Don't fall behind: Extend your services to 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
Don't fall behind: Extend your services to 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
To succeed, all staff should reinforce functional goals
With the emphasis on cost cutting in today's health care environment, subacute providers no longer have the luxury of saying rehab is something that happens Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Instead, your rehab services should embrace more of a philosophy of care, something every member of your staff does to prepare a patient for discharge. Today's patients come to the subacute unit much sooner from the acute care hospital, and their lengths of stay are dramatically shorter than they were just a few years ago.
Let's face it, lengths of stay are not going to get any longer, and managed care and capitated contracts, as well as new Medicare reimbursement rules, mean reimbursement will decrease. For those reasons, you are challenged to do more for more acute patients in less time and for a lower cost. How will you do it? Your facility is going to have to provide rehab services 24 hours a day, seven days a week. "Since we have patients for shorter periods of time in rehab, and we are not going to be given more time, we need to look at how we can provide comprehensive rehab programs in a shorter time," says Chris MacDonell, national director for Medical Rehabilitation at CARF . . . The Rehabilitation Accreditation Commission, with headquarters in Tucson, AZ.
New accreditation standards
CARF has new standards, which went into effect July 1, that require comprehensive integrated inpatient rehabilitation facilities to show they provide coordinated and integrated medical and rehabilitation services 24 hours a day. (For more information on the CARF requirements, see story, p. 111.)
"When you think of it, rehabilitation isn't something that only the physical therapist does," says Linda Peterson, MS, MBA, vice president of InteRehab at RehabLink/Marianjoy Rehabilitation Hospitals and Clinics in Wheaton, IL. "Patients need the same consistent approach to activities of daily living throughout the day. Whether they need assistance in toileting at 11 a.m. on Tuesday or 11 p.m. on Saturday, they need the same approach."
At Marianjoy, the staff have been working for years to maximize every hour of the day because of pressures to cut costs and drive down the length of stay, Peterson says.
Providing rehabilitation 24 hours a day, seven days a week requires extensive communication among all staff so all will use the same cueing techniques, the same approach, the same equipment, and require patients to participate in a similar manner. (For a look at how Marianjoy has improved communication among all shifts, see story, p. 111.)
For instance, in the past, the night nursing staff did not always reinforce the bowel and bladder techniques used during the day shift. A sleepy or tired patient may have convinced the staff to help them more than the day staff did.
However, Peterson points out, when patients are discharged home, they may need to go to the bathroom during the night. It's up to the rehab staff to help them maintain the techniques so they'll be able to do it independently or with minimal assistance, she says.
No more bedpans
When patients go home, their family caregivers aren't going to want to provide a bedpan at 3 a.m., nor will it be practical for patients to take a wheelchair to the bathroom.
That's why Lourdes Regional Rehab Center in Camden, NJ, issues wheelchairs and bedpans only to patients for whom it is therapeutically necessary. This forces the staff to ambulate patients who need to practice their ambulation, even if it's in the middle of the night, says Tammy Feuer, MA, CCC, administrator of rehabilitation and post-acute service.
All staff must be cross-trained to therapeutically reinforce what the patients learn during formal training, says Connie Burgess, MS, RN, president of Connie Burgess and Associates, a Lakewood, CA, consulting firm specializing in rehab management issues.
Everyone who works with the patients should use the same therapy techniques so the patients aren't confused and their treatment is reinforced, whether it's the nurse, the therapeutic recreation specialist, the speech pathologist, or the physical therapist taking care of bladder function, Burgess explains.
Everyone on the team should know the plan of care and how to therapeutically reinforce it without having to call another person or letting it go until morning, she adds.
"Having cross-trained staff doesn't mean that the nurse become a physical therapist," she says. "The nurse is simply able to reinforce what the primary therapist has been working with."
Therapy techniques should be identical
In the past, nurses might have learned to transfer patients one way and occupational therapists might have learned another way. Speech pathologists might not have transferred patients at all. However, in today's rehab marketplace, everyone who works with the patients must learn how to transfer patients in the same way.
"We need to understand that there is no room for territorialism in health care," Burgess says. "Our customers are not interested in that. They want to know who can get the best outcome in the least amount of time for the lowest cost."
At the Rehabilitation Institute of Santa Barbara (CA) where almost all care is reimbursed on a case rate or per diem rate, it's a constant challenge to continue to provide quality care that meets individual patients' functional needs in a shorter length of time, says Melinda Staveley, MS, RN, vice president of clinical services.
In 1995, the facility took a transdisciplinary approach to therapy and required that all caregivers across the disciplines have some basic skills to meet the needs of patients. The Santa Barbara nursing staff use the same strategies as the therapy staff to meet the functional goals of patients.
"We need to use every second of the day from a functional perspective and make sure that every interaction every staff member has with patients emphasizes their functionality," Staveley says.
For example, all the nursing staff receive mobility training, such as wheelchair transfers, dressing assistance, and ambulation, so they can assist the therapy staff if necessary or do some tasks at night or when no therapist is available. Other staff who do not provide direct patient care, such as the dietary and pharmacy staff, unit secretaries, and housekeepers, are trained to assist the therapy staff in tasks such as helping patients to the bathroom, in the event they are the only people available.
[Editor's note: For more information, Connie Burgess can be reached at (562) 397-2050.]
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