2016 AHCA ⁄ NCAL Annual Awards | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2016/October/Pages/2016-AHCA ⁄ NCAL-Annual-Awards.aspx | 2016 AHCA ⁄ NCAL Annual Awards | <div><span class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-7-4"><br>Here are stories about some very special, compassionate leaders and groups in the long term and post-acute care profession: the recipients of the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living (AHCA ⁄ NCAL) annual awards. They will be recognized during the AHCA ⁄ NCAL 67th Annual Convention & Expo this month.</span></div>
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<div><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-5-4"><img class="ms-rtePosition-1" alt="Carmy Jerome" src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/CarmyJerome.jpg" style="margin:5px 15px;" />CARMY JEROME</strong></div>
<div><em>NCAL Administrator of the Year</em></div>
<div><br>As administrator of Aspen House Memory Care Assisted Living, Loveland, Colo., Carmy Jerome’s mission is to improve care wherever possible. This is clearly visible in the comfortable, stress-free, safe, and dignified environment she provides for residents. A local physician agrees, saying the Aspen House community is “without hesitation, one that is uniquely person-centered.”<br><br></div>
<div>Jerome personally examines residents’ histories to discern preferences and interests. For one resident who loves to shop, Jerome made special arrangements with a local retailer for the resident to “shop without paying,” in an effort to maintain the man’s independence and dignity.<br></div>
<div><br>Jerome is always willing to jump right in and assist with whatever is needed, whether that be washing dishes or singing for residents. She also acknowledges exemplary staff performance through creative awards like the No One Measures Up to You program.<br></div>
<div><br>Through Jerome’s leadership, staff turnover has decreased by 30 percent, Aspen House earned a 98 percent customer satisfaction score, and census is up 20 percent.<br><br></div>
<div>Jerome also works tirelessly as an advocate for the assisted living profession. She has a keen interest in bringing dementia and memory care issues to the forefront.<br><br></div>
<div>The NCAL Administrator of the Year award recognizes an assisted living administrator who demonstrates outstanding innovation, achievement, and capabilities.</div>
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<div><img class="ms-rtePosition-1 ms-rteThemeForeColor-5-4" alt="Pat Giorgio" src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/PatGiorgio.jpg" style="margin:5px 15px;" /><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-5-4"><br>PATRICIA (PAT) GIORGIO</strong></div>
<div><em>Jan Thayer Pioneer Award</em></div>
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<div>Pat Giorgio never thought she’d work in long term care. More than 25 years ago, Giorgio was seeking her master’s in theology when a temporary job at a residential care community changed her trajectory forever.</div>
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<div>Now, she is the president and chief executive officer of Evergreen Estates. Operating three assisted living communities in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Giorgio is one of the most respected assisted living professionals and advocates in the country. </div>
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<div>She has championed issues like maintaining state regulation, increasing access to vulnerable residents, and improving changing payment models. She has delivered expert testimony before numerous Iowa legislative committees, and her advocacy efforts were recognized in 2009 when she received the Joe Warner Patient Advocacy Award. </div>
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<div>Giorgio has made it her priority to inform elected officials and shape policy affecting the assisted living profession. For nearly 15 years, she has served on the boards of the Iowa Center for Assisted Living and NCAL. </div>
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<div>At the national level, she oversaw the development of NCAL’s performance measures, initiated work with the first-ever National Patient Safety Organization, assisted in the creation of LGBTQ training materials, and developed Iowa’s disaster planning manual. </div>
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<div>Giorgio continues to be active on countless committees and volunteer positions.</div>
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<div>Most recently, her collaboration with the University of North Carolina and the Center for Excellence in Assisted Living led to the development of a person-centered care toolkit for care providers, while collecting research on how to measure assisted living medication errors. </div>
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<div>Her efforts to educate, inform, and promote quality care and professional growth continue to make an immeasurable difference in the assisted living profession and in the lives of the residents it serves.</div>
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<div>The NCAL Jan Thayer Pioneer Award recognizes individuals who have moved the senior care profession forward, positively affecting the lives of those served and those who serve. </div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/RobertMartin.jpg" alt="Robert Martin" class="ms-rtePosition-1 ms-rteThemeForeColor-5-4" style="margin:5px 15px;" /><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-5-4">ROBERT MARTIN</strong></div>
<div><em>Not for Profit Trustee Award </em></div>
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<div>Serving as a member of the Board of Trustees of Madison County Nursing Home in Canton, Miss., for 15 years, Robert Martin has not only volunteered an incredible amount of time, but he has made an undeniable impact on the residents, staff, and families. </div>
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<div>During his time as a board member, Martin has been involved in various projects: constructing an Alzheimer’s unit, increasing the number of beds in the nursing care center, and approving the addition of television sets in the residents’ bedrooms. </div>
