Capture the Spirit of Learning in San Diego | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2018/September/Pages/Capture-the-Spirit-of-Learning-in-San-Diego.aspx | Capture the Spirit of Learning in San Diego | The 69th Annual Convention & Expo of the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living will be held at the San Diego Convention Center Oct. 7–10, 2018.<br><br><div>Here is a small sample of the EU-credited symposia held in conjunction with the convention.</div>
<div><h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">Employee Focus Groups for Staffing Stability: Theory-to-Practice</h3>
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<div>Facing the challenges of recruiting and retaining qualified staff in the ever-changing workforce is a top priority of health care leaders today. Focus groups can be used as a vital and useful supplement to employee surveys, exit interviews, and other resources. </div>
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<div>Whereas quantitative data, such as surveys, are most effective at providing quantifiable data, focus groups can be used to “enrich” these results by revealing the more qualitative perspectives underlying the numbers. </div>
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<div>Although conducting a focus group may appear to be a few questions and having a “discussion,” a productive focus group is much more than a chat session. This presentation provides a demonstrated model and core principles for designing and engaging effective focus groups. Additionally, the presentation demonstrates take-away tools and techniques to synthesize the feedback into action plans for meaningful change and outcomes. </div>
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<div><em>Speaker: David Lucia, PhD, human resources consultant, Tealwood Senior </em><em style="background-color:initial;">Living, Bloomington, Minn.</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/SanDiego1.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-1" alt="" style="margin:10px;width:228px;height:169px;" /><br>An Introduction to Genomic Testing: <span>Is This the Dawn of Personalized </span><span>Medicine?</span></h3>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><span class="ms-rteForeColor-10"></span><span style="background-color:initial;">Genomic testing represents an exciting advancement in developing individualized treatment plans for the post-acute patient, but navigating through the technology can be a daunting process. The first part of this presentatio</span><span style="background-color:initial;">n will provide a background on the science of genomic testing, the current status of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) approval for the testing, and a review of the payment models. The second part will discuss how one post-acute provider selected a genomic testing service (there are many available) and will provide several case studies where </span><span style="background-color:initial;">genomic testing was used to help the treatment team make individualized medication recommendations.</span></p>
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<div><em>Speakers: Mark Pavlovich, MA, senior director of analytics and education, CHSGa, Alpharetta, Ga.; Allan Anderson, MD, MMM, CMD, DLFAPA, assistant professor of psychiatry, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Cambridge, Md.</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">Preventing Hospital Readmissions</h3>
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<div>Healthcentric Advisors has designed an evidence-based, community-centered nursing facility project to address unnecessary or potentially avoidable hospitalizations using a systematic process for discharging residents back into the community. The project uses key elements from the hospital-based Project Red and Coleman’s Care Transitions Intervention. It is centered on an evidence-based after-care plan (ACP) that educates patients and their families regarding post-discharge care management. Data collection and a Medicare claims-based analysis took place from March 2017 through March 2018. Preliminary results from among 1,793 nursing facility admissions are promising: Participants have demonstrated the feasibility of implementing the core elements of Project Red (93 percent of patients received ACP at discharge), and claims provide evidence for a downward trend in readmissions among the participating facilities. </div>
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<div>This session will describe the intervention; recent results from this project, including the impact on readmissions; utilization of ACPs to promote patient satisfaction and understanding of their care; and best practices for dissemination to other communities. </div>
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<div><em>Speakers: Tyler Czarnecki; Gail Patry, RN, CPEHR, chief program officer, Healthcentric Advisors, Providence, R.I.; Kathleen Calandra, BSN, RN, CPHQ</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">Effective Organizational and Clinic<span></span>al Approaches to Infection Prevention and Control (F880)</h3>
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<div>Infection prevention & control (F880) is the most frequently cited deficiency under the new survey process to date and has historically been a top citation nationwide. Using national data, this session will provide information on common drivers of infection prevention & control citations and best practices to optimize infection prevention and control processes and practices to avoid deficiencies and improve residents’ outcomes. The session will highlight effective organizational and clinical approaches to infection prevention and control that attendees can implement immediately in their centers. </div>
