Case Management Advisor – January 1, 2010
January 1, 2010
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2010 may bring new career opportunities for case managers
Now is a good time to be a case manager, leaders in the field report. New opportunities are opening up for case managers as the country struggles with ways to provide optimal health care for everyone while minimizing soaring costs for care. -
Want to spend more time interacting with patients?
Case managers went to nursing school to take care of people, something they find themselves doing less and less in most practice settings, Catherine Mullahy, RN, BS, CRRN, CCM, points out. -
Program helps patients adhere to regimen
Recognizing that patients who don't take medication for chronic conditions as prescribed are more likely to have poor control over their independence, Blue Cross has launched a program to coach people on medication adherence. -
Make business case for mental health interventions
If an employee is newly diagnosed with diabetes, he or she would likely be able to obtain a significant amount of resources for prevention, screening, and treatment of this condition. Would this also be true if that employee suffered from depression? -
Screen employees for depression, anxiety
Since employees with medical conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, and cancer often have co-morbid mental conditions, it makes sense to screen these workers for depression, says Nancy W. Spangler, MS, OTR/L, a consultant to the Partnership for Workplace Mental Health and president of Leawood, KS-based Spangler Associates Inc. -
If a worker is badly injured, what happens next?
It's a moment dreaded by every occupational health manager learning that an employee was seriously injured at work. It's also the "moment of truth" for how well the occupational health manager does his or her job. -
Never do these things after a worksite injury
Avoid trouble with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) by never doing any of the following things after a worksite injury occurs, warns Mary (Penny) B. Nicholls, RN, CCM, COHN-S, a disability consultant with Alabama Power Company in Birmingham and a member of the advisory board for the Deep South Center for Occupational Health & Safety at the University of Alabama at Birmingham: -
Get workers to commit to short bouts of exercise
Getting employees to commit to hour-long workouts at the gym might be expecting the impossible in many cases. However, new research shows that short bouts of exercise also have significant benefits. -
Don't ignore the health impact of job insecurity
These days, many workers have a high amount of anxiety over job security, with good reason. Now, a new study shows this poses a major threat to worker health. -
2009 Salary Survey Results: Hours, responsibilities increase for case managers
Case managers are more experienced and are putting in longer hours than ever before, but aren't necessarily getting more compensation for it, according to the results of the 2009 Case Management Advisor Salary Survey.