Articles Tagged With: discharge
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Review Every Patient, Every Day to Ensure Appropriate Reimbursement
When case managers concentrate only on getting the patient status right up front and then review only selected patients and review them every few days, it’s likely to have a big effect on the financial health of the hospital, says Brian Pisarsky, RN, MHA, ACM, associate director of Emeryville, CA-based Berkeley Research Group.
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One Quarter of General Medicine Readmissions May Be Preventable
The major concept behind the effort to reduce 30-day readmission rates is the impression that some readmissions are preventable and some are not preventable.
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Discharge planning proposed rule focuses on patient preferences
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has proposed to revise the discharge planning requirements that hospitals, including long-term care hospitals and inpatient rehabilitation facilities, critical access hospitals, and home health agencies, must meet in order to participate in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
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Can We Safely Discharge Patients on the Weekend?
ABSTRACT & COMMENTARY: The link between weekend discharge and 30- and 90-day readmission rates.
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Study shows a data route tying quality to VBP
Value-based purchasing has added more weight to the role of quality managers in collecting data related to 30-day readmission rates. These readmission rates now affect a health system’s Medicare reimbursement, and the key is to look at data in a way that will highlight areas where improvements can have a positive effect on them.
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“Warm handoffs” can reduce hospitals’ readmission rates
Newton-Wellesley Hospital in Newton, MA, improved its readmission rates through a quality improvement process that included measurements of “warm handoff” rates.
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Multidisciplinary team brainstorms on transitions for complex patients
At Spectrum Health Butterworth and Blodgett Hospitals in Grand Rapids, MI, patients who are likely to have complex discharge needs are identified early in the hospital stay and referred to a multidisciplinary Complex Transitions Team, which develops a plan of action designed to remove barriers and produce a smooth transition to the next level of care.
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Beef up your discharge planning to prepare for new rules
CMS has announced a proposed revision of the discharge planning requirements for acute care hospitals, long-term care hospitals, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, critical access hospitals, and home health agencies.
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Collect in ED before or after discharge? Both methods have their challenges
The most daunting challenge of collecting in the emergency department setting involves the simple fact that ill, injured, and tired patients just want to go home, as opposed to having a discussion about how much money they owe.
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Failure to diagnose infection causes toddler death and yields verdict of $1.72 million
Plaintiffs’ 3-month-old daughter was taken to the hospital with a high fever and elevated pulse rate. The ED physician diagnosed an ear infection and discharged the infant with a prescription for antibiotics. Days later she was diagnosed with pneumococcal meningitis, hypoxic brain injury, and hydrocephalus. She lived for 20 more months. Plaintiffs sued the hospital and the ED physician, and they won a verdict of joint and several liability for $1.7 million.