CCM
CASE MANAGEMENT
"A collaborative process that assesses, plans, implements, coordinates, monitors and evaluates the options and services required to meet the client's health and human services needs. It is characterized by advocacy, communication, and resource management and promotes quality and cost-effective interventions and outcomes" (CCMC, 2010).
Chronic Care Model
(Model of care) Care for people with chronic conditions in primary care seeings using proactive approach 6 components: health system, delivery system, self mgmt support, decision support, clinical info system, community resources Key component is planned, regular interactions with caregivers
CM Accreditation phase 1
1)application
With Medicare, the benefit period ends after patient has been out of facility for
60 days
Break in coverage
63 consecutive days or more without health insurance
Medicare eligibility
65 or older, disabled(5month waiting period), Railroad retirement (24 +5months), ESRD
Medicare select
A HMO type policy that specifies the hospitals a patient must use, unless an emergency
Administrative law
A branch of public law that deals with the various organizations of federal, state and local government which prescribes in detail the manner of their activities. (ACO- Administrative Services Only) an insurance
CONTRACTOR
A business entity that performs delegated functions on behalf of the organization
Case Management System
A computer program that allows you to to organize information by tracking client information on the computer helping you to run your practice.
ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORD
A computerized medical and health record a healthcare organization (e.g., a hospital, rehabilitation facility, physician's office or home care agency) uses as part of a health information system that allows documentation of important information about a client's status and care provision. It also allows storage, retrieval, and modification of records specific to the individual client the organization is caring for. Other terms used to refer to EMIR are electronic patient record (EPR), electronic health record (EHR) and computer-based patient record (CPR).
Medicare
A federal program insurance: 65 or older, disabled, ESRD(dialysis or transplant)
Cultural Intelligence (CQ)
A globally recognized way of assessing and improving effectiveness in culturally diverse situations based in rigorous, academic research. 4 categories: drive knowledge strategy dexterity
CHRONIC ILLNESS
A health condition (disease) that lasts three months or longer.
COLLABORATION
A process where two or more individuals work closely or jointlytogether to achieve a mutual goal or purpose such as resolving a problem or improving a situation. This process requires openess, mutual trust and respect, sharing of knowledge and consensus.
DAYS PER THOUSAND
A standard unit of measurement of utilization. Refers to anannualized use of the hospital or other institutional care. It is the number of hospital days that are used in a year for each thousand covered lives. #days/year/1,000covered lives.
ACCREDITATION
A standardized program for evaluating healthcare organizations to ensure a specified level of quality, as defined by a set of national industry standards. Organizations that meet accreditation standards receive an official authorization or approval of their services. Accreditation entails a voluntary peer-reviewed survey process provided by external organization that assesses the extent of a healthcare organization's compliance with the standards for the purpose of improving the systems and processes of care (performance) and, in so doing, improving client outcomes.
Accessible
A term used to denote building facilities that are barrier-free thus enabling all members of society safe access, including prisons with physical disability
CASE MANAGEMENT PLAN
A timeline of patient care activities and expected outcomes of care that address the plan of care of each discipline involved in the care of a particular patient. It is usually developed prospectively by an interdisciplinary healthcare team in relation to a patient's diagnosis, health problem, or surgical procedure.
Error-free costs
All costs including processes, services, equipment, time, materials, etc needed to provide product/service without error-unrelated to planning
Health Coach
Ally; we'll authority and supportive mentor who assist client to achieve goals
Prosthesis
An artificial device to replace/augment a missing/impaired part or all of missing body part
ENROLLEE
An individual who subscribes for a health benefit plan provided by a public or private healthcare insurance organization.
HEALTH BENEFIT PLAN
Any written health insurance plan that pays for specific healthcare services on behalf of covered enrollees.