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<div><em>Speakers: Sara Rudow, MPA, senior director of regulatory services, AHCA, Washington, D.C.; Holly Harmon, RN, MBA, LNHA, FACHCA, associate vice president, quality & clinical affairs, AHCA; Paul Arbour, BSBA, senior administrator, MaineGeneral Rehabilitation & Long Term Care at Glenridge, August, Maine; Troy Cutler, RN CIC, supervisor infection prevention, MaineGeneral Health at Glenridge, Augusta, Maine</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3"><span class="ms-rteForeColor-10">Combining Actionable Strategies with Marketing Automation to Shorten the Sales Cycle and Improve Results</span> </h3>
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<div>What changes in online and traditional marketing strategies are needed this coming year? What are the best strategies for staying in touch with prospects during a lengthy sales cycle? How do we better tell our story so that we can connect with prospects? Is there an easier way to manage marketing activities? </div>
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<div>Marketing experts Dan Gartlan and Nicole Wagner explore the answers to these questions using proven principles and tactics designed to attract prospects in a crowded market space. Attendees will learn cohesive and integrated strategies that work in combination to create the ideal platform.</div>
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<div>Interdependent strategies focus on topics such as brand storytelling that connect emotionally with prospects, content creation on the website that engages seniors and builds trust, social media and search engine optimization, and the use of email in combination with lead nurturing to move prospects through the buying journey. </div>
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<div><em>Speakers: Dan Gartlan, president, and Nicole Wagner, internet marketing director, Stevens & Tate Marketing, Lombard, Ill.</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">How’d They Do That? A Dataholic’s Guide to Great Performance</h3>
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<div>Nursing centers face a world gone mad, with payment systems in a continual state of flux and uncertainty, and increased focus on quality and resident experience. The ongoing challenge is to maintain profitability, increase efficiency, and improve care. The presenters have worked collaboratively to identify nursing centers that are achieving excellence clinically and financially, pinpoint the metrics that set them apart from other centers, and implement organizational changes to recreate those results in other facilities. The benchmarks, which include staffing standards, billing and coding issues, costs of care, and resident statistics, contrast operational indicators that set the very best facilities apart. </div>
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<div>Of course, just knowing the benchmarks isn’t enough. Presenters will also discuss experience-based approaches to closing gaps between a center’s current state and desired state and maintaining great performance. </div>
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<div><em>Speakers: Lara Cline, RN, MSN, FNP, C-NE, director of care coordination, Cantex CCN, Carrollton, Texas; Loretta Kaes, BSN, RN, BC, C-AL, LNHA, CALA , director of quality improvement and clinical and regulatory services, Health Care Association of New Jersey, Hamilton, N.J.; Chris Murphy, CPA, partner, BKD, Tulsa, Okla.</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">Compliance Programs: Minimizing Risk in a Fraud & Abuse World</h3>
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<div>This session will discuss recent developments in False Claims Act cases and investigations and other risk areas. Speakers will review the trends in investigations and response strategies, and the impact and benefit of compliance programs. They will discuss the most recent guidance on compliance programs, including for phase three of the Requirements of Participation, and how to implement or update the programs in SNFs. </div>
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<div><em>Speakers: Mark Johnson, attorney at law, managing partner/San Diego office, and Mark Reagan, attorney at law, managing partner/San Francisco office, Hooper Lundy and Bookman</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/SanDiego2.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-2" alt="" style="margin:10px 15px;width:214px;height:280px;" />New Survey? No Problem!</h3>
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</span><div>The Long Term Care Survey Process is a resident-centered, outcome-oriented inspection that relies on a case-mix-stratified sample of residents to gather information about the facility’s compliance with participation requirements. </div>
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<div>One year into the implementation of the new survey, often referred to as the hybrid survey, many providers are still learning how to successfully navigate their health inspection.</div>