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<div>“Robert serves with passion and is frequently at our nursing center looking for ways to make things better for our residents,” says Daniel Logan, administrator at Madison County Nursing Home. “It is without a doubt that I can say that Madison County Nursing Home is a better place because of Mr. Martin.” </div>
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<div class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-5-4"><strong>Vincent Mor </strong></div>
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<div><em>Mary K. Ousley Champion of Quality Award</em></div>
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<div>Vincent Mor, PhD, is a name that most in the long term and post-acute care profession know and respect. His dedication and passion for research has transformed technical, scientific data into real-life quality improvement resources that have proven essential for long term and post-acute care.</div>
<div><br>For decades, Mor has studied how health care delivery affects the well-being of elders, particularly in skilled nursing care centers. He conducted some of the first research on national rehospitalization rates in skilled nursing centers that helped shape the AHCA/NCAL Quality Initiative.</div>
<div><br>Mor is also the director of Brown University’s Center for Long-Term Care Quality & Innovation (Q&I Center), an independent research center formed by AHCA/NCAL. He collaborates with providers and other innovators to test and disseminate interventions to improve long term and post-acute care. Under his leadership, Brown researchers have evaluated the impact of care practices and policies on the care of residents. </div>
<div><br>“Vince is a prolific researcher. He has done so much to promote nursing center quality, first by helping to develop the Minimum Data Set [MDS] resident assessment, and then by creating MDS quality measures that providers can use to monitor quality,” says Rosa Baier, MPH, associate director of the Q&I Center.</div>
<div><br>As a professor of health services, policy, and practice, Mor has done incredible work. Recently, he and his colleagues worked with more than 800 nursing centers on a study of high-dose influenza vaccination and produced critical evidence that the vaccine prevents hospitalizations and deaths among residents. Mor has also led a study that helped convince Congress to establish the Medicare hospice benefit.</div>
<div><br>AHCA presents the Mary K. Ousley Champion of Quality Award to an individual or organization that has made a significant national contribution to advancing quality performance in the long term care field. </div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/AdoptSr.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-1" width="198" height="159" alt="" style="margin:5px 15px;" /><br><span class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4"><strong>ADOPT-A-SENIOR</strong></span></div>
<div><em>Group Volunteer of the Year </em></div>
<br>Thanks to Adopt-A-Senior, it’s all about birthdays at Bartley Healthcare Nursing and Rehabilitation, in Jackson, N.J.
<br><br><div>Balloons, a cake, a “Happy Birthday” serenade, and presents are guaranteed to all residents on their birthdays. The Adopt-A-Senior group of volunteers works hard to make residents feel extra special on their birthdays by planning personalized birthday celebrations—complete with cake and candles; kazoos; and meaningful, personalized gifts. </div>
<div><br>One die-hard Mets fan was given “a new Mets cap that he proudly wears every day and lets everyone know where it came from,” says Joanne Ryan, vice president of quality management at Bartley Healthcare.<br><br></div>
<div>No matter the age, birthdays are a nostalgic event that deserve a celebration with friends. Thankfully, the volunteers at Adopt-A-Senior are exceeding expectations and making each resident feel valued and remembered. The individual recognition that these residents receive on their birthdays makes their day and puts a smile on their faces. Now that’s priceless!</div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/RandyMcQueen.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-1" alt="" style="margin:5px 15px;" /><br><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4">RANDY McQUEEN</strong></div>
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<div><em>Adult Volunteer of the Year</em></div>
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<div>Randy McQueen is not a typical volunteer. He faces his own health concerns and has spent significant amounts of time as a patient himself at Mercy Living Plus at Mercy Hospital of the Franciscan Sisters, located in Oelwein, Iowa, where he now volunteers. However, McQueen does not let those obstacles stop him, as he finds great satisfaction in his volunteer work. <br><br></div>
<div>“Life was pretty dull in my little world until I started volunteering at Mercy Living Plus,” he says. Through his volunteer efforts, McQueen is deemed a living example to the residents and staff.<br></div>
<div><br>Indeed, he shows everyone that a zest for life, passion for new experiences, and love for contributing to society doesn’t have to be limited by one’s own trials and tribulations in life. <br><br></div>
<div>“His smile is the best medicine for residents,” says Terri Derflinger, site administrator. <br></div>
<div><br>McQueen brings excitement to Mercy Living Plus residents and staff by dressing up for them at holiday parties, and he encourages them with his overwhelming positivity. Such passion for volunteering is rare, and for that, McQueen is an inspiration to all. </div>
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<div class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4"><strong> <img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/JohnLair.jpg" alt="John Lair" class="ms-rtePosition-1" style="margin:5px 10px;" /><br>JOHN LAIR</strong></div>
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<div><em>ID/DD Hero of the Year</em></div>
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<div>To create an incredible program for New Hope Services, a program of Medicalodges, Director John Lair has combined his two passions: improving the lives of individuals with intellectual/ developmental disabilities and sports. New Hope Services is located in Pittsburg and Valley Center, Kan.</div>
