Hospitals work to ensure high-risk patients are ready for surgeries

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/healthcare/hospitals-work-to-ensure-high-risk-patients-are-ready-for-surgeries?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTVdZNE9UbGtZemxtTXpBMCIsInQiOiJVS01rMXhPNVNhS1c0V2JKaE53TSthTHg0dWFnaXVtcUtXeEZlK0VqQTk3SFBNTG01aEJpVVN0aFhqRDZ5cmFGYitGUmtrZHV0K0JGMHBcL2twN2RBeUpSSk5MaW5vS0NcL25JQTk3T2FFTUhrPSJ9&mrkid=959610&utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

As healthcare becomes increasingly value-based, surgical outcomes are more important than ever, leading many providers to assess patients’ fitness for elective procedures.

Increasingly, providers make an effort to learn more about patients’ health before operations such as hip and knee replacements, according to The Wall Street Journal, looking for evidence of dangers of infection and other complications. Patients with chronic conditions or lifestyles that put them at higher risk may be directed to “pre-habilitation” programs to increase the odds that their procedures go off without a hitch. These initiatives can involve medical treatments or simply improved diet and exercise, according to the article.

This approach builds on strategies surgeons have employed for years, including advising patients to quit smoking or get in better shape ahead of a procedure, but the range of risks they focus on has broadened considerably to encompass everything from sleep disorders to mental illness, according to the article.

“In health care, we often bring patients into surgery without fully addressing their chronic medical conditions,” Solomon Aronson, M.D., executive vice chair in the anesthesiology department at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina, told the WSJ, and when patients are healthier pre-surgery, “we can significantly diminish the risk of complications.”

For example, Duke Health’s “Poet” (Peri-Operative Enhancement Team) program has focused its efforts on patients with anemia, malnourishment, poor tolerance for exercise, complex pain disorders and diabetes. The fixes the provider offers range from pre-operative iron infusions for anemic patients to a protein shake regimen for older, malnourished patients. In the cases of patients who need such fixes as weight loss or blood sugar control, the Duke team employs longer-term regimens as well.

 

Big-name hospitals often fail to prevent C. diff infections

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/hospitals/report-c-diff-infections-continue-to-be-a-struggle-for-big-name-medical-centers?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTVdZNE9UbGtZemxtTXpBMCIsInQiOiJVS01rMXhPNVNhS1c0V2JKaE53TSthTHg0dWFnaXVtcUtXeEZlK0VqQTk3SFBNTG01aEJpVVN0aFhqRDZ5cmFGYitGUmtrZHV0K0JGMHBcL2twN2RBeUpSSk5MaW5vS0NcL25JQTk3T2FFTUhrPSJ9

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Some of the most well-known hospitals in the nation rank among the worst in preventing deadly Clostridium difficile infections, according to a new Consumer Reports analysis.

The publication analyzed C. diff infections at hospitals across the country, based on data reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention between 2014 and 2015. It found well-known teaching hospitals like the Cleveland Clinic, Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles had the lowest or second-lowest ranking, indicators that these hospitals fall short against the national benchmark to control such infections.

“Teaching hospitals are supposed to be places where we identify the best practices and put them to work,” Lisa McGiffert, director of Consumer Reports‘ Safe Patient Project, said in an announcement of the findings. “But even they seem to be struggling against this infection.”

The report analyzed data from more than 3,100 U.S. hospitals and found that more than a third received a low score for C. diff infection control.

Only two large teaching hospitals, Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Florida and Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, earned top marks from Consumer Reportson controlling C. diff.

Ascension reveals new, unified branding campaign

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/hospitals/ascension-reveals-new-unified-branding-campaign

There will no longer be any doubt whether a hospital belongs to the Ascension health system. This week the nation’s largest non-profit health system rolled out plans to rename all 2,500 of its sites of care under its brand name.

Hospitals in Michigan and Wisconsin, its two largest markets, will be among the first to adopt the new name, the organization announced. The Catholic health system includes 141 hospitals in 24 states and the District of Columbia.

The branding strategy aims to make it clearer and easier for patients to access and navigate care within the system.

The switch began on Tuesday, as Ascension changed the name of its 15 Michigan hospitals and 24 Wisconsin facilities–for example, Detroit’s St. John Providence Hospital will become Ascension St. John Hospital.

 

Make room for lawyers at the hospital C-suite table

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/hospitals/lawyers-increasingly-play-a-role-health-system-c-suites?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTVdZNE9UbGtZemxtTXpBMCIsInQiOiJVS01rMXhPNVNhS1c0V2JKaE53TSthTHg0dWFnaXVtcUtXeEZlK0VqQTk3SFBNTG01aEJpVVN0aFhqRDZ5cmFGYitGUmtrZHV0K0JGMHBcL2twN2RBeUpSSk5MaW5vS0NcL25JQTk3T2FFTUhrPSJ9

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http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/lawyers-the-new-player-emerging-in-the-health-system-c-suite.html

As payment models shift and other industry changes shine a spotlight on regulatory concerns, it’s becoming more and more common for hospitals and health systems to use in-house attorneys.

These legal experts are becoming a C-suite mainstay, too, according to an article from Becker’s Hospital Review, as roles like chief legal officer gain importance.

“Gone are the days where CEOs could afford to say, ‘I hate lawyers,’ or, ‘I don’t want to deal with lawyers,'” Werner Boel, principal and practice leader of legal services at executive search firm Witt/Kieffer, told Becker’s.

Though smaller hospitals may not be able to afford an in-house team, many larger systems are investing in a group of attorneys. Having on-site legal advice beyond general counsel, for example, can help hospitals navigate mergers and increased oversight from institutions such as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services related to privacy and anti-kickback laws, Boel told Becker’s.

