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All posts tagged with “Headlines.”



The Top 10 Home Health Care News Stories Of 2023

12/23/23 at 03:25 AM

The Top 10 Home Health Care News Stories Of 2023Home Health Care NewsDecember 20, 2023In the first year that truly felt “post-COVID,” home-based care providers did not see a shortage of challenges. Instead, in 2023, home health providers saw another year defined by payment struggles, with both the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and Medicare Advantage plans.  ... Reflect back on this year in home-based care by revisiting 10 of HHCN’s most widely read stories.

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NAHC and NHPCO Announce Transition Board of Directors

12/23/23 at 03:20 AM

NAHC and NHPCO Announce Transition Board of DirectorsNews ReleaseDecember 21, 2023Alexandria, VA, and Washington, DC—The National Association for Home Care & Hospice and the National Hospice & Palliative Care Organization jointly announced today that they have developed a proposed slate of Transition Board of Directors and officers for 2024. The Transition Board will oversee the transition to a new, consolidated organization pursuant to its ratification by both associations’ Boards of Directors in an agreement to combine which is contemplated in early 2024. ... The proposed Transition Board was selected collaboratively by the boards of NAHC and NHPCO and represents the full breadth of the patient-centered healthcare sector providing care in homes and communities nationwide, with wide-ranging expertise, demographic and geographic diversity, varied organizational tax statuses, and other criteria. The Transition Board includes equal representation from NAHC and NHPCO ... The proposed Transition Board is as follows:

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Caring for Dementia during the holidays

12/22/23 at 03:06 AM

Caring for Dementia during the holidaysValley Times News (Lanett, AL)December 20, 2023The holidays can be a stressful time for everyone, but they pose a unique challenge for senior citizens, individuals with disabilities, or those living with dementia and their caregivers. Dr. Joe Downs, from the Chattahoochee Hospice, said checking on caregivers of people with dementia is important all year around, but it can be especially important during the holidays. 

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Washington Post Investigation on Elopements Puts Memory Care in the Spotlight

12/22/23 at 03:03 AM

Washington Post Investigation on Elopements Puts Memory Care in the SpotlightSenior Housing NewsDecember 20, 2023A series of investigations from the Washington Post on resident elopement and staffing has shone a new light on memory care operators and the challenges they face keeping residents safe. One of the Post stories, published over the weekend, centered on residents who wandered away from memory care communities since 2018, almost 100 of which died. Most of the incidents involved residents of memory care communities, and among the struggles highlighted were staffing shortages and improper training. The story represents a new source of scrutiny for an industry that has intermittently struggled with bad press since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

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A Lukewarm Home Health, Hospice Dealmaking Year Comes To A Close

12/21/23 at 03:49 AM

A Lukewarm Home Health, Hospice Dealmaking Year Comes To A CloseHome Health Care NewsDecember 19, 2023Following consecutive record years for health care transactions, 2023 was a comparatively lukewarm time for home health and hospice dealmaking activity. That’s according to a recent report from PwC. Specifically, there were 95 home health and hospice deals in the 12 months examined by PwC, which ended on Nov. 15., compared to 114 during the same period last year. The deals were worth $4.7 billion. ... PwC experts believe that M&A will likely be a key growth and profit driver next year.

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Nurses First, Doctors Distant Second in Healthcare Provider Ratings

12/21/23 at 03:16 AM

Nurses First, Doctors Distant Second in Healthcare Provider RatingsGallup OrganizationDecember 18, 2023Washington, DC—At the end of a year when Gallup found Americans’ confidence in the U.S. medical system at its lowest in a decade, a new survey reveals that some prominent players in the system are still widely acclaimed while others are not. Nurses receive the best rating by far, with 82% saying they provide excellent or good medical care, and doctors rank second at 69%. 

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The Language of Hospice Can Help Us Get Better at Discussing Death

12/20/23 at 03:09 AM

The Language of Hospice Can Help Us Get Better at Discussing DeathTIMEDecember 18, 2023Just because death is inevitable doesn’t make it easy or natural to talk about. In a new study, researchers wondered if hospice workers—experts in end-of-life care—had lessons to teach the rest of us when it came to speaking with patients and families about death. Daniel Menchik, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Arizona who studies the use of language in different fields of medicine, spent eight months sitting in on team meetings at a hospice care facility that were also open to patients’ families. ... In the study, Menchik noticed that hospice workers used three different types of verbs in meetings with family members: predictive, subjunctive, and imperative. Predictive verbs are used to assert things about the future and include words like “will” and “going to.” Imperative verbs carry a similar firmness, but include a call to action; the most common one Menchik encounters in medical settings is “should.” Subjunctive verbs convey some sort of personal stance when talking about the future. “Think,” “feel,” “want,” and many other expressive phrases fall in this category. When a family starts hospice care, “their capabilities to engage in intense conversations [about death] are usually pretty limited,” Menchik says. But he believes that hospice workers help bridge that gap by minimizing their use of imperative verbs. In meetings he observed, imperative verbs made up just 17% of the verb phrases used by hospice professionals. That’s fairly uncommon in medicine. Editor's Note: Use this article to examine the language used in your team meetings; to strengthen your orientation of employees from non-hospice settings; to engage your admissions nurses in a lively dialogue about its applicability to their experiences with patients and families.

