How To Start A Palliative Care Program

How To Start A Palliative Care Program 4,4/5 7446reviews
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The pillars of care are symptom management, advance care planning, including attention to documentation of goals of care and POLST. To start, I created a PowerPoint presentation with my “ask.” This included a definition of palliative care, slides with studies demonstrating the proven benefits known in the hospital/outpatient setting of cost savings, symptom management, etc. The pillars of care are symptom management, advance care planning, including attention to documentation of goals of care and POLST. To start, I created a PowerPoint presentation with my “ask.” This included a definition of palliative care, slides with studies demonstrating the proven benefits known in the hospital/outpatient setting of cost.

Ensuring Your Community-Based Palliative Care Success ONE DAY ONLY! Manual Para Celular Lg Kp500 Descargar Wifi. This seminar has proven to be extremely helpful to anyone working to launch or upgrade a community-based palliative care program. Palliative care is an integral part of the post-acute care networks being developed in response to CMS value-based care initiatives. Who is better positioned to offer these services than your organization? This is the time to jump-start or revitalize your program!

Want a training in your state? Call 760-750-7288 and ask for Brandon McDonald or click to contact us. Palliative Care Education From Experts You Know This seminar features content developed by national palliative care experts including Janet Bull, Jean Acevedo, Torrie Fields, Kathleen Kerr, Brian Cassel, Kathy Brandt, Helen McNeal, and more! Implementing and integrating a community-based palliative care program is a complex endeavor. Can you answer all of these questions affirmatively?

If not, then this one-day, live course is for you. • Do you understand the benefits and challenges of each type of palliative care model? • Have you assessed the needs in your community using publically available data and stakeholder interviews? • Do you know how to bill CMS for palliative care? • Is your palliative care budget realistic?

• Can you present an evidenced-based business case to payers or provider partners? • Are you measuring the right quality indicators to demonstrate the effectiveness of your program? • Do you have a comprehensive implementation plan?

Build a Sustainable Palliative Care Program This interactive and informative full-day workshop will teach you what it takes to build a palliative care program and provide you with a customizable organizational implementation plan that can lead to your success. All attendees who pre-register for the course will receive a link to access one free registration to the CSU Institute for Palliative Care’s How to Get Started Building a Community-Based Palliative Care Program online course to complete prior to attending the November 1 st workshop. I think for anybody thinking about a community-based palliative care program, this course is an excellent way to get started. Neville Sarkari.

I’m with Tidewell Hospice, and I had a great experience in the class about community-based palliative care. The class showed us how to think about the needs of a community and get a program started in a logical fashion. It was really practical. They showed us not only how to do it but gave us tools to help us work through the situations in our own communities and get a program started that would be successful and sustainable. Several things, really showed us how to do a needs assessment upfront and how to do the groundwork that would enable a program to be sustainable over time. Things that you probably wouldn’t think about if you hadn’t gone through it before. It’s a great opportunity to pick the brains of people who have already done this.

Absolutely, it was a great class. Meet the Faculty Kathy Brandt, MS, Principal, the kb group, Washington, DC Kathy Brandt has more than twenty-six years working in hospice, palliative care, aging, and caregiving at the national, state, and local level. As a leading provider of community-based palliative care and hospice consulting, Kathy helps organizations identify and maximize their capacity through business development, project management, marketing, strategic planning, leadership development, and systems design. In that capacity, Kathy wrote Covenant Hospice’s successful Medicare Care Choices Model application, working with the leadership to develop and refine the program. For more than 16 years Kathy helped lead the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, working her way up through the organization to become the Senior Vice President, Office of Innovation and the Executive Director of NHPCO’s Mary J Labyak Institute for Innovation. Kathy led NHPCO’s efforts to help hospices evolve beyond the Medicare Hospice Benefit, expanding services in a fiscally-prudent, mission-focused way to help people access palliative care sooner in their disease process.

NHPCO’s go-to-person for strategic planning, Kathy facilitated strategic planning for the boards of NHPCO, the National Hospice Foundation, the Hospice Action Network, and Americans for Better Care of the Dying and chaired the planning committee for the American Society on Aging (ASA). Kathy has served on the Board of Directors of the American Society on Aging and the Florida Council on Aging. She is currently chair of the ASA membership committee. Janet Bull, MD, FAAHPM, Chief Medical Officer, Four Seasons, Flat Rock, NC Janet Bull, MD FAAHPM is the Chief Medical Officer at Four Seasons and holds a consultant assistant professorship in the internal medicine department at Duke University Medical Center.