Standards of care
Are a rigid set of criteria
Guidelines
Are meant to be flexible
Cost-benefit analysis
Average cost of problem and avg cost of intervention = savings
Residential Care Facilities
Avg $2,000 - $8,000 per month
Managers should take the following 3 things into account when working across cultures
Avoid cultural stereotyping, view cultural differences in neutral terms, enhance cognitive skills
Hard Savings
Avoided costs that can be measured-directly related to case manager's actions, ex: decrease length of stay, price negotiations
BAS
Burden Assessment Scale
self-insured
Business pay employees medical claims with own funds, but can by stop loss insurance to protect from high costs
Interdisciplinary team model
CM decisions made jointly with other team members
Primary Therapist Model of CM
CM has therapeutic relationship with client
Continuous Quality Improvement
CQI, process of ongoing review to improve quality of healthcare services
EXECUTIVE FUNCTION
Capacity of a person's working memory which relies on one's state of cognition, attention, aptitude, intellectual capacity, mental processes, ability to maintain focus, and ability to handle a breadth of ideas and facts (Cowen, Elliott, Scott Saults et al., 2005).
CUSTODIAL CARE
Care provided primarily to assist a client in personal home care to meet the activities of daily living but not require skilled nursing or licensed care.
CMAG
Case Management Adherence Guidelines
CMBOK
Case Management Body of Knowledge
CMS
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services: Formerly known as the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA).
Axis I
Clinical disorders (depression, anxiety), anything other than personality disorder or mental retardation.
CM management outcomes
Clinical outcomes measured in groups or individuals Ex: percent of patients readmitted to the hospital within 30 days
CCMC
Commission for Case Manager Certification
CARF
Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities. A private, non-profit organization that establishes standards of quality for services to people with disabilities and offers voluntary accreditation for rehabilitation facilities based on a set of nationally recognized standards.
Medicare Part B
DME, 80% covered if prescribing physician and supplier are Medicare enrollees
HIPAA does not cover...
Disability, auto, liability, or workers compensation insurance; state laws take precedence over HIPAA
Cost-benefit analysis report
Economic model that uses a systematic approach to estimating the strengths and weaknesses of alternatives used to determine options which provide the best approach to achieving benefits while preserving savings. Includes alternative treatments plans and helps in finding the best level of care for the client which ultimately affects the return on investment.
EPR
Electronic patient record
EMTALA
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act- federal law that requires emergency department to stabilize and treat regardless of ability to pay- "anti-dumping"law
General subacute
Est stay 10-40 days 3-5 hours nursing services/day
HEARSAY
Evidence not proceeding from the personal knowledge of thewitness, but from the mere repetition of what has been heard from others.
EBP
Evidence-Based Practice
functional capacity evaluation
Examination of a worker's physical ability to perform a required task-tests manual materiel handling capabilities, aerobic capacity, posture, and mobility tolerance done is a structured setting, not the workplace, it is performed by independent MD, PT, OT and not a treating clinician.
EDSS
Expanded Disability Status Scale- A method of quantifying a disability and monitoring changes in the level of disability over time- based on an exam by a neurologist.
BARRIERS
Factors in a person's environment that, if absent or present, limit one's functioning and create disability. Examples are a physical environment that is inaccessible, lack of relevant assistive technology, and negative attitudes of people toward disability. Barriers also include services, systems, and policies that are either nonexistent or that hinder the involvement of people with a health condition in any area of life.
Justice
Fairness- being fair or just, balance of what is best for one patient vs. what is best for larger society
FMLA
Family and Medical Leave Act is not a source of income, but it protects a employee's job
FECA
Federal Employees Compensation Act.
Work adjustment
Focus is on attitude, behavioral and social skills for clients with behavior health issues. Goal is to improve problems preventing employment
Axis III
General medical conditions present that might impact the patient's mental disorder or its management.
Agency
General willingness to act
Risk Sharing
HMO &PROVIDER share financial risk/rewards of caring for plan members
Network model HMO
HMO contract directly with IPA, medical groups & independent Physicians forming a provider Network, organized referrals
Critical Pathways
Healthcare provider management plans that detail the main elements of day to day care activities necessary for a typical patient with a specific diagnosis. It specifies goals and the sequence and timing for that patient to accomplish optimum outcomes.
