Literature Review
All posts tagged with “Hospice Provider News | Operations News.”
The Top 10 Home Health Care News Stories Of 2023
12/23/23 at 03:25 AMThe 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.
LCHD head defends hospice program budget
12/21/23 at 03:40 AMLCHD head defends hospice program budgetPen City Current (Fort Madison, IA)December 19, 2023Fort Madison, IA—It would appear that a push by some on the Lee County Board of Supervisors to get out of the hospice business is at a stand still. At Monday’s regular meeting of the board, Keokuk resident Mary Jo Reisberg and an employee of the health department advocated for the county staying in the hospice business to make sure that every county resident has a choice for care. ... Several members of the board, including Chairman Garry Seyb, said they don’t think the county should be engaged in business that competes with private for-profit companies.
Hudson Valley Hospice Opens its First Residence
12/21/23 at 03:37 AMHudson Valley Hospice Opens its First ResidenceHudson Valley Press (Newburgh, NY)December 19, 2023Poughkeepsie, NY—Michael Kaminski, President and CEO of Hudson Valley Hospice, announced that the Hudson Valley Hospice House is now open to patients. ... Suites can also be converted for pediatric patient care to meet the extraordinary needs of our youngest patients and their loved ones.
The Language of Hospice Can Help Us Get Better at Discussing Death
12/20/23 at 03:09 AMThe 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.
Hospices’ Unanswered Questions—Filling the Research Gaps
12/16/23 at 03:20 AMHospices’ Unanswered Questions—Filling the Research GapsHospice NewsDecember 14, 2023Research around hospice care has come a long way. But data gaps exist when it comes to expanding understanding of some aspects of end-of-life care delivery. A range of researchers has amassed a growing base of data on hospice, with some common themes tied to quality outcomes, costs, length of stay and general inpatient care. ... Having more information around successful care delivery models and training processes could impact the ability for hospices to foster growth and improve sustainable clinical capacity.
Home Health & Hospice Care Reopens Renovated Inpatient Center
12/15/23 at 03:56 AMHome Health & Hospice Care Reopens Renovated Inpatient CenterHospice NewsDecember 13, 2023fMerrimack, NH—Home Health & Hospice Care has reopened its inpatient facility in New Hampshire after expanding with a new addition. The Community Hospice House opened in November and serves patients in Merrimack, New Hampshire. ... All told, the hospice anticipates serving more than 600 patients annually at the center going forward, HHHC President and CEO Barbara Lafrance told local news.
2023 NHPCO Facts and Figures Report Now Available
12/15/23 at 03:00 AM2023 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
VyncaCare CEO Schulte—Redesign Serious Illness Care for Patients’ Changing Needs
12/14/23 at 03:18 AMVyncaCare CEO Schulte—Redesign Serious Illness Care for Patients’ Changing NeedsHospice NewsDecember 12, 2023The needs of today’s seriously ill patients necessitates the development of new, longitudinal care models that integrate the patient-centered principles of hospice and palliative care, Dr. Darren Schulte, CEO of VyncaCare, told Hospice News. Vynca launched as an advance care planning technology platform and expanded into the palliative care provider space through its 2021 acquisition of California-based Resolution Care.
Best Buy to expand health offerings with new partner
12/13/23 at 03:55 AMBest Buy to expand health offerings with new partnerModern HealthcareDecember 11, 2023Best Buy plans to expand its healthcare offerings through a new partnership with Biobeat, a remote patient monitoring company. The partnership is the latest effort by the retailer’s Best Buy Health unit to bolster its at-home health strategy. Best Buy Health aims to provide the technology side of at-home care through its Current Health subsidiary, which Best Buy acquired in 2021 for $400 million. ... Terms of the partnership were not disclosed. ... Biobeat allows patients to remotely view several health metrics, including cuffless blood pressure, pulse rate, respiratory rate, blood oxygen saturation, stroke volume and cardiac output through wearable devices.
Hospice CEO, Chief Compliance Officer Collaborations Key to Quality
12/13/23 at 03:33 AMHospice 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.