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Top 5 ‘Hidden Gem’ Palliative Care News Stories from 2023

12/20/23 at 03:00 AM

Top 5 ‘Hidden Gem’ Palliative Care News Stories from 2023Palliative Care NewsDecember 18, 2023Reimbursement and regulation reigned in the news this year, but other important trends garnered attention as well. Below are top five under-the-radar stories that, while important, didn’t make our most read this year. The topics range from unmet staff and patient needs, financial and operational headwinds and research fueling innovative care delivery approaches.

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Washington Post Reports Highlight Assisted Living Resident Elopements and Staffing Problems, Industry Pushes Back

12/19/23 at 03:42 AM

Washington Post Reports Highlight Assisted Living Resident Elopements and Staffing Problems, Industry Pushes BackSenior Housing NewsDecember 17, 2023A new Washington Post investigation has detailed dozens of incidents where senior living residents have wandered away and died as well as “bare-bones” staffing levels at communities across the country. In one article published over the weekend, the Post examined thousands of cases since 2018 where senior living residents wandered away from their communities, resulting in nearly 100 deaths in that time. ... The articles underscore the challenges senior living operators will surely have in the coming years, in terms of both staffing and managing communities and maintaining positive perceptions among the public. 

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2024: Healthcare Insiders Predict The Future

12/18/23 at 04:00 AM

2024: Healthcare Insiders Predict The FutureForbes, 12/14/23By Sachin  H. JainCan others predict what the future holds for healthcare? To find out, I asked colleagues, friends and other people I admire in the healthcare industry to weigh in with their predictions for 2024. From AI to pharmaceuticals to the cost of care, their viewpoints cover a range of topics. I hope you find their predictions and insights as intriguing as I do.Editor Note: Article includes 20 topics, including...

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Hospice of the Western Reserve targeting $75,000 grant to address racial disparities

12/17/23 at 04:00 AM

Hospice of the Western Reserve targeting $75,000 grant to address racial disparitiesCleveland.comDecember 15, 2023Lakewood, OH—For the better part of the last decade, Hospice of the Western Reserve has been focused on dispelling misperceptions within minority communities related to hospice care. “If you look at statistics across the board, traditionally African-American and Hispanic communities tend not to utilize hospice services,” Hospice of the Western Reserve Manager of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Heidi L. Barham said. “A lot of that is based on historical mistrust, so doing the outreach work helps us to break the stigma of the H-word—that hospice is not a death sentence.” That’s why Hospice of the Western Reserve applied for and recently received a Three Arches Foundation grant, with the intent to address healthcare inequity.

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Palliative-Behavioral Health Collaborations Benefit Patients with Serious Mental Illnesses

12/17/23 at 04:00 AM

Palliative-Behavioral Health Collaborations Benefit Patients with Serious Mental IllnessesPalliative Care NewsDecember 15, 2023Palliative care providers have opportunities to bridge gaps of unmet needs among patients who have serious mental illnesses and their families. ... Building up community-based palliative and mental health care collaborations will be crucial to supporting a growing population of seniors with SMIs with complex needs, he [Dr. Andrew Esch, palliative care physician and senior education advisor at the Center to Advance Palliative Care] said. ... Some of the most common SMIs among seniors include bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder and post traumatic stress and major depression, among others.

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‘Tougher Every Day’—Nursing Home Operators, CCRCs Weigh in on Future of Skilled Nursing

12/16/23 at 03:50 AM

‘Tougher Every Day’—Nursing Home Operators, CCRCs Weigh in on Future of Skilled NursingSkilled Nursing NewsDecember 14, 2023Operating a skilled nursing facility today is considered a “tough business” with regulations and reimbursement woes making the space “tougher every day.” Other operators say they regularly budget a loss for skilled nursing services, and if it weren’t for other lines of business, skilled nursing would be unsustainable. 