<div><br>Lair works tirelessly to build a lifestyle, fitness, and Special Olympics program from the ground up—raising much of the money needed to build a state-of-the-art gym and fitness center by himself. As a result of his dedication and superior coaching ability, Lair has taken the New Hope Bulldogs, a flag football team, to an international level of recognition. </div>
<div><br>But Lair doesn’t stop there. His latest venture entails job coaching arrangements at local skilled nursing centers to create confidence and job opportunities for New Hope residents. </div>
<div><br>“John’s programs support the aspirations of all program participants: to live a life without boundaries enforced by others,” says Fred Benjamin, former chief operating officer of Medicalodges. </div>
<div><br>“John has in so many ways facilitated this dream for thousands of individuals.” </div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/Brandywine.jpg" alt="Brandywine Senior Living Princeton" class="ms-rtePosition-1" width="251" height="168" style="margin:5px 15px;" /><br><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4">BRANDYWINE SENIOR LIVING PRINCETON</strong></div>
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<div><em>National Assisted Living Week® Programming Award</em></div>
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<div>The residents and staff of Brandywine Senior Living Princeton in Princeton, N.J., connected with their families, the community, and each other during National Assisted Living Week 2015. Brandywine took the week’s theme—”Nourishing Life: Mind, Body, and Spirit”—and ran with it.</div>
<div><br>The festivities kicked off with lively entertainment and delicious food at a family-friendly BBQ. On Monday, the community caught the attention of local media while hosting a Tai Chi demo in Princeton’s Palmer Square. </div>
<div><br>An intergenerational program revitalized souls on Tuesday, as memory care residents and local first-grade students enjoyed the company of baby farm animals.</div>
<div><br>On Wednesday, Brandywine’s nurses and therapists performed “Fit 4 Life” wellness checks, and the day concluded with residents making birdhouses. </div>
<div><br>The next day, a local organization brought in service dogs to show how they can enrich the lives of individuals with disabilities.
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<div><br>Later that evening, residents displayed their “Princeton Pride and Passion” by offering dramatic readings and performances to the tune of meaningful songs from yesteryear. And there was not a dry eye in the house as a Brandywine couple celebrated their 68-year union.</div>
<div><br>On Friday, the community hosted a “Tricky Tray” fundraiser, with all proceeds benefitting The Princeton Parkinson’s Alliance. To top off the week, Brandywine hosted its “Sugar, Music Video” and CD release party. Featured on Spotlight New Jersey NEWS 12, residents lip-synched and danced to the Maroon 5 pop hit “Sugar.” </div>
<div><br>The NCAL National Assisted Living Week® Programming award recognizes an individual or community that demonstrates successful incorporation of the week’s theme into their activity plans, resulting in outstanding special activities and community events.</div>
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<div class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4"><strong><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/Chapparal%20House.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-1" width="173" height="132" alt="" style="margin:5px 10px;" /><br><br>THE CHAPARRAL HOUSE ACTIVITIES PROGRAM</strong></div>
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<div><em>Not for Profit Program of the Year</em></div>
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<div>The Activities Program at Chaparral House, located in Berkeley, Calif., aids in the care of residents by promoting their social, physical, emotional, cognitive, and spiritual health. Residents are engaged in novel experiences such as drum circles, drama therapy, sewing, yoga, and much more. </div>
<div><br>The Activities Program grants the residents both meaningful interaction and personal choice, hallmarks of Chaparral House that extend far beyond the boundaries of the center and into the greater community of Berkeley.</div>
<div> <br>“The program celebrates each resident, empowers their choices, and respects their right to age with dignity and grace,” says Mayor Tom Bates of the City of Berkeley.</div>
<div><br>With nine hours of activities every day for approximately 100 residents, there is something for everyone to do at the Chaparral House. Residents and staff alike benefit from some variety in their day, and the activities often help residents regain lost interests and skills, which exponentially enhances their quality of life. </div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/ZachSeverson.jpg" alt="Zach Severson" class="ms-rtePosition-1" style="margin:5px 15px;" /><br><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4">ZACH</strong><span class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4"> </span><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4">SEVERSON</strong></div>
<div><em>Young Adult Volunteer of the Year </em></div>
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<div>At 16 years of age, the most notable characteristic of Zach Severson’s volunteer efforts is his dependability, which is especially important to the residents and staff of the Evangelical Good Samaritan Society in Canton, S.D. </div>
<div><br>His other great asset is a skill to interact with the residents at a maturity level far beyond his years. Severson combines typical activities like playing cards, bean bag, or Yahtzee with being present “in the moment,” communicating with each resident at any level of care. </div>
<div><br>Friends and families are also big fans of Severson. A family member once said that his interactions with her mother are “kind, gentle, patient, and completely understanding of [Mom’s] capabilities.” </div>