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<div>In this session, the speaker will detail the hybrid survey process used by state surveyors and review trends providers have seen in the past year in terms of tags cited more frequently on a national basis and at a regional level. This interactive lecture will also provide attendees with strategies and practices that not only help providers improve survey performance but also can be used to fulfill requirements to meet the five elements of Quality Assurance & Performance Improvement (QAPI). </div>
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<div>Combining these initiatives will help providers to come into compliance more efficiently, and more completely, with less time, effort, and energy required from staff. </div>
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<div><em>Speaker: Ellen Kuebrich, chief strategy officer, Providigm, Denver</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10"><span>Achieving Quality and Financial Outcomes by Improving Medication Safety in Transitions of Care</span></h3>
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<div>Pharmacy-related CMS quality measures for medication reconciliation and drug regimen review are important in addressing medication-related problems (MRPs) that result in patient harm and increased health services utilization and costs, including emergency room visits, rehospitalizations, and mortality. </div>
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<div>This session explores the value of pharmacist-provided medication reconciliation during transitions of care. The speakers will share the impact pharmacists have on resolving MRPs, streamlining individualized care, reducing rehospitalization rates, and decreasing total cost of care. </div>
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<div><em>Speakers: Frank Grosso, pharmacist, president, and Marylee Grosso, BSPharm, RPh, PD, FASCP, managing partner, HealthCare Consults, Corinth, N.Y.; Addolorata Ciccone, PharmD, BCGP, geriatric clinical pharmacist, Jefferson House, Hartford HealthCare, Middletown, Conn.</em></div>
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</span><div>This session will discuss key principles in incorporating meaning into the activity program for residents living with dementia, which in turn improves quality of life and decreases distress, thereby reducing the need for antipsychotics. </div>
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<div>As antipsychotics use diminishes, residents with dementia “come alive” and have a need to interact with their environment and caregivers. Layering activities, theme bags/stations, Spark of Life, and the Montessori method are four approaches that will be discussed and demonstrated in this session. </div>
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<div>To engage people living with dementia, caregivers must increase sensory input and create a “yes” environment. These approaches employ specific tools to make it happen. When residents experience meaning in their daily interactions with staff and their environment, their distress decreases, staff satisfaction increases, and the overall care environment improves. </div>
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<div><em>Speaker: Dusty Linn, LCSW, CDP, AC-BC, CVW, PAC Trainer, social/activity/dementia consultant & educator, Dusty Linn Consulting, Greenbrier, Ark.</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">Electronic Health Records: Maximize Opp<span></span>ortunities and Minimize Risk</h3>
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</span><div>In a fast-changing and resource-constrained environment, long term care providers are looking for ways to offer better care and demonstrate value to partners. In particular, the change from paper charts to electronic health records (EHR) has transformed the delivery of services by introducing new benefits as well as risks that must be managed.</div>
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<div>This session will explore how long term care providers can leverage EHR to find efficiencies, improve clinical outcomes, and elevate the patient or resident experience, while also identifying potential pitfalls. The discussion will cover topics such as how to address human error, identify differences producing EHR rather than paper charts for litigation, and integrate EHR across staff and clinical practices. </div>
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<div><em>Speaker: Larry Wolf, MS, chief transformation officer, MatrixCare, Chicago</em></div>
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<h3 class="ms-rteElement-H3 ms-rteForeColor-10">Preventing and Responding to Bullying Between Older Adults </h3>
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</span><div>Strong social bonds are an important aspect of successful aging, but group dynamics often involve conflict and tension, and staff at assisted living communities may be called upon to respond to instances of bullying or aggression between residents. The speaker will examine how to identify bullying behavior, strategies for preventing bullying, successful interventions when bullying is taking place, and ways to support staff in creating a welcoming atmosphere.</div>
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<div>He will pay special attention to preventing bullying where the aggression is based on a person’s minority status, such as bullying that targets people of specific ethnic and/or racial identities, genders, disabilities, sexual orientations, or religions. Exercises will also address how to intervene in conflicts</div></div> | The 69th Annual Convention & Expo of the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living will be held at the San Diego Convention Center Oct. 7–10, 2018.