Boel emphasized the need for a true team, according to the article, as having a group of lawyers with diverse regulatory knowledge is key to helping hospitals weather any number of storms. Other executives must also be open to the legal team’s advice, and must actively engage with them on legal matters, Boel said.

A knowledge of regulatory matters can also benefit the executive team, according to the article, as roles like compliance officer and even CEO are increasingly filled by people with a legal background. These leaders have the right mix of experience to help guide change in hospitals under the constraints of healthcare reform, Boel said.

This is America on drugs: A visual guide

http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/23/health/heroin-opioid-drug-overdose-deaths-visual-guide/index.html?utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=34947841&_hsenc=p2ANqtz–YrF401_rgY2Eu0quZOGu9hf5HBQemDWKYHgHZO3RCn4jyYo6VVlHRZJMTNcd5dddYZkCJpItslmEaGArXyBnjA1Y4IA&_hsmi=34947841

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In modern history, few things have caused such a sharp spike in US deaths as drug overdoses.

CNN reached out to every state for the latest statistics on drug deaths, with half providing data from 2015. It found that drugs deaths continue to rise rapidly in many states.

High-Need, High-Cost Patients: Who Are They and How Do They Use Health Care?

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2016/aug/high-need-high-cost-patients-meps1

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Issue: Finding ways to improve outcomes and reduce spending for patients with complex and costly care needs requires an understanding of their unique needs and characteristics.

Goal: Examine demographics and health care spending and use of services among adults with high needs, defined as people who have three or more chronic diseases and a functional limitation in their ability to care for themselves or perform routine daily tasks.

Methods:Analysis of data from the 2009–2011 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.

Key findings: High-need adults differed notably from adults with multiple chronic diseases but no functional limitations. They had annual health care expenditures that were nearly three times higher—and which were more likely to remain high over two years of observation—and out-of-pocket expenses that were more than a third higher, despite their lower incomes. On average, rates of hospital use for high-need adults were more than twice those for adults with multiple chronic conditions only; high-need adults also visited the doctor more frequently and used more home health care.

Conclusion: Wide variation in costs and use of services within the high-need group suggests that interventions should be targeted and tailored to those individuals most likely to benefit.

Tailoring Complex Care Management for High-Need, High-Cost Patients

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/in-brief/2016/sep/tailoring-complex-care-high-need-high-cost?omnicid=EALERT1104498&mid=henrykotula@yahoo.com

High-need, high-cost (HNHC) patients account for a disproportionate share of health care spending, and the complex care they need can be fraught with quality and safety issues. Any effort to address quality and cost challenges must focus on improving care for this population. The Commonwealth Fund’s David Blumenthal, M.D., and Melinda Abrams highlighted six key opportunities in this JAMA “Viewpoint.”

Black Book Rankings: 25 top RCM outsourcing vendors

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/black-book-rankings-25-top-rcm-outsourcing-vendors.html

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Black Book Rankings has released its 2016 rankings of financial and revenue cycle management systems and services.

Here are the top five vendors included in the rankings across five different outsourcing categories.

12 hospitals planning facility upgrades, expansions

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/facilities-management/12-hospitals-planning-facility-upgrades-expansions-92216.html

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4 best practices for managing patient billing complaints

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/4-best-practices-for-managing-patient-billing-complaints.html

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Root causes of billing complaints
Healthcare reform has transformed how hospitals conduct business. Due to shifts in cost sharing, a larger portion of many hospitals’ reimbursement now comes from patients rather than commercial payers. This means hospitals are interfacing more than ever with consumers to collect. Many hospitals’ revenue cycles are struggling to meet today’s financial demands and consumer expectations due to a confluence of factors, from historic underinvestment to administrative burden.

Many Americans who gained healthcare coverage under the Affordable Care Act are unfamiliar with what their health insurance entails. The first time some policyholders hear about deductibles, co-pays, co-insurance or benefits is when an unanticipated hospital bill shows up in their mail. In fact, consumers’ No. 1 billing complaint is that hospital employees did not explain how much their medical care would cost, says Ms. Prince.

The shock of an unexpected expense can destabilize the patient-hospital relationship and reduce satisfaction rates. A 2013 survey by TransUnion found nearly 70 percent of patient respondents who gave the highest ratings to their quality of care during the past two years also gave high ratings to their billing and payment experiences, compared to only 24 percent of those who gave low ratings to their quality of care. This has made customer satisfaction a strategic priority for hospitals as clinical outcomes and HCAHPS scores are increasingly linked to reimbursement rates.

Negative financial interactions also have a direct effect on hospitals’ cash flow. A 2016 study by Connance found 74 percent of satisfied patients paid their medical bills in full, compared to 33 percent of their lesser satisfied counterparts. Intermittent or unreliable cash flow can harm a hospital’s ability to respond to changing market conditions, putting an organization at a disadvantage in the transition to value-based care.

Many patients lodge complaints about the length of time between services rendered and when they get a bill in the mail, says Ms. Prince. The number of days an account is in days not final billed is a great indicator of revenue cycle efficiency. High claims denial rates and slow adjudication processes can delay patient billing for up to four months or longer. “Hospitals forecast receiving patient payments within a certain timeframe,” says Ms. Prince. When patients don’t get bills on time, hospitals likely won’t get paid on time, she says.

In recent years, hospital revenue cycles have struggled to remain efficient under a mountain of new regulations and reporting measures implemented by the ACA. Because of the increased demand for documentation under ICD-10, physicians are required to perform clinical and time-intensive administrative duties with no increase in compensation, says Ms. Prince. Tedious, administrative tasks can slow down the claims submission and billing process, causing patients to receive bills later than anticipated.