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Case Management Advisor

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  • Case managers reduce pre-term deliveries

    A program that provides face-to-face case management and hormone injection services for women at risk for pre-term birth has reduced the spontaneous pre-term birth rate by 8% among the Medicaid population served by the program.
  • Why aren't patients in compliance? Top issue may be misunderstanding

    When patients don't follow their discharge plan and end up back in the hospital or fail to keep their chronic disease under control, resulting in complications, it could be that they simply don't understand what they're expected to do.
  • HF management program decreases readmissions

    The first year after Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta implemented a Heart Failure Resource Center that provides care coordination for patients discharged with heart failure, the 30-day rehospitalization rate for heart failure patients in the program decreased from 4.6% to 1.6% when compared to heart failure patients treated at Piedmont and not in the program.
  • Following up care cuts readmissions

    WellPoint's initiatives to reduce hospital readmissions by following up with Medicare Advantage members after discharge has decreased the readmission rate and reduced skilled nursing days, according to Karen Amstutz, MD, vice president and medical director of care management for seniors and state sponsored business for the Indianapolis-headquartered health benefits company.
  • On-site nurses reduce readmissions, overall LOS

    By placing on-site nurse case managers in hospitals and post-acute facilities, Presbyterian Health Plan of New Mexico has saved more than $1 million in just 10 months, according to Paula Casey, MSN, RN, ONC, CCM, clinical director for inpatient and recovery services at the Albuquerque-based health plan.
  • 6 ways to prevent hospital readmissions

    To prevent hospital admissions, gather as much information as possible about the patient's discharge needs, psycho-social needs, and support systems in the community, Cory Sevin, RN, MSN, NP, director with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement advises. Talk to family members and primary care providers who know the patient and can provide first-hand information, Sevin says.
  • Options examined for stroke survivors

    A physical therapy program that included task-specific walking training using a body-weight supported treadmill and over-ground practice was not shown to be superior in improving walking ability among stroke survivors compared to a home physical therapy program focused on structured, progressive strength and balance exercises and general encouragement to walk. This late-breaking science was presented at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2011.
  • Refer heart patients before leaving hospital

    Healthcare practitioners can increase the number of patients with heart disease referred to a cardiac rehabilitation program by 40%, helping them to reduce their risk of dying and improve their quality of life, say researchers at the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre at Toronto General Hospital in Canada.
  • Spinal manipulation holds its own

    For patients suffering from chronic lower back pain, a new review of existing research finds that spinal manipulation is as helpful as other common treatments like painkillers, according to the Health Behavior News Service, part of the Center for Advancing Health.
  • Spinal surgery worsens workers comp outcomes

    For workers' compensation patients with chronic low back pain, spinal fusion surgery leads to worse long-term outcomes including a lower rate of return to work compared to nonsurgical treatment, suggests a study in the Feb. 15 issue of Spine.