| 2018-09-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/SanDiego_t.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Caregiving | Convention |
Balancing Security and Usability | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2018/September/Pages/Balancing-Security-and-Usability.aspx | Balancing Security and Usability | <div>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/JoeBerkman.jpg" alt="Joe Berkman" class="ms-rtePosition-1" style="margin:5px 10px;" />M<span style="background-color:initial;">ost would agree that the statement: “The most secure health care system is one that nobody can access,” is true. However, as secure as it is, that system would be useless. In long term and post-acute care (LT/PAC), accessibility to relevant data is critical to quality outcomes.</span><span style="background-color:initial;"> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The converse would be a system that has no access control at all, where the user can launch the application and do anything they want to, without having to worry about remembering a password or user name—that system would be easy to use and even simpler for information technology (IT) staff to manage, but clearly that approach would not offer any data security whatsoever.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">These are two extremes. However, the best systems, and the best security policies, will typically fall somewhere in the middle of the range of possible solutions for the security area in question.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>A Common Predicament</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><span></span><span>Here is a real-world example: How does an </span>LT/PAC organization handle a situation where a certified nurse assistant has forgotten his or her password, but needs to log into the electronic health record (EHR) to begin delivering care for the day?<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Some customers may feel strongly that their users should only be able to have their password reset by staff from their IT department, so that the central office can fully validate that they are not giving access to an impersonator. (If not familiar with this technique, it is worth doing a Wikipedia search about “social engineering” for more information.)</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Then there are customers who feel just as strongly that their users should have the ability to reset their own passwords through some form of self-service password recovery method. This is often an email-based system where the user enters their login name and clicks a link that triggers an email to the email address on file with a link to a page where the user can reset their password. It might also require them to provide the answer to a “secret question” that (presumably) only the user would know.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Embracing Uniqueness</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">It is important to note that neither of these solutions (centralized or self-service) is a wrong answer—every LT/PAC organization is different, with different operating methods and security environments, and user management can be centralized or decentralized, or even both at the same time.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The email-based approach is obviously only useful if all the staff have company email access, so its usefulness can be limited in LT/PAC. The secret question recovery method may be convenient, but be aware that the secret question method offers a larger (and additional) attack surface than just the username and password. If a hacker is targeting a specific user in the organization, it can be surprisingly easy to find or deduce the name of the high school the user graduated from, the make and model of their first car, or the name of their favorite pet.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">“Secret-question-and-answer password reset systems are a way to allow a person into the EHR who doesn’t know a password.” Think about that one for a moment. When setting policies for user management, there is a decision to be made: Where is the organization’s sweet spot regarding the compromise between usability and security? Both are critical to success, of course.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Making Better Passwords</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">There’s also a duality between allowing simple, easy-to-remember passwords or requiring complex passwords, which seem more secure but can be harder to type, or harder to remember. Fortunately, there is less needing to compromise in this area than there used to be.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), until recently, recommended that passwords contain a mixture of upper-case, lower-case, numeric digits, and special characters. However, recent analysis has turned that on its head—NIST now advises that complex passwords are in many cases just as hackable as simple passwords of equal length.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">However, the one factor that makes the biggest difference in terms of security is the LENGTH of the password. A password phrase that is a) not obvious and b) 20 or more characters long is virtually unhackable with current technology. So, if the EHR allows for setting a minimum password length, setting a longer length requirement will do more for the security than requiring special characters and so on.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">One can advise users to think of a four-word phrase that they can remember and type easily, like, for example, ‘obviouslargeglassbowl,’ which according to one password evaluation algorithm, would take 410 billion years of computer time to decrypt.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Compare that to ‘F!zzY’, which could be broken in 43 milliseconds, according to the same evaluation. Fortunately, this security issue doesn’t necessarily require as much compromise as one might think.