<div><br>Severson’s consistent dependability as a volunteer day-in and day-out has made the art of birdwatching possible at Good Samaritan. It’s not just a regular pastime that brings joy and busyness to the residents and staff. He has become the most reliable filler of birdfeeders all around the building, and everyone loves that he feeds the birds on a regular basis. </div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/AngelaHumes.jpg" alt="Angela Humes and resident" class="ms-rtePosition-1" width="254" height="169" style="margin:5px 10px;" /><br><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4">ANGELA HUMES</strong></div>
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<div><em>Noble Caregiver in Assisted Living</em></div>
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<div>For registered medication aide Angela Humes, business is personal. Employed at Dogwood Village Senior Living in Orange, Va., since 1981, Humes has committed herself to providing individualized care and attention to each resident. </div>
<div><br>Humes befriends residents and their family members, taking the time to learn their preferences and incorporate them into their daily routines. She volunteers her free time to accompany residents to doctors’ appointments, take birthday shopping trips, or attend the funerals of former residents. </div>
<div><br>Simply put, Humes is a true friend, providing unwavering support to her Dogwood Village family. When the granddaughter of a resident lost her battle with cancer, Humes offered her time and prayers, providing the resident extra attention and comfort during her period of grief.</div>
<div><br>The model of what a caregiver should be, Humes always does right by the residents of Dogwood, and for that reason, she is this year’s Noble Caregiver in Assisted Living. </div>
<div><br>The NCAL Noble Caregiver award recognizes frontline caregivers, housekeeping, maintenance staff, or other staff who have improved the quality of life for residents and created a better work environment.</div>
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<br><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/StephanieLavigne.jpg" alt="Stephanie Lavigne" class="ms-rtePosition-1" style="margin:5px 10px;" /><br><strong class="ms-rteThemeForeColor-4-4">STEPHANIE LAVIGNE</strong><br><em>Assisted Living Nurse of the Year</em><br><br>Stephanie Lavigne, RN, residential care director of Maine Veterans’ Homes - Machias of Machias, Maine, is a triple threat. With a genuine love for her residents, combined with excellent leadership skills and a resolve to find innovative solutions, Lavigne has undoubtedly improved the lives of 30 Mainers living with dementia. <br><br>Operating with an open door policy, Lavigne gives her time and attention freely. She brings her personal approach to interdisciplinary team meetings, where staff, residents, and families determine the individual needs and care of residents. <br><br>Out on the floor, Lavigne can be found helping out staff to complete any shift in order to meet the needs of residents.<br><br>It’s no secret that innovation is important for Lavigne. After attending countless training sessions, she quickly implements the evidence-based techniques she’s learned. Under her guidance, the community has decreased noise and improved lighting, and residents’ sleeping patterns have dramatically improved. And because of Lavigne’s work, the veterans’ home dramatically reduced its antipsychotic use in two years by nearly 70 percent.<br><br>The NCAL Nurse of the Year award recognizes a licensed practical nurse or registered nurse who demonstrates outstanding compassion, supervisory success, and innovation. </div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div> | Here are stories about some very special, compassionate leaders and groups in the long term and post-acute care profession: the recipients of the AHCA ⁄ NCAL annual awards. They will be recognized during the AHCA ⁄ NCAL 67th Annual Convention & Expo this month. | 2016-10-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" height="114" src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/Chapparal%20House.jpg" width="150" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Caregiving;Management | Column |
Tom Coble: A Leader With A Passion For Care | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2016/October/Pages/Tom-Coble-A-Leader-With-A-Passion-For-Care.aspx | Tom Coble: A Leader With A Passion For Care | <div id="__publishingReusableFragmentIdSection"><a href="/ReusableContent/4_.000">a</a></div><div></div>
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<div>Talk to any staff member about their position in a skilled nursing care center or assisted living community and eventually someone will say: “This is my calling.” Some care professionals can easily trace their passion for caregiving to their childhood or personal experiences, saying that they “always knew” that caring for the elderly was their “mission in life.” </div>
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<div>For Tom Coble, that calling came as a surprise. After spending 15 years in the oil and gas business, Coble seized an opportunity to purchase a local skilled nursing center with a longtime friend, and he’s never looked back. </div>
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<div>Before taking up the helm at Elmbrook Home, a skilled nursing, long term care, and rehabilitation center in Ardmore, Okla., Coble had only been in a care center twice in his life: once when his uncle needed care in the mid 1970s and again in the 1980s, when his father required care. </div>
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<div>It wasn’t until 1993 that Coble walked into a care center with a new mission.</div>
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<div>“On Feb. 28, 1993, I was wrapping things up in my office I had occupied for years, and then on March 1, there I was in long term care,” says Coble. “I had so much to learn. I realized then that I didn’t truly know what a nursing care center really was.”</div>
<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Rising To The Top</h2>