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Greener nurses enter field as workforce demand continues to spike

12/16/23 at 03:41 AM

Greener nurses enter field as workforce demand continues to spikeMcKnight’s Home Care DailyDecember 15, 2023Job openings in healthcare and social services have risen sharply in the last several years, and healthcare providers are taking on less-experienced registered nurses to handle the pressure. At the beginning of 2018, the average nurse’s tenure was more than six years of experience, according to a recent workforce report by the ADP Research Institute. In the five years since, however, high turnover rates and a corresponding abundance of job opportunities deflated a nurse’s average tenure to about five years of experience. 

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Proportion of hospice users declines while industry undergoes shift, NHPCO report finds

12/16/23 at 03:16 AM

Proportion of hospice users declines while industry undergoes shift, NHPCO report findsMcKnight’s Home Care DailyDecember 14, 2023The proportion of Medicare beneficiaries who died on hospice continued to decline in 2021, according to the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization’s 2023 Fact and Figures report. ... Notably, the number of hospice users rose by thousands since 2019, but this growth was unable to outpace the proportion of Medicare beneficiaries who died without receiving any hospice care. 

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What health systems did this year to recruit, retain workers

12/15/23 at 03:41 AM

What health systems did this year to recruit, retain workersModern HealthcareDecember 13, 2023Tuition reimbursement is a top program offered this year by health systems seeking to recruit and retain employees, according to a recent survey by Aon, an insurer and consulting firm. ... Here are five areas of focus around recruitment and retention this year.

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Telehealth use among seniors back up to pandemic-era highs, one company claims

12/15/23 at 03:29 AM

Telehealth use among seniors back up to pandemic-era highs, one company claimsMcKnight’s Senior LivingDecember 13, 2023Nearly all seniors in the US, an astonishing 97%, had at least one telehealth appointment this year, a new survey indicates. The data, which comes from remote platform operator Independa, indicates that telehealth usage among seniors has grown 20% over the past three years, nearly back up to the pandemic-era peak, when in-person options were not available. 

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Memory Care Gap—GAO Report Shows Less than 2.5% of Medicare Beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s Receive Cognitive Assessment

12/15/23 at 03:22 AM

Memory Care Gap—GAO Report Shows Less than 2.5% of Medicare Beneficiaries with Alzheimer’s Receive Cognitive AssessmentSenior Housing NewsDecember 13, 2023Between 2018 and last year, use of cognitive assessment and care plan services tripled, but few Medicare beneficiaries who qualify received the service, according to a recent study by the Government Accountability Office. The GAO study found that, at most, 2.4% of Medicare beneficiaries with a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease or a related disorder received this service. 

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2023 NHPCO Facts and Figures Report Now Available

12/15/23 at 03:00 AM

2023 NHPCO Facts and Figures Report Now AvailableNews ReleaseDecember 13, 2023Alexandria, VA—The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization has published its 2023 edition of Facts and Figures, an annual report on key data points related to the delivery of hospice care, including information on patient characteristics, location and level of care, Medicare hospice spending, and hospice providers. NHPCO Facts and Figures is the leading resource for hospice providers and others interested in understanding the work of the community. Editor's Note: Click here to access NHPCO's Report

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2023’s Most Impactful Hospice Regulatory Moves

12/14/23 at 03:07 AM

2023’s Most Impactful Hospice Regulatory MovesHospice NewsDecember 12, 2023Program integrity issues that have heated up in the hospice space during the past five years reached a boiling point in 2023. Hospice providers have seen an array of increased regulatory oversight in 2023. That momentum has been fueled by two main concerns among regulators—risks of patient safety and evidence of malfeasance in the space. Hospice News sat down with providers, advocacy groups, legal experts and other stakeholders to uncover the most significant hospice regulatory trends from this year and their anticipated impacts heading into 2024 and beyond. ...Editor's Note: Quoted in the article, Jason Wallace, partner in health care, Barnes & Thornburg LLP; Ben Marcantonio, COO and interim CEO, NHPCO; Carrie Uebel, senior vice president and chief ethics and compliance officer, Compassus

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Study uncovers racial inequalities in hospice utilization, length of stay

12/13/23 at 03:38 AM

Study uncovers racial inequalities in hospice utilization, length of stayMcKnight’s Home Care DailyDecember 12, 2023Blacks and Hispanics are less likely to use hospice services, and those who do often have shorter lengths of stay than white patients, according to a new study published in JAMA Health Forum. ... Minority patients also generally experienced shorter hospice lengths of stay. Hispanic patients in particular were more than twice as likely to stay in hospice care for seven days or less, compared to the average white Medicaid beneficiary. Still, short length of stay was relatively common across the board at about 40%, which suggests “room for improvement in referring all Medicaid recipients to hospice earlier in the course of terminal illness,” the study’s authors wrote. As to possible reasons for these disparities, the researchers noted that language barriers, mistrust of hospice programs or cultural differences might be at play. But also, the inequity might also reflect “potential racial biases that affect who a physician is more likely to refer to hospice,” according to the study. Specific, targeted efforts to encourage hospice services for Medicaid and dual-eligible beneficiaries who show low rates of utilization may help to overcome these disparities.