How Health Equity Payment Models Are Impacting Hospice Staff Diversity
12/10/23 at 04:00 AMHow Health Equity Payment Models Are Impacting Hospice Staff DiversityHospice NewsDecember 8, 2023Recent health equity initiatives in hospice reimbursement may reverberate impacts into providers’ staff recruitment and retention strategies, particularly when it comes to leadership roles. ... While equity-focused reimbursement channels like ACO REACH hold promise in helping to reduce disparities, unknowns exist around how providers should shape their care delivery approaches and where to pour operational and financial resources, according to Hospice of Acadiana CEO Keith Everett. ... A key for hospices to understand about health equity payment programs is that strategies to improve disparities can come in a variety of ways, which can be both a challenge and opportunity for providers, Everett said. ... One area of focus is to grow a more diverse employee base—not just in terms of interdisciplinary staff who interact with patients and families, but also among leadership teams, according to André Lee, co-founder and administrator of Heart ‘n Soul Hospice. ... Community collaborations are key to knowing where to search for hospice professionals from diverse backgrounds, according to Agrace Hospice & Supportive Care CEO Lynne Sexten.
How the Hospice Care Index Can Help Shape an Operator’s Future
12/09/23 at 04:00 AMHow the Hospice Care Index Can Help Shape an Operator’s FutureHospice NewsDecember 7, 2023Strong performance on the Hospice Care Index is becoming increasingly essential to securing payer and referral contracts and will be a key consideration in the federal government’s forthcoming Special Focus Program. ... Health care consumers are also becoming more aware of these data. ... HCI data will be a key component of the algorithm that CMS will use to determine which hospices qualify for the SFP, coming in 2024. CMS plans to target hospices who fall within the lowest 10% of performers on a range of quality metrics and survey data.
Hospitals Think Some Dead Patients Are Alive
12/09/23 at 04:00 AMHospitals Think Some Dead Patients Are AliveBloombergDecember 7, 2023Neil Wenger, a professor of medicine at UCLA, was researching different ways of encouraging patients to make end-of-life care plans when he discovered something troubling—hundreds of patients who were seriously ill, according to the health system’s records, were actually dead. This is a well-known but little-studied phenomenon, according to Wenger—until now. Wenger and his colleagues wrote up their findings in a short paper that was published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine. They identified 676 patients from UCLA’s health system that were recorded as alive, but were actually dead, according to state data. At face value, it sounds absurd. But there are many reasons why it might happen, Wenger says. While patients who die in the hospital are automatically recorded as deceased in that system’s database, patients who die at home are not. Same goes for patients who die at another health system with a different electronic records database. “The health system continues to act as if they’re alive,” Wenger says. “If we don’t know they’re dead, we can’t do the right thing.” ... “We think this is a really important finding that needs to be corrected,” Wenger says.
South Hill hospital to cease in-home hospice, home health services Dec. 31
12/08/23 at 03:59 AMSouth Hill hospital to cease in-home hospice, home health services Dec. 31News & Record (South Boston, VA)December 6, 2023South Hill, VA—VCU Health Community Memorial Hospital in South Hill will no longer provide in-home community health and hospice services starting Dec. 31, hospital officials announced Monday. ... Kristy Fowler, marketing and communications specialist for VCU Health CMH, said the hospital will continue to provide these services on “an inpatient and outpatient basis, [but] they will no longer be available in the home.” ... Fowler explained that home health and hospice services declined throughout the pandemic and are no longer part of VCU Health CMH’s core business.
National HME Acquires Hospice Source
12/07/23 at 04:00 AMNational HME Acquires Hospice SourceBusiness WireDecember 5, 2023Irving, TX—National HME, a leading provider of durable medical equipment solutions and services to hospice and alternate sites of care, today announced that it has acquired Hospice Source, a provider of medical equipment to hospice patients and facilities.
Chris Comeaux, nationally recognized Hospice leader, announces the release of first leadership book.
12/01/23 at 04:00 AMChris Comeaux, nationally recognized Hospice leader, announces the release of first leadership book.