Employee Management
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The Time for Contraceptive Revolution Is Now
While the 20th century yielded new contraceptives in the form of pills, rings, patches, intrauterine devices, and implants, it is time for new exploration into further birth control options.
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Tips for Becoming a More Effective Leader
Case managers facing frustration and burnout can learn simple skills to reduce stress and become more effective leaders.
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Career Outlook for Case Managers
In today’s hospitals, the role of case manager has expanded greatly as regulatory demands have increased. Case managers in large hospitals have moved into C-suite roles, where they can greatly influence the hospital’s processes and procedures to improve the patient’s experience and outcome. They also can address payer and regulatory issues.
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Optimizing COPD Discharge Planning
Patients are not one size fits all when discharged with COPD. However, in readmission rates they are all lumped together, one expert says.
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Healthcare Facility Uses Lean Principles to Enact Systemwide Culture Change
A hospital’s process improvement (PI) could begin with a focus on reducing gaps in quality service. The Cleveland Clinic started such a process, focusing on engaging all employees in process improvement — rather than leaving the work to one PI team.
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Risk Assessment Tool Helps Identify People in Need of Case Management
The Valley Risk Assessment Tool, created by The Valley Hospital of Ridgewood, NJ, is a two-page, two-column chart that assigns a level to each category of risk.
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Tips to Improve Quality and Efficiency in Case Management Departments
One of the first steps to streamline case management operations is to reassign staff to new roles, such as focused discharge planning jobs and utilization review.
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Team-Based Case Management Improves Care Coordination
A health system’s focus on revamping its care coordination led to a reduction in some 30-day readmissions, as well as other benefits.
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Appellate Court Orders Retrial Due to Physician’s Improper Testimony
This case raises an interesting legal issue that may be important and applicable to medical care providers’ defense of medical malpractice actions. Since litigation often arises years after the underlying services are provided, the care providers may no longer remember specific details for one patient who received services years ago. Under specific circumstances, courts permit individuals to testify about their courses of conduct when such courses rise to the level of “habit.”
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Failure to Treat High Blood Pressure Results in Kidney Failure, $31 Million Verdict
A critical lesson from this case focuses on the legal concept of comparative negligence, which concerns whether a patient’s own negligent conduct played a role in causing or worsening his or her injury.