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  • Population Health Initiatives Could Include Focus on Spiritual Care

    Spiritual care can be separated from the chaplain experience and focus on patients across the continuum, the author of a new paper suggests. Integrating spiritual care into outpatient, managed care, and population health can enhance patient care and improve the effectiveness of interdisciplinary teams.

  • More Work Needed to Fight Healthcare Disparities

    It takes a village to improve population health and whole person care. The village includes the public health system, which can be led by case management or a care coordination team. Populations that experience health inequities can benefit from the whole-person approach, particularly when hospitals form public health partnerships and use telehealth at discharge.

  • High-Risk Patients Benefit From Direct Social Needs Assistance

    A case management team can help high-risk patients access social assistance. But to be most effective, they need to help clients access psychosocial support and direct assistance for social needs. A health system’s program reduced inpatient hospitalizations by 11% in a randomized study.

  • How to Fight Denials

    Case managers do not have to settle for denials. In fact, they can use their skills to overturn denials. There are certain tactics that can help in this process, and some case management professionals even specialize in this.

  • Solving Transportation Problems Improves Hospital’s Efficiency

    Health systems that work to improve social determinants of health, including transportation, may find their actions improve patient care and follow-up, discharge, and throughput efficiency. For example, UCSF Health found case managers could more easily plan discharges and turn over beds once they solved the issue of finding rides home for clients without family or social support.

  • Offering Transportation Services Is a No-Brainer for Some Health Systems

    Case managers are logistical artists when it comes to helping patients handle care needs during hospitalization and transitions after discharge. But things can get out of control when patients leave the hospital, and transportation is a top obstacle to patients receiving necessary care in the community.

  • Long COVID May Linger in Patients for Months or Years

    The COVID-19 pandemic may be waning, but its effects continue as many patients experience long-term symptoms, including fatigue, brain fog, and other problems. Healthcare providers across the continuum may see these patients for months — and possibly for years.

  • Diagnosis of Myasthenia Gravis May Be Challenging

    Mimics of myasthenia gravis, including functional neurologic disorder, progressive external ophthalmoplegia, chronic ptosis, oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, mitochondrial cytopathy, or low-grade myositis, can make the diagnosis of myasthenia gravis difficult.

  • Is the Long-Term Use of Low-Dose Opioids for the Treatment of Refractory RLS Safe and Effective?

    A review of two-year longitudinal data regarding efficacy and dose stability in refractory restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients treated with low-dose opioids shows that patients do not escalate their opiate dosage and that there is clinical and therapeutic stability in the treatment of RLS with this therapeutic regimen. Methadone is the preferred opiate for the treatment of RLS because of its single-dose, long-acting profile and lack of euphoric effects.

  • Viral Exposure and Risk of Neurodegenerative Disease

    Twenty-two pairs of viral exposures associated with an increased risk of neurodegenerative diseases were identified and replicated across two national European biobanks.