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Resetting Options</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">So, what is the best way to handle forgotten passwords? If the system offers an email-based password reset, that may a great solution, but only if the organization provides email accounts to most or all of the users, which may not be practical. Similarly, phone-based or text-message-based resets may or may not be feasible for the business case.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/tech_size-matters.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-2" alt="" style="margin:5px;width:395px;height:263px;" />Another option is to require users to contact IT or other designated staff to reset their passwords, but for a large organization, this can require a lot of staff, and probably 24/7 coverage. It is good practice to do it this way, as long as the IT staff are trained to validate that the person on the phone is who they say they are. (See the earlier comment on “social engineering.”)<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">If it is not possible to provide 24/7 centralized password reset services to the users, then what? One might go with a decentralized approach where a few key staff at each location can handle password resets.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">This also requires 24/7 coverage, but not necessarily dedicated support staff. The security trade-off here is this approach would require granting admin access to a larger number of people in the facility.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">If the system offers a secret question-based password reset process, and the alternatives above are not workable, this may end up as the compromise that gives the best balance between security and usability when users forget their passwords. The caveat with that is the organization should advise users to choose a secret question that is not easily guessed or researched on social media.<span> </span></p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Beefing Up Secret Questions</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">If the system has a predefined list of questions that they can choose to answer, encourage them to pick the less obvious questions, or if it allows the user to enter their own questions, encourage them to be smart about the questions they choose.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">For example, the name of their favorite teacher might be harder to research than the name of their high school sports mascot.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The role of the technology partner is also important. A trusted technology provider should be constantly evaluating the LT/PAC business environment and emerging security threats, as well as new user authentication and authorization technologies as they become available.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Their strategy should be to offer highly configurable security options using the latest technology, so that their customers can configure the system with the right security options for their specific situations and business needs.<span> </span></p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Striking a Balance That Works</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Optimizing the security of any computer system involves a compromise with usability. But with careful evaluation of the various options available, providers will likely find a balance between the two that protects the data while keeping it easy for individuals to access the systems and care for the clients.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><span><em>Joe Berkman</em></span><em> is product manager at MatrixCare. He can be reached at Joe.Berkman@MatrixCare.com.</em><span><em> </em><br></span></p> | The best systems, and the best security policies, will typically fall somewhere in the middle of the range of possible solutions for the security area in question. | 2018-09-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/tech_t.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Technology | Technology in Health Care |
How Fundamentals Are Holding Up In Skilled Nursing | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2018/September/Pages/How-Fundamentals-Are-Holding-Up-In-Skilled-Nursing.aspx | How Fundamentals Are Holding Up In Skilled Nursing | <div>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><span style="background-color:initial;">T</span><span style="background-color:initial;">he National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care (NIC) released its Skilled Nursing Data Report with data through the first quarter of 2018. Different from the last quarter report, this report now includes revenue mix and urban vs. rural trends. The main takeaways include:</span><br></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">1. First quarter national occupancy decreased 30 basis points from the fourth quarter to 81.6 percent.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">2. Skilled mix increased at the national level from the prior quarter.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">3. Managed Medicare revenue mix reached a time-series high at the national level in February 2018.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">4. Medicare revenue mix increased in the first quarter and was close to the highs of one year ago in urban cluster and rural settings.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">5. Nationally and consistently across geographic areas, private revenue per patient day continues to increase.