<div>Finding his passion, Coble quickly dove in, learning as much as possible. He expanded Elmbrook’s capabilities to better serve the residents and a few years later opened an assisted living center. He later grew the company even further to become Elmbrook Management Co., which currently owns and operates seven long term care and assisted living communities in southern Oklahoma.</div>
<div><br>It was an exciting time for Coble, who quickly rose through the ranks of health care leadership in his home state of Oklahoma, an achievement he credits to the residents he helped care for at Elmbrook. </div>
<div><br>“I learned so much from the families that we cared for, and I still apply this day in and day out. I’ve learned from not only the members of my family but the families of my friends and all the people that helped raise me in the community,” says Coble. </div>
<div><br>Coble joined the Oklahoma Association of Health Care Providers (OAHCP), where he served two terms as president of the board. He has had several state-level legislative appointments to health-related task forces, councils, and other boards. </div>
<div><br>“It’s humbling to reach a point where people consider you to be one of the leaders of the long term and post-acute care profession,” he says.</div>
<div><br>Soon after, Coble became involved with the American Health Care Association (AHCA), where he served as chair of the Independent Owners Council and member of various committees, including the Board of Governors in 2011. </div>
<div><br>As the current chair of the board completing his first-year term, Coble says that his passion has driven him to continue the work of previous AHCA leaders, with a renewed focus on enhancing quality and developing new reimbursement models.</div>
<div><br>“It’s important for our profession to understand that we’re at the crossroads where quality and reimbursement will meet,” says Coble. “This is a sea change.” In AHCA circles and back in Oklahoma, Coble is known for his out-of-the-box thinking on payment models. He founded his own business offering Medicare Advantage plans, which has allowed him to serve both residents in care centers and those in the community. </div>
<div><br>“Tom has a special expertise in new payment models, and to have a chair who is one of the leading reimbursement experts in the country is invaluable,” says Mark Parkinson, president and chief executive officer of AHCA and the National Center for Assisted Living.</div>
<div><br>Another cornerstone of Coble’s mission as chair of AHCA is to continue to enhance the association’s relationship with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “With that comes the important work of enhancing regulations with survey and certification,” Coble says. <br><br><span id="__publishingReusableFragment"></span></div>
<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">A Strong Advocate</h2>
<div>When asked about what he’s enjoyed the most as AHCA chair, Coble says, quite simply, it’s the people. </div>
<div><br>“The interactions with other states and experts have been really phenomenal. We’ve all learned so much from each other, and all those inter-workings support our profession,” Coble says. “I’ve made lifelong friends here.” </div>
<div><br>“Tom is a great leader for our profession, and we’ve learned a lot from the great work he’s done not only for the residents at Elmbrook, but for elders in Oklahoma,” Parkinson says.</div>
<div><br>Fellow board member David Norsworthy, vice president of strategic planning at Central Arkansas Nursing Centers, also praises Coble’s steady leadership.</div>
<div><br>“At a time when the profession is facing so many unknowns on the legislative and regulatory horizons, it’s reassuring to have Tom at the helm,” says Norsworthy. “His steady leadership is appreciated and welcome. We have a strong advocate who knows provider needs so well.”</div>
<div><br>When asked what those outside the profession should know, Coble says “It’s incredibly important to continue to make the public aware of the importance of long term care within the community and how it affects the health outcomes of our society as we age.”</div>
<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Expanding The LTC Center Role</h2>
<div>Later this month, Coble will take this message and his passion for caregiving overseas, where he will participate as a speaker and panelist at the 6th Annual Retirement Living World in Shanghai, China. </div>
<div><br>Coble will present on the role of the long term care center in population management in an aging society. </div>
<div><br>“It’s about integrating the medical model [long term care] with the social model [home- and community-based services],” says Coble. “What it comes down to is the care center becomes a place to serve both the residents in the center and the elderly in the community by offering services such as Meals on Wheels and wellness checks. We call this concept, Nursing Home Without Walls.” </div>
<div><br>Several in Coble’s family are involved with the Elmbrook community. “When my son Brett was little he pitched in to help by washing dishes, mopping floors, and doing laundry,” says Coble. “My daughter, Meghann, spent time helping my wife, Kim, in the assisted living community.”</div>
<div><br>Today, Brett oversees operations at Elmbrook and Meghann is completing her master’s degree, with plans to be a nurse practitioner. Coble’s mother resides in the assisted living community and will turn 82 in November.</div>
<div><br>Above all, the experiences that have had the biggest impact on Coble have been with the residents of Elmbrook. </div>
<div>“There are so many that have touched our lives over the years,” he says. </div>
<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Memories That Stay</h2>
<div>Coble recalls a young resident who had moved into the center with his grandmother back in the 1960s, residing there for years. He filled the Coke machines every day and delivered the papers to everyone, making sure residents received their mail. </div>
<div><br>“I called him the Governor of Elmbrook. He knew so much,” says Coble. Once the young resident left, people complained that the Coke machines were empty and papers didn’t get delivered on time. “I really learned from him that the little things matter and can make people happy.”</div>