Cultural Screens
How language prefigures your perception, "filling the blanks" of what others mean 4 screens: 1. language and linguistic structure (formal/informal, native/non-native) 2. selective perception (focus on immediate demands, sensing/missing non-verbal messages) 3. cognitive evaluation (attaching meanings to messages, norm of authenticity, grouping of people) 4. cultural logic (assuming other think & act the same)
prevention quality indicators (PQI)
Identify conditions where good outpatient care can prevent hospitalization Ex: hypertension, diabetes
IM
Important Message from Medicare
Failure to thrive
Indicates insufficient weight gain or inappropriate weight loss in pediatric patients.
CLIENT
Individual who is the recipient of case management services.This individual can be a patient,beneficiary, injured worker, claimant, enrollee, member, college student, resident, or health care consumerof any age group. In addition, when client is used, it may alsoinfer the inclusion of the client's support.
Lions Club International
Initiatives for vision screening, prevention of blindness and disabilities including diabetes and prevention
Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI)
Injured worker has recovered to max level. Does not mean worker is back to baseline
Medicare Part A
Inpatient Acute care, critical care, inpatient rehab, skilled nursing, hospice, some home health care
ICT
Interdisciplinary care team
ICD 10
International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Edition, used for coding MR for reimbursement
essential job functions
Job duties and responsibilities that are the reasons for the job's existence (aka basic fundamental duties)
Tort Law
Law that deals with harm to a person or a person's property.
Indemnity payments
Monies paid as wage replacement for injured worker medically unfit to work .
To qualify for inpatient rehab after knee/hip replacement
Must have BMI >50 (extreme obesity) Bilateral knee/hip surgery or Age >85
Case Management Process Phases
Nine phases through which case managers provide care: Screening, Assessing, Stratifying Risk, Planning, Implementing Follow up, Transition, Post Transition, and Evaluate (identify patients, assess problems, develop, Implement, evaluate, & terminate POC)
Medicare Part B
Outpatient care. Extends Medicare to supplemental treatments, and physicians
Health Insurance
Provides money to pay for health care for illness, injury, or in some cases preventive care.
Clinical Pathway
Provides outcome-focused care within a certain timeline. Developed from evidence based guidelines CM plan. a timeline of patient care activities and expected outcomes of care.
Work accommodation
Reasonable accommodation is to provide a medical examination for individual with a disability so the employer will know what environmental changes are needed
HIPAA Title V
Revenue offsets governing tax deductions for employers
Prospective review
Reviewing possible hospitalization before admission to determine necessity and LOS
CARVE OUT
Services excluded from one care provider contract that may be covered through arrangements with other providers. Providers are not financially responsible for services carved out of their contract.
Under the 60 percent rule 13 conditions qualify. Conditions that require additional criteria to qualify include:
Severe Osteoartritis systemic vasculitides Other arthritis conditions
SF 36
Short-Form Health Survey that measures adult patient care outcomes
Quality improve
Systematic, data driven effort to measure and improve client services
DEMAND MANAGEMENT
Telephone triage and online health advice services to reduce members' avoidable visits to health providers. This helps reduce unnecessary costs and contributes to better outcomes by helping members become more involved in their own care.
TANF
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
Respite Care
Temporary care that relieves caregivers of their responsibilities for a short period of time.
CASE CLOSURE
Terminating the provision of case management services to aclient/support system. The process of communicating the decision to terminate services to clients/support systems, payor representative, and other healthcare professional involved.
CONTRACTUAL ETHICS
Terms and conditions in a contract that are ethical in context and must be adhered to by the involved parties. Sometimes these terms are not explicit and impose moral rather than legal obligations, for example, undue influence and informed consent.
GROUP MODEL HMO
The HMO contracts with a group of physicians for a set fee per client to provide many different health services in a central location. The group of physicians determines the compensation of each individual physician, often sharing profits.
Access to Care
The ability and ease of clients to obtain healthcare when they need it
APPROVED CHARGE
The amount Medicare pays a physician based on the Medicare fee schedule. Physicians may bill the beneficiaries for an additional amount, subject to the limiting charge allowed.
CARRIER
The insurance company or the one who agrees to pay the losses. A carrier may be organized as a company, either stock, mutual, or reciprocal, or as an Association or Underwriters.