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Occupancy Continues to Fall, Despite Seasonal Influence</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">First quarter national occupancy decreased 30 basis points from the fourth quarter to 81.6 percent, diverging from the expected historical trend that usually shows an uptick in occupancy from the fourth to the first quarter. Occupancy initially increased in both January and February before slipping in March as occupancy ended down 210 basis points from the March 2017 rate of 83.7 percent.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/NIC_Occupancy.jpg" class="ms-rtePosition-1 ms-rteImage-1" alt="Occupancy Oct. 2011-March 2018" style="margin:5px 15px;width:401px;height:249px;" />From the January 2015 high in this time series of 87.2 percent, occupancy is down 555 basis points. And remember, 2015 was when value-based health care started to take hold and many challenges began to appear in the skilled nursing sector, such as pressure on length of stay—and the data here reflect that.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Medicare patient day mix increased 56 basis points to 13.0 percent in the first quarter of 2018. This suggests that seasonality did once again influence the data as higher-acuity patients are often admitted during the winter/flu season, which in turn often drives an increase in overall occupancy. However, as mentioned above, overall occupancy decreased so other factors may be at play that are offsetting this influence, such as lower admissions or pressure on length of stay.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Throughout the time-series on page 47, the spike each year in Medicare mix due to this seasonality can be seen, but each year since 2014 has seen a lower level, reflecting the challenges to increase the Medicare patient day mix in the skilled nursing sector.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Urban and Rural Trends</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">As briefly mentioned in the beginning of this article, the data set now includes urban and rural trends, but as many might guess, the overall occupancy trends over the past few years are similar. Although occupancy was down overall nationally and in urban and rural areas, the urban cluster area was actually up 24 basis points from the fourth quarter of 2017 to the first quarter of 2018.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/NIC_Managed-RM.jpg" alt="Managed Medicare Revenue mix" class="ms-rteImage-1 ms-rtePosition-2" style="margin:10px 15px;width:402px;height:261px;" />However, the urban cluster was down similar to that of other areas when compared to last year. Also worthy of note is the fact that there was a sharp decline in rural occupancy, which decreased a significant 100 basis points from December 2017 to March 2018.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Exploring additional comparisons within different geographies, skilled mix increased at the national level from the prior quarter as Medicare and managed Medicare patient day mix increased 56 and 54 basis points to 13.0 percent and 6.6 percent, respectively. As mentioned earlier when describing the recent Medicare patient mix trends, this skilled mix increase suggests that seasonality did influence the data as higher acuity patients are often admitted during the winter/flu season, which in turn often drives an increase in overall occupancy.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Skilled mix increased across all reported geographic areas in urban, rural, and urban cluster markets. Rural area properties are now at the highest level of skilled mix within the time-series, ending the quarter at 24.4 percent.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Managed Medicare Still a Factor</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Managed Medicare revenue mix reached a time-series high at the national level in February 2018, demonstrating the growing influence of this payer source. Even among rural properties, where revenue mix for managed Medicare is less than half the revenue mix reported in urban areas, the trend is consistent. Rural areas have been less affected by managed Medicare than others, but the trend warrants attention in the years to come, in all geographic areas.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/NIC_Medicare-PDM.jpg" alt="Meicare Patient Day Mix" class="ms-rteImage-1 ms-rtePosition-1" style="margin:10px 15px;width:401px;height:241px;" />The challenge on the managed Medicare business is not only the pressures on length of stay, but also the reimbursement rate differential between fee-for-service Medicare and managed Medicare, which has been pressured over the last few years. Based on the patient day mix and reimbursement rate data, it is clear that managed care growth continues to progress, and as more patient days transition from fee-for-service to managed Medicare, there will continue to be pressure on daily reimbursement.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">For further insights and data, download the latest report. NIC’s Skilled Nursing Data Report is released quarterly to provide operators and investors timely, relevant data that are not readily available from other sources. Select metrics include: occupancy, quality mix, skilled mix, patient day mix, and revenue per patient day by payor source. The first quarter 2018 report features time series data from October 2011 through March 2018. This report, in addition to the skilled nursing quality metrics recently launched through NIC MAP® Data Service, represents NIC’s growing commitment to transparency in the skilled nursing sector. The NIC Skilled Nursing Data Report is available at <a href="http://info.nic.org/skilled_data_report_pr" target="_blank">http://info.nic.org/skilled_data_report_pr.</a> There is no charge for this report.<span> </span><span><em><img src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/NIC_Skilled-Mix.jpg" alt="SKilled Mix" class="ms-rteImage-1 ms-rtePosition-2" style="margin:10px 15px;width:402px;height:251px;" /></em></span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The report provides aggregate data at the national level from a sampling of skilled nursing operators with multiple properties in the United States. NIC continues to grow its database of participating operators in order to provide data at localized levels in the future. Operators that are interested in participating can complete a participation form at <a href="http://www.nic.org/skillednursing" target="_blank">http://www.nic.org/skillednursing</a>. NIC maintains strict confidentiality of all data it receives. </p>