<div><br>Another memorable resident was a World War I bride from France. When Coble introduced her to a French physician visiting the Elmbrook while studying geriatrics, the physician began speaking to the resident in French. </div>
<div><br>“The look on her face stayed with me for years. I’ll never forget that. She made a connection,” says Coble.</div>
<div><br>“We’re working in a history book,” Coble says. “The people we care for may not always remember what happened 10 minutes ago, but they can remember just about everything that happened 80 years ago.” <br><br><em><a href="mailto:amendoza@providermagazine.com" target="_blank">Amy Mendoza</a> is managing editor of </em>Provider <em>magazine.</em></div> | Some care professionals can easily trace their passion for caregiving to their childhood or personal experiences, saying that they “always knew” that caring for the elderly was their “mission in life.” | 2016-10-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/TomCoble_t.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | | Column |
Online Courses Open Learning Opportunities | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2016/October/Pages/Online-Courses-Open-Learning-Opportunities.aspx | Online Courses Open Learning Opportunities | <div id="__publishingReusableFragmentIdSection"><a href="/ReusableContent/4_.000">a</a><a href="/ReusableContent/4_.000">a</a></div><div></div>
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<div><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/HR.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-2" alt="" style="margin:5px 10px;" />At 10 p.m., Mary, a nurse assistant at a rural long term care center, puts her son to bed, then sits on her bed with her laptop to finish an educational program that she needs to complete her certification requirements. </div>
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<div>Two days later, her colleague, John, eats his lunch and reviews a program about pressure ulcers on his tablet. He had completed the program previously, but the center recently admitted two residents with pressure ulcers, and he wants to brush up on the topic. </div>
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<div>Elsewhere, at a care center 1,200 miles away, a new certified nurse assistant (CNA) at a national skilled nursing center chain is studying the same program to gain the knowledge she needs to care for her residents.</div>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span></span>The Di<span></span><span></span>stant<span></span><span></span> Past</h2>
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<div>Twenty or even 10 years ago, these scenarios would have been unlikely, if not impossible. Few nurse assistants or even nurses had widespread access to computers. Even if they had a desktop model or laptop at home, they likely had to share it with their spouses and children<span></span><span></span>.</div>
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<div><br>As computer prices have dropped over the years and many can afford a laptop, tablet, or phone with internet access, online education has become a common and popular way for long term care centers to train CNAs, nurses, and others. </div>
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<div><br>Just last year, the nursing department at Bethel University and technology vendor Academic Platforms asked the American Health Care Association (AHCA) if it could utilize its “How to be a Nurse Assistant” curriculum for an online education initiative. The plan was for Bethel to put the content into an online format that nursing students could access as a baseline course. </div>
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<div><br>Now that the curriculum is online, AHCA is offering it to providers who want an online training course for their CNAs.</div>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Evolution Of Online Learning</h2>
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<div>As the cost of technology has dropped and adult learners increasingly have sought at-home learning opportunities, online education has become a popular option. The U.S. National Center for Education Statistics says that more than half of all two- and four-year degree-granting institutions offer online learning courses for all types of students.</div>
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<div><br>The growth of online course offerings between 2004 and 2005 alone is estimated at 35 percent. A 2013 report by Babson Survey Research documented that more than 6.7 million post-secondary students were enrolled in at least one online class in 2011, compared with 1.6 million in 2002. Today, many colleges and universities offer entire degrees via online programs. The advantages of online learning for CNAs and other staff include scheduling flexibility and the ability of learners to control their study time and focus more on the topics they need or want to address. People who are more introverted may feel more comfortable interacting with instructors via online discussions or messaging.</div>
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<div><br>Online communication also eliminates the wait for office hours or instructor availability to ask questions and discuss issues. Interestingly, the U.S. Department of Education has suggested that students in online courses perform better than those in live classes. <br><span id="__publishingReusableFragment"></span></div>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">New CNA Training Program</h2>
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<div>The course from AHCA includes a complete curriculum with lesson plans, practice tests and study guides, and new competency-based skills checklists. It also offers scheduled in-person clinical training with qualified instructors, a customizable online learning platform, options to integrate the care center’s culture and materials to complement the lessons, and instructional lectures and discussions led by qualified nursing faculty members.</div>
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<div><br>The benefits of this online program include learning flexibility, a reduced need for physical class space, interactivity via offerings such as videos and discussion groups, and the ability to take quizzes or tests and get scores immediately.
