from another area of our business. One clinical approach that can be emulated throughout the hospital is evidence-based practice, which integrates current research, caregiver perspectives and experience, and patient preferences. [For more information, see Evidence-Based Practice in Nursing & Healthcare by B. Melnyk and E. Fineout-Overholt;Philadelphia, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2005.]

Physicians and nursing professionals have been using EBP in various forms since the 1970s to improve patient care outcomes. Its longevity is due to its documented success in many different areas, including infection prevention and patient falls.

In more recent years, scholars have studied and written about evidence-based leadership and evidence-based management. A logical progression in this thinking is evidence-based employee engagement. Employees are engaged when they are satisfied (they like what they do), energized (they put effort behind it) and productive (their work contributes to organizational goals). Leaders who are effective in engaging others are facilitators of the engagement process. Because no one external source can motivate an employee, providing an environment that encourages intrinsic motivators is critical.

For the full article please go here.

The KHN Conversation: 'Innovation' Advisors On Achieving CMS' Triple Aim from Kaiser Health News

One of the more controversial, yet least expensive, aspects of the health law is starting to kick in. ​

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has launched the Innovation Center, which is supposed to experiment with different ways to deliver health care more efficiently. As one of its first initiatives, the center has selected 73 people to be “Innovation Advisors.” Their year-long commitment with CMS' Innovation Center requires they test out an idea -- with the goal of improving health, improving quality of care and decreasing costs -- and, if successful, could see it scaled up by CMS.

Among those first selected to receive grants of as much as $20,000 are doctors, nurses, hospital executives, public health and policy experts, and they represent institutions in 27 states plus the District of Columbia. CMS expects to pick as many as 200 advisors by the end of the year.

For the full article please go here.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Are Health Law Backers Nervous About The High Court's Review? from Kaiser Health News

The Hill reports that some supporters have recently shifted their tone about the health law challenges being "frivolous," acknowledging the Supreme Court wouldn't allow so much time for arguments if the justices viewed the issues as "a waste of time." Also, Politico explores the fate of the law's Medicaid expansion in the context of the court challenge, and CQ HealthBeat reports on the addition of plaintiffs and more amicus briefs.

The Hill: Court Angst For Left Over Health Care
Supporters of President Obama's healthcare reform have lost the high level of confidence they once displayed that the Supreme Court would throw out constitutional challenges to the law's individual mandate. Many liberals and some Democratic leaders initially waved off lawsuits challenging the law's individual mandate, saying the suits were "frivolous" political stunts. But that tone has shifted significantly since the Supreme Court devoted nearly six hours to arguments in the case — a modern record. That the high court would set aside so much time for the landmark case suggests that the justices certainly don't see the challenges as a waste of time (Baker, 1/18).

Politico: Supreme Court Holds Fate Of Medicaid
Legal experts say no one can predict what the high court will do — particularly because many were surprised that the Supreme Court agreed to consider the Medicaid portion of the big multistate challenge to President Barack Obama's health reform law in the first place (Feder, 1/17).

For the full article please go here.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Surviving Modern Healthcare: Gaining Confidence as a Nurse from Nurse Together

No matter who we are or what career path we have chosen, becoming familiar with the role and its responsibility takes time. The difference in nursing versus another non-healthcare related career is that one mistake can cost a patient their life, so for us, the stakes are high. This pressure contributes to stress and fear, especially as new, inexperienced nurses enter the field. Thirty seven years of nursing has taught me many things in relation to the notion of confidence and competence and there are ways to ensure that you possess both. It has also been my experience that the most confident nurses may not be the most competent nurses and throughout my life I have met many individuals that seemed to be visions in their own minds that did not manifest itself in their performance. New and evolving nurses can improve their confidence and competence by thinking about the following strategies.

Realize That You Don’t Know It All

For the full article please go here.

Social Media and Healthcare from Nurse Together

Social Media and Healthcare are two words that don’t always mix well. With student nurses getting kicked out of school for posting pictures on Facebook or a doctor being fired because he made a comment about a patient on Twitter, some healthcare organizations and nurses are leery of joining the social media bandwagon.

But social media can work in healthcare without breaching HIPPA laws if done right, and nurses can be at the forefront of this movement by providing accurate information that patients are seeking online.

For the full article please go here.

Data: Hospice Programs Grow in Popularity from H and HN

The popularity of hospice programs continues to rise, according to a new study from the National Hospice and Palliative Care Association. In 2001, 18.8 percent of Medicare patients who passed away accessed three days or more off hospice care; by 2007, 30.1 percent of Medicare decedents did so. The study also found the average length of stay for hospice patients is declining, from 69 days in 2009 to 67.3 days in 2010.