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</p><em></em><em></em><p class="ms-rteElement-P"><em>Bill Kauffman is senior principal at the National Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care (NIC). He can be reached at bkauffman@nic.org.</em></p>
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| NIC released its Skilled Nursing Data Report with data through the first quarter or 2018. | 2018-09-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/NIC_t.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Quality;Management;Caregiving | Management |
Pass the PEPPER For Better Preparation | https://www.providermagazine.com/Issues/2018/September/Pages/Pass-the-PEPPER-For-Better-Preparation.aspx | Pass the PEPPER For Better Preparation | <div>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><br>T<span style="background-color:initial;">he focus by the Office of Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office on identifying fraud and abuse is no secret to skilled nursing facility (SNF) providers. There are new articles and news reports on the issue every day. A Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) blog entry from Nov. 15, 2017, by the principal deputy administrator of operations, Kimberly Brandt, details the improper payment–reduction efforts. The author notes:</span><span style="background-color:initial;"> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">“Due to the successes of actions we’ve put into place to reduce improper payments, the Medicare Fee-For-Service (FFS) improper payment rate decreased from 11.0 percent in 2016 to 9.5 percent in 2017, representing a $4.9 billion decrease in estimated improper payments. The 2017 Medicare FFS estimated improper payment rate represents claims incorrectly paid between July 1, 2015 and June 30, 2016. This is the first time since 2013 that the Medicare FFS improper payment rate is below the 10 percent threshold for compliance established in the Improper Payments Elimination and Recovery Act of 2010.”</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">In addition, Deputy Brandt says that “improper payments are not always indicative of fraud.” She goes on to say that the most common reason for improper Medicare payments is documentation error, leaving CMS unable to determine whether the billed items or services were actually provided, were billed at the correct level, or were medically necessary.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Although CMS was pleased with the reduction in the rate of improper payments, Brandt says, the agency still had work to do and would continue its efforts to address the problem. One component of those efforts is a document of great use to providers, the Program for Evaluating Payment Patterns Electronic Report (PEPPER).<span> </span></p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>About PEPPER</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">CMS releases PEPPER every April. It is filled with statistical data that summarize a SNF’s Medicare claims for areas that have been vulnerable to improper Medicare payments.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The data are collected from the standard claim form (UB-04 or CMS 1450) submitted by the SNF to bill the Medicare Administrative Contractor for payments. SNF staff can access their own data for these vulnerability (target) areas and compare their facility’s performance to that of other facilities in the same jurisdiction, in the state, and nationally.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">These comparisons (shown numerically and in graphs) assist SNF staff to determine whether their facility may be vulnerable to review by Medicare review contractors. The reports can also alert the provider to opportunities for improvements in care practices and data accuracy.</p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Highlights from This Year</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The target areas in this year’s PEPPER report include the following:</p>
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<ul><li><span style="background-color:initial;">T</span><span style="background-color:initial;">herapy Resource Utilization Groups (RUGs) with high activities of daily living (ADL) scores (11–16). This calls into question the accuracy of the ADLs. This is a good checkpoint for providers to evaluate potential over- or under-coding of ADL status. Does the medical record documentation correlate with therapy documentation regarding ADLs? Does the medical record support the coding of bed mobility, transfer, toilet use, and eating in G0110 for both the Self-Performance and Support columns?</span></li>
<li><span style="background-color:initial;">Nontherapy RUGs with high ADLs (15–16). This indicates potentially inaccurate ADL coding. Correlating the information in the medical record with the ADL coding in G0110 as noted above is crucial to a successful compliance program. As mentioned, the lack of supportive documentation is often the reason for claim denial.</span><span style="background-color:initial;"> </span><br></li>
<li>Of course, the data can no longer be modified, but any lack of correlation can and should be used as the basis for additional education and training of all nursing and therapy staff members.<br></li>