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<div>Because the curriculum is accessible from computers, tablets, and smart phones, users can learn with whatever technology they have. </div>
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<div><br>“This presents a great learning opportunity for CNAs everywhere, but particularly for those in rural markets where they don’t have a lot of access to community colleges and other places to pursue education,” says Jon-Patrick Ewing, AHCA senior director of marketing.</div>
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<div><br>“It’s also helpful for large corporations that have many employees and must constantly do training. This enables them to provide consistent quality education for employees, regardless of their location. It creates a solid base of knowledge that is shared by everyone.” </div>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Consistent Training an added benefit</h2>
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<div>Consistency is one of the major advantages of online learning. Catherine Kelly, director of learning programs for Brookdale Senior Living, says, “Online learning provides an opportunity for training in a consistent, measurable way time and time again. Across the board, we can deliver the same messages, enabling users to meet the same goals and objectives.”</div>
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<div><br>Brookdale offers a variety of online learning programs and activities for staff, including frontline caregivers. These are designed to supplement, support, and expand on inservice programs and live training events.</div>
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<div><br>John Reinhart, president and chief executive officer of Academic Platforms, which hosts AHCA’s “How To Be” curriculum, agrees about the value of consistency.</div>
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<div><br>“We had conversations with nursing leaders across the country who say there is a variation in the quality of education and educators. We wanted to produce something that enables consistent, high-quality training for everyone from one end of the country to the other.” </div>
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<div><br>Reinhart says, “Working on the ‘How To Be’ curriculum presented an opportunity to produce a hybrid program that starts with excellent content from books developed for instructors and students that could be translated into an e-book and online training effort. Clinical learning is done onsite with their instructors and equipment.”</div>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Personalizing Training</h2>
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<div>While it is useful to have standardized content that provides consistent, appropriate, and up-to-date knowledge and information, Reinhart says, it also is important to personalize clinicals to the center’s needs and practices and the skill level of personnel. </div>
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<div><br>Technology has come a long way over the years, and care centers need to keep up, says Ewing. “More than ever, people are pursuing learning on the go—with their iPads and other mobile devices. As more millennials enter the long term care workforce, they increasingly will expect to use technology,” he says.</div>
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<div><br>For the center, budget and staffing limitations make it challenging to take CNAs and educators off the floor for training, and many communities don’t have the physical space for classes. </div>
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<div><br>“This is one of the biggest things we hear from a center. This is a particular challenge when centers have a lot of turnover and need to provide quality education while lowering costs,” says Ewing.</div>
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<div><br>Variety is important. “We have a huge library of programs and topics. Some are assigned, such as those related to regulatory issues,” Kelly says. However, CNAs can access whatever programs they need for their own certification requirements and personal learning needs and goals. <br><span id="__publishingReusableFragment"></span></div>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2">Backup Programs</h2>
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<div>While technology is more generally accessible than ever, some CNAs still may have limited access to computers. Therefore, Ewing says, “We have to have paper-based information and materials as well. There should be a balance to ensure that everyone has an opportunity to pursue the education and training they want and need.” <br></div>
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<div><br>Balance is especially important, he says, as people learn in different ways. This means having a program that blends lectures and videos with interactive efforts such as discussion groups. </div>
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<div><br>Ensuring that training accounts for those who don’t have access to technology or simply prefer paper-based education is key, Reinhart says. </div>
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<div><br>“One early suggestion we received was to convert the content to an audio book as well as an e-book.” At the same time, one size doesn’t necessarily fit all when it comes to technology. </div>
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<div><br>“We want to make sure our content is friendly for all platforms—from laptops and desktops to smart phones and tablets,” he says.</div>
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<div><br>Online learning will likely play a growing role in education and training moving forward. However, Ewing cautions that it isn’t a blanket solution. </div>