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Hospice CEO, Chief Compliance Officer Collaborations Key to Quality

12/13/23 at 03:33 AM

Hospice CEO, Chief Compliance Officer Collaborations Key to QualityHospice NewsDecember 11, 2023The lines of communication between hospice leaders and compliance executives need to be open and transparent in today’s regulatory environment. ... The ability to both understand and navigate shifts in regulations requires a solid relationship between a hospice executive team and its compliance leaders, according to Avow Hospice President and CEO Jaysen Roa. To achieve this, compliance and senior executive teams should foster interlocking collaboration and careful communication, he stated in a recent Husch Blackwell podcast. “It’s having compliance be part of the fabric,” Roa said. “Whether it is redoing some policies and procedures, looking at our code of ethics or how we respond to audits ... it’s all these things that can be esoteric to us [leaders]. When speaking to peers, whether it’s the C-suite, leadership teams or the board, [it’s doing] it in a way where it’s relatable and they understand not only why it’s important, but also the impact of why we’re readying for this. [If] we’re not constantly learning, then that’s a problem—especially in an industry like ours where it’s dynamic and changing every single day.” ... Strong ties between compliance and executive teams are crucial, according to [Chief Compliance Officer and Senior Vice President of Engagement, Kerri Ervin] Ervin. Having honest and transparent communication between compliance officers and hospice executives is key, she said. 

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MedPAC draws fire with draft recommendations for massive home health cut, hospice rate freeze

12/13/23 at 03:19 AM

MedPAC draws fire with draft recommendations for massive home health cut, hospice rate freezeMcKnight’s Home Care DailyDecember 12, 2023The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission offered initial recommendations for Congress to cut home health reimbursement by 7% and pause hospice payment updates in 2025. “The 2022 [home health] margins remain above 20%, higher than the long-run average of 16.8% since 2001,” Evan Christman, senior analyst at MedPAC, said during last Friday’s public meeting, according to a transcript. “Overall, these margins indicate that Medicare fee-for-service continues to pay well in excess of cost.” Part of the reason home health agencies reportedly saw margins of 22.2%, on average, according to Christman, is a decline in the number of visits per 30-day period. Since the implementation of the Patient-Driven Groupings Model in 2020, these visits have declined more than 15%; between 2021 and 2022, visits per 30 days declined 3.5%. Home health advocates were quick to dispute MedPAC’s claims. “There are many shortfalls in MedPAC’s home health margins report—starting with the fact that MedPAC’s analysis only captures a declining fraction of the Medicare home health population, ignoring that overall margins are low,” Joanne Cunningham, chief executive officer of the Partnership for Quality Home Healthcare, said in a statement. ... The Partnership and National Association for Home Care & Hospice cited poor methodology and data in the recent home health final rule, which contained a Medicare cut related to PDGM. MedPAC also recommended that Congress eliminate any payment updates for hospice providers in 2025. 

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Forced to work in a vacuum, MedPAC recommends another Medicare cut

12/12/23 at 03:10 AM

Forced to work in a vacuum, MedPAC recommends another Medicare cutMcKnight’s Long Term Care NewsDecember 11, 2023A Congressional advisory group appears ready to recommend a 3% Medicare pay cut for nursing homes in 2025. In what has become an annual tradition, members of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission voiced ongoing concerns Friday about the use of Medicare Fee for Service reimbursement to effectively subsidize Medicaid rates and Medicare Advantage payments. With official data indicating that patients still have plenty of access to care, panel staff recommended MedPAC tell Congress that it should pursue a cut to Chair Michael Chernew, PhD, a healthcare policy professor at Harvard, said the 3% cut could be steeper given the reported margins. But the commission—tasked only with considering Medicare policy—remains cognizant of the pressures faced by providers accepting Medicaid and being increasingly low balled by managed care plans.

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An educator who established Oregon’s first hospice, Joan Buell dies at 90

12/11/23 at 04:00 AM

An educator who established Oregon’s first hospice, Joan Buell dies at 90The Oregonian (Portland, OR)December 9, 2023Joan Strong Buell was a woman of many dimensions ... Most important, she was matter-of-fact about death but deeply devoted to transforming the experience of dying—from a traumatic, clinical affair on an uncomfortable hospital cot to a peaceful, dignified occasion in a homelike setting. That conviction is what led her to open what is now known as Hopewell House, the first hospice in Oregon and one of the first in the United States. Joan died on Aug. 19, at the age of 90. A celebration of her life was held in Portland on Dec. 3.

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