<li><span style="background-color:initial;">Change-of-Therapy (COT) assessments. These indicate the efficacy of therapy and nursing collaboration in providing therapy as ordered. In addition, a low number of assessments can suggest to a Medicare reviewer that the COTs are not being completed as required. Are nursing and therapy staff meeting daily to confirm the delivery of services? If there are barriers to the provision of services as ordered, what are they?</span><span style="background-color:initial;"> </span><br></li>
<li><span style="background-color:initial;">Ultrahigh RUGs. High numbers for this amount of therapy (a total of 720 minutes in seven days, with one therapy discipline providing five days of service, and another discipline, three days) could indicate that the services are not medically necessary. It would appear to be time for an audit of the medical record documentation. Does the documentation support that therapy services were inherently complex?</span><br></li>
<li><span style="background-color:initial;">20-day episodes of care (new this year). The numbers lead to the question of whether the length of stay was appropriate; was care planning in place with an appropriate discharge plan? Did the documentation support that the skilled services were medically necessary and practical to be delivered in the skilled facility for 20 days?</span><br></li>
<li><span style="background-color:initial;">90+ day episodes of care. This is another measure that leads to questions of whether appropriate documentation was </span><span style="background-color:initial;">in place to support the medical necessity of this episode of care. What were the skilled services, which only licensed and professional staff could safely provide, that required this length of stay?</span><span style="background-color:initial;"> </span><br></li></ul>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>Seizing an Opportunity</span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Providers ought to find this report extremely helpful. But the SNF PEPPER Retrieval Map by state (<a href="https://pepperresources.org/Training-Resources/Skilled-Nursing-Facilities/PEPPER-Portal-Retrieval-Map">https://pepperresources.org/Training-Resources/Skilled-Nursing-Facilities/PEPPER-Portal-Retrieval-Map</a>) reveals how few facilities are using the reports. This is a missed opportunity.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">SNF staff have access to very insightful reports, free of charge, to which Medicare reviewers also have access. It is through the reports that the reviewers determine which facilities to target for review. How else but via this report and a Quality Assessment and Assurance action plan are facility staff going to demonstrate the facility has an effective corporate compliance plan?<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Just as a sprinkle of pepper enhances flavor, the PEPPER report enhances the provider’s corporate compliance efforts. The revised Requirements of Participation that took effect Nov. 27, 2017, detailed in the State Operations Manual Appendix PP, are being implemented in three phases to allow providers time to develop and implement the extensive rule changes. Phase 3 includes a mandatory compliance-and-ethics program (F-895). As noted in the regulation, the program must be “reasonably designed, implemented, and enforced so it is likely to be effective in preventing and detecting criminal, civil, and administrative violations and promote quality of care.”<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The program needs to be developed and implemented by Nov. 28, 2019.<span> </span></p>
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<h2 class="ms-rteElement-H2"><span>PEPPER for Audits<span> </span></span></h2>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">That is where PEPPER can add some zip to a provider’s program. As stated in the SNF PEPPER User’s Guide, Sixth Edition: “As part of a compliance program, a SNF should conduct regular audits to ensure services provided are necessary and that charges for Medicare services are correctly documented and billed. The Program for Evaluating Payment Patterns Electronic Report (PEPPER) can help guide the SNF’s auditing and monitoring activities.” The report needs to be shared among nursing, therapy, and administration. The value of PEPPER increases as those involved in creating the data with the Minimum Data Set and the supporting documentation are then involved in looking at the data, analyzing it, and identifying proactive steps if warranted.<span> </span></p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">The PEPPER website—<span></span><a href="https://www.pepperresources.org/" target="_blank">https://www.pepperresources.org/</a>—features pages to which staff members from nine health care settings (including skilled nursing facilities) can navigate to access their Medicare data. Once there, providers can access the user’s guide, training, resources, and the link to the facility’s PEPPER reports. For those who are new to the reports and need additional assistance, the website offers a help desk and frequently asked questions.</p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P">Providers should help themselves, help their residents, and help their staff by passing the PEPPER around. </p>
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<p class="ms-rteElement-P"><span><em>Jane Belt,</em></span><em> RN, MS, RAC-MT, RAC-CT, QCP, is curriculum development specialist at the American Association of Nurse Assessment Coordination. She can be reached at jbelt@aanac.org.</em><span><em> </em></span></p>
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| The focus by the Office of Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office on identifying fraud and abuse is no secret to skilled nursing facility (SNF) providers. | 2018-09-01T04:00:00Z | <img alt="" src="/Issues/2018/September/PublishingImages/mgmg_t.jpg" style="BORDER:0px solid;" /> | Management | Management |