Among the other findings:

In 2010, 1.58 million patients received hospice care. Of those, 1.029 million died under hospice care, roughly 292,000 remained in hospice care at the end of 2010 and 259,000 were discharged.
In 2010, roughly 41.9 percent of all U.S. deaths were under the care of a hospice program.
Approximately 35.3 percent of hospice patients died or were discharged within seven days of admission, up from 34.4 percent in 2009.
The majority of hospice patients receive care at home; however, the proportion of hospice patients who died in acute care facilities increased from 10.1 percent in 2009 to 11.4 percent in 2010.


For the full article please go here.

The High Cost Of A Good Night's Sleep from Kaiser Health News

On a Monday night in December, Lauretta Martin, 47, visited the sleep lab at the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington, D.C. for the second time. On her first visit, Martin, a heavyset woman whose husband reports she is a loud snorer, was diagnosed with sleep apnea. This time, she was being fitted for a CPAP machine, which helps keep a snorer’s airway open throughout the night.

The sleep lab has six testing rooms, each of which looks just like a room at a Holiday Inn, with striped wallpaper, a floral bedspread, framed prints of the seaside and free wifi.

For the full article please go here.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Preparing for State-Run Health Insurance Exchanges By Ron Goldstein from Hospitals and Health News

The health care reform feature that likely will affect the greatest number of Americans — and hospitals — is state-run health insurance exchanges. As mandated by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, every state must establish and launch its own exchange by Jan. 1, 2014, or default to a national fallback program. (States that cannot meet the 2014 deadline still can set up their own exchanges later as long as they give the federal government a year's notice to transition from a federally administered exchange.)

Health insurance exchanges will have a profound effect on how individuals and employers select and buy their health care. There will be an online, one-stop shopping mall where consumers, employers, insurance brokers and still-to-be-defined "navigators" easily will view competing health plans — comparing benefits, costs, provider networks and other features. Exchanges also will enable individuals to access subsidies and employers to access tax credits.

For the full article please go here.

Hospital Statistics Chart Rise in Physician Employment By Haydn Bush from Hospitals and Health News

Roughly 20 percent of all physicians are now employed by hospitals.

The number of physicians employed by hospitals has grown by 32 percent since 2000, according to the recently released 2012 edition of AHA Hospital Statistics. Today, hospitals employ approximately 212,000 physicians, according to the book. Hospitals have a range of relationships with privileged physicians: 55.1 percent of physicians are not employed or under contract, while 20.3 percent are covered by a group contract; 17.3 percent are directly employed and 7.2 percent have individual contracts.

Among the other key findings:

For the full article please go here.

Fiscal Fitness: Trimming Hospital Energy Costs By John Ebers From Hospitals and Health News

A good video on energy costs and how hospitals could be saving money.

For the video please go here.

Friday, January 6, 2012

National hospice company accused of fraud from MSNBC

A national hospice company improperly cycled patients through nursing homes and hospice with a goal of making as much profit as possible from Medicare, according to a whistleblower lawsuit announced this week.

Federal attorneys also sued the hospice company, AseraCare, alleging it milked Medicare’s hospice benefit by pressuring its employees to enroll people into hospice who weren’t dying and resisted discharging them despite evidence they weren’t deteriorating. One hospice patient who should have been immobile from end-stage heart disease was healthy enough to go to his granddaughter’s graduation and a berry-picking excursion with a friend, the government charges.

For years, some critics of Medicare’s hospice benefit have said that the way the government pays providers gives them financial incentives to abuse the system. The suits against AseraCare, a Fort Smith, Ark.-based hospice company operating in 19 states, follow several other suits against big hospice companies but go further in their allegations that the company coordinated its use of nursing care and hospice care to maximize Medicare reimbursements.

For the full article please go here.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

US Cancer Deaths Continue To Fall, ACS Report from Medical News Today

A new report from the American Cancer Society (ACS) shows that rates of cancer deaths in the United States continue the downward trend of the last two decades. The new figures show that over the past ten years of available data (up to 2008), cancer deaths have fallen by more than 1% a year in men and women for all but one of the racial/ethnic groups in the US, the exception being American Indians/Alaska Natives, among whom rates have remained stable.

The result is that more than a million cancer deaths have been avoided in the last 20 years, the ACS told the press.

The figures are in the ACS annual report, which was published online in the 4 January issue of the society's journal CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.

For the full article please go here.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

8 key issues for population health management in 2012 from HealthCareITNews.com

Recently, the Care Continuum Alliance, an advocate for population health management, surveyed industry leaders to assess the market and predict key issues for 2012. According to the alliance’s white paper, two predominant themes were brought to light as a result of the survey.

“First, significant market movement will occur toward accountability and value creation in healthcare, driven partly by new physician-guided and collaborative models,” according to the report. “And second, population health management is well-positioned to add value to and support these emerging models, but must continue to build the case for wellness and prevention.”

Here are eight additional key issues, identified in the report, that could affect population health management in 2012.

For the full article please go here.