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Hospitals have been put on alert to recognize fatigue among health care workers as a risk to patient safety. But for now, hospitals won't face any regulatory consequences for failing to address it.
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Despite the progress toward safe patient handling, about eight in 10 nurses still suffer from frequent musculoskeletal pain and six in 10 worry about having a disabling musculoskeletal injury, according to a 2011 online survey by the American Nurses Association in Silver Spring, MD.
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Case management follows a process, not unlike the clinical nursing process or social work process. By following a process, case managers can function more effectively and efficiently.
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With the increase in uninsured and underinsured patients, hospitals face the challenge of finding post-acute care for unfunded or underfunded patients, or keeping them in a bed when they no longer need the acute level of care.
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In its efforts to ensure that the uninsured and homeless receive the healthcare services they need, Carondelet Health Network in Tucson, AZ, has developed a list of community resources and partnered with community agencies to provide care for patients underserved patients.
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In order to provide consistent post-acute care for uninsured or under insured patients, hospitals need to think like payers and develop a payment assistance policy so that at admission or registration, a financial counselor can do a quick assessment and determine who qualifies and who doesn't, according to Matt Boettcher, LSW, MSW, vice president for continuum of care for Scott and White Healthcare, with headquarters in Temple, TX, and consultant for the Center for Case Management, a patient care management consulting firm based in Wellesley, MA.
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At Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, NY, a complex care case manager coordinates appropriate post-discharge options for uninsured and under-insured patients who are likely to need complex care after discharge.
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In Lee County Florida, providing healthcare for the uninsured and under insured is a community-wide effort, according to Chris Nesheim, RN, MS, CMAC, system director, case management, Lee Memorial Health system with headquarters in Ft. Myers, FL.
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Faced with an increasing number of patients who have no insurance and can't afford to pay for their own care, the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City, has developed a multi-pronged approach to identify indigent patients early in their stay and help them get access to community providers who can provide ongoing care.
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Provider's offices are no longer the "middleman" between schedulers and patients at Spectrum Health in Grand Rapids, MI, due to a newly implemented process.