Hospital Case Management
RSSArticles
-
Taking the lead in ensuring that pathways are followed
Case managers are the logical leaders in their hospital’s effort to follow clinical pathways, says Larry Burnett, RN, MS, managing director for Huron Healthcare, a healthcare consulting firm with headquarters in Chicago.
-
Developing Pathways is a Team Effort
The first step in creating clinical pathways is to know and understand your data. Identify your opportunities to affect quality and costs.
-
They’re Back! Once Out of Favor, Clinical Pathways are Surging
Clinical pathways are being reinvented as changes in reimbursement require hospitals to get a handle on resource consumption and healthcare costs.
-
Embedded CMs reduce readmissions, increase follow-up, cut costs
After Sentara Healthcare System’s embedded case management program was redesigned, the total cost of care for patients in the program dropped by 17% over a three-year period. -
Understand, reduce HCW absenteeism
The answer should restore a little of your faith in humanity. For the most part, healthcare workers call in with legitimate illness. -
Care coordinators help close gaps in care, lower costs
An initiative that included hiring an RN care coordinator to work with patients who needed a higher level of care, or had gaps in care, resulted in significant improvements in preventive care exams, lower costs for hospitalizations, and a decrease in emergency department visits for patients in the program at Jackson Clinic, a multispecialty practice with 136 providers in western Tennessee. -
Patients at risk for medication stoppage
According to a report1 from the The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), patients discharged from acute care hospitals might be at risk for unintentional discontinuation of medications prescribed for chronic diseases. The report says that the intensive care unit (ICU) might pose an even greater risk because of the focus on acute events and the presence of multiple transitions in care. -
Transition intervention lowers readmissions
Medicare spends about $17 billion a year on hospital readmissions that could have been prevented, experts say. -
Stroke patients follow up after motivational talk
Even though many Americans learn through community health screenings that they are at high risk for having a stroke, they rarely follow up with their doctor for care. -
Advance directives and end-of-life expenditures
Medicare patients with advance directives specifying limits in treatment who lived in regions with higher levels of end-of-life spending were less likely to have an in-hospital death, averaged significantly lower end-of-life Medicare spending, and had significantly greater odds of hospice use than decedents without advance directives in these regions, according to a study in a recent issue of the The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).