HEALTHCARE TRILOGY
The quality, cost, and outcomes aspects of healthcare delivery. This term is attributed to the works of Donabedian.
a
The questioning of a witness during a trial or deposition by the party opposing those who originally asked him/her to testify
shame culture
Type of culture (Ruth Benedict): collectivism, loss of face, fear of abandonment, incompetence
guilt culture
Type of culture (Ruth Benedict): individualism, sin, fear of punishment, transgression of norms
Medigap
Type of health care insurance that covers out of pocket costs for Medicare covered services
Bereavement Counseling
Type of psychotherapy that helps a person deal with grief after a loss
APPROPRIATENESS OF SETTING
Used to determine if the level of care needed is being delivered in the most appropriate and cost-effective setting possible.
DELAY IN SERVICE
Used to identify delays in the delivery of needed services and to facilitate and expedite such services when necessary.
Integrated Delivery System
Variety of providers and organizations who come together to provide coordinated continuum of services to defined population
EARLY RETURN-TO-WORK
When a worker who had suffered a job-related injury or illness resumes work before complete recovery and while still suffering some sort of a partial disability. Usually the early return of the worker may involve the same job but with modified responsibilities or another job altogether.
Dual Diagnosis
When an individual is diagnosed with both a psychiatric disorder and a substance use disorder
Unbundling
When bundling agreement is dissolved and separate costs are paid
Quality metrics of facilities
When determine the quality of a rehab facility and it's programs, assess accreditation, scope of services, proximity, flexibility, outcomes measurement systems
Bundling
When insurance plan negotiates specific fee for procedure
Viatical Settlements
ability to sell own insurance policy
POMA
assesses mobility, gait, balance
COB
coordination of benefits
Primary consideration for medication management for patient with kidney disease
drug clearance
Staff Model HMO
group of physicians who work and are paid by the HMO and see only HMO patients
Managed care
is an approach that has developed in response to rising health care costs
Email communication
non-verbal communication
a
prevents Providers from discussing uncovered(plan) treatment options with the patient
Pre-Authorization/Pre-Certification
process of obtaining & documenting approval for health plan befor delivery of Medical Services
Root Cause Analysis (RCA)
process to identify underlying factors that contribute to variation in outcomes in sentinel event
HRA components
questionnaire, risk calculation, and feedback
Veracity
truthfulness
understanding
what comes first: translation or understanding?
Two Physicians can serve as surrogate
when no legal guardian, sibling/friend/or significant other can make decisions
Skilled workers
workers specialized at a specific task, credentials
HEALTHCARE DELIVERY SYSTEM
"A comprehensive model or structure used in the delivery of healthcare services to individuals--for example, integrated delivery system (IDS)." Also includes HMOs, PPOs, POSs, and EPOs. (Powell & Tahan, 2008, pp. 20, 29-31)
HEALTHCARE CONTINUUM
"Care settings that vary across a continuum based on levels of care that are also charactierized by complexity and intensity of resources and services" (Powell & Tahan, 2008, p. 43). See also health and human services continuum.