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<div><br>“There are many state-specific rules and regulations regarding education, training, and certification. It is important to know requirements and limitations in your state before introducing or promoting any online learning opportunities to CNAs and others,” he says. </div>
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<div><br>Care centers that provide online learning opportunities are likely to reap the dividends in terms of happier, more skilled employees. As Kelly says, “The majority of staff enjoy the opportunity to participate in training that enhances their competencies and confidence. They like to learn and appreciate the opportunity to grow.” </div>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><em><img src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/JoanneKaldy.jpg" alt="Joanne Kaldy" class="ms-rtePosition-1" style="margin:5px 10px;" /><br><br>Joanne Kaldy is a freelance writer and communications consultant based in Harrisburg, Pa. She can be reached at (240) 527-9848 or <a href="mailto:JoKaldyCooper@aol.com" target="_blank">JoKaldyCooper@aol.com</a>.</em><span></span><span></span><span></span><span></span></p>
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<span></span><span></span><span></span><span></span></h2> | As computer prices have dropped over the years and many can afford a laptop, tablet, or phone with internet access, online education has become a common and popular way for long term care centers to train CNAs, nurses, and others.
| 2016-10-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2016/October/PublishingImages/HR_t.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Workforce | Column |
How would you approach meeting the new QAPI regulation that CMS is promulgating? | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2016/October/Pages/The-Quality-Forum.aspx | How would you approach meeting the new QAPI regulation that CMS is promulgating? | <br>By the time this column is published, the new survey and certification rule, including the Quality Assurance & Performance Improvement (QAPI) regulation, may already be published in the Federal Register. This new QAPI regulation represents a major transformation of the nursing center Quality Assessment & Assurance (QAA) regulation along the path that all health care providers are now moving on to improve health care effectiveness.<br><br>The QAPI regulation (§483.75) would, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), “require that a facility develop, implement, and maintain an effective, comprehensive, data-driven QAPI program, reflected in its QAPI plan, that focuses on systems of care, outcomes, and services for residents and staff.”<br><br>Where do you start in meeting the requirements for this extensive regulation? <br><br>Just like in Deming’s PDSA cycles (plan, do, study, act) that underlie all specific QAPI activities, in its regulation CMS is specific that you begin your QAPI program with a comprehensive QAPI plan: “We propose in new §483.75(a)(2) that the facility must submit the QAPI plan to the state agency or federal surveyor, as the agent of the secretary, at the first annual recertification survey that occurs at least one year after the effective date of these regulations.”<br><br>Thus, the QAPI plan is where surveyors will begin to evaluate compliance with this regulation, and, equally important, a successful QAPI program requires that you invest in developing a plan that is designed around the specific needs, people, and processes in your building. A less formal quality assurance process will no longer suffice, even if you have had successes in the past finding and fixing selected quality problems. <br><br>Rather, CMS is seeking a more proactive, systematic, and comprehensive approach that goes beyond previous QAA: “While our proposal retains the existing QAA requirements at §483.75(o), these requirements alone do not conform to the current health care industry standards that proactively design quality improvement into each program at the outset, monitor data (indicators, measures, and reports of staff/residents/families), determine root causes of problems, design and use performance improvement projects (PIPs) to promote continuous improvement, develop and implement plans that effect system improvement, and monitor the success of this systematic approach to improving quality.”<br><br>To be successful in your QAPI efforts, it is essential that you conduct the QAPI processes yourself based on your residents’ concerns, your organizational structure and staff, your operating systems, and the current challenges that you face. Ensuring quality and improving performance only works if your organization owns it. <br><br>It’s no secret that even the perfect plan that contains all of the QAPI elements is of little value if you put it on a shelf and don’t use it. To be effective in health care today, we have to elevate QAPI on par with all other essential services that we provide to our residents.<br><br>So after developing your plan, I encourage you to systematize your approach to following and documenting each step. Think of your QAPI plan as a living document that helps you in meeting the dynamic challenges that all of our industry is facing today. | The new QAPI regulation represents a major transformation of the nursing center Quality Assessment & Assurance (QAA) regulation along the path that all health care providers are now moving on to improve health care effectiveness.
| 2016-10-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2016/PublishingImages/AndyKramer_2015.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Quality | Column |