globalization
"The inexorable integration of markets, capital, nation states, and technologies in ways that allow individuals, groups, corporations, and countries to reach around the world farther, faster and more deeply, and more cheaply than ever before" Cochrane & Pain, globalization is: stretching of social relations, increased density of interaction, interpretation of social and economic practices, facilitated by a transnational infrastructure
Special Needs Plan (SNP)
(Model of care) Available to people with Medicare A &B Limits membership to people with specific diseases
Health Homes
(Model of care) Medicaid . Coordinated care to people with multiple chronic conditions including mental health and substance use Or people with 2 chronic conditions
Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS)
(Part of NCQA) Collection of standardized performance measures Info from HEDIS helps employers and purchasers evaluate health plan operations
Six stigma approach DMAIC
(Quality improvement tech) Define: goal is identified Measure: collect data to develop baseline Analyze: find root cause of inefficiencies and make solutions Improve: develop and implement methods and address deficiencies (test runs) Control: metrics are developed to assess success; cycle continues if need to make adjustments
lean approach
(Quality improvement tech) Reducing waste to increase value Consumers say what is valuable
Plan-Do-Study-Act
(Quality improvement technique) Plan:identify a process that yielded non ideal outcome Do: measure key performance attributes Study: make a new approach Act: integrate new approach
communicative discourse
(collaborative bargaining): relationship between parties is mutual trust coordination is achieved against shared traditions legitimacy of agreement based on voluntary consent based on reasoned arguments language is primarily a vehicle of dialogue
strategic discourse
(competitive bargaining): relationship between parties is like between strategic adversaries coordination of actions is based on money effectiveness of influence is based on empirical knowledge, no need for consent of the other party language is an instrument to exercise power (manipulative
Under Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Prospective payment System (IRF PPS) patients are classified by
- Impairment categories - Then into Case-Mix Groups (CMGs) - similar motor functioning, age and cognitive ability - CMGs further grouped into 4 tiers, depending on comorbidities - determines reimbursement
Medicare Advantage Plan (MAP)
- approved by Medicare but administered by private insurance companies -Medicare pays fixed $ per month to insurance company for people enrolled - MAP is a form of managed care - Less flexible - must choose from network - treatment requires pre-approval
Change theory (Kurt Lewin)
1 precontemplation, 2 contemplation, 3 preparation, 4 Action , 5 maintenance
GLOBE 9 dimensions
1. Power distance 2. Uncertainty avoidance 3. Humane orientation 4. Institutional collectivism 5. In-group collectivism 6. Assertiveness 7. Gender egalitarianism 8. Future orientation 9. Performance orientation
Hofstede's 6 dimensions
1. Power distance 2. Uncertainty avoidance 3. Individualism/collectivism 4. Masculinity/femininity 5. Time orientation 6. Indulengence/restraint
Stages of Change
1. Precontemplation 2. Contemplation 3. Preparation 4. Action 5. Maintenance
Risk Management Process
1. Risk Identification 2. Risk Assessment 3. Risk Response Development 4. Risk Response Control
Trompenaars' 7 dimensions
1. Universalism/particularism 2. Individualism/collectivism 3. Specific/diffuse 4. Neutral/affective 5. Achievement/ascription 6. Time perspective 7. Relationship with the environment
Medicare hospice benefit covers
1. routine home care 2. inpatient care for medical conditions/complications 3. continuous home care for complications that would require inpatient hospitalization 4. cost of all supplies & medication
Nar-Anon
12-step program for family members of narcotic addicts
Smoker's Anonymous
12-step program for nicotine addiction - disease out of person's control, must appeal to higher power
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
1993 Federal law requiring organizations with 50 or more employees to provide up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave after childbirth or adoption; to care for a seriously ill family member or for an employee's own serious illness; or to take care of urgent needs that arise when a spouse, child, or parent in the National Guard or Reserve is called to active duty
Measure law for performance improvement
1: process-what is actually done in giving/receiving care 2: structure- assess capacity of HC organization to provide services and for managed care organizations to ensure they have providers to meet clients need 3: outcomes- health status of client as results of HC
psychological, socio-cultural
2 adjustments which an expatriate must deal with to integrate properly Includes 4 different possibilities: marginalization, separation, assimilation, integration
habermas
2 foundational views of discourse strategic (means-end) discourse (competitive bargaining) communicative discourse (integrative bargaining)
incommensurability
2 paradigms meeting, they have no common measure, no impartial way to compare/evaluate ex: Newton and Einstein theories of gravity Denotes a double disparity between paradigms: Meaning variance: largely incompatible conceptual schemes (what the world should look like) Standard variance: provide divergent standards to assess relevance and quality of things Resulting in a translation failure: standards used which are incompatible with both standards biased towards one
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF)
24 hour skilled nursing and personal care. Rehab services Patient must be medically stable and need care from a skilled professional on a daily basis
Newly disabled person under 65 can apply for Medicare with coverage beginning ---------- months after starting SS or RRB disability benefits
24 months however, can apply for part D between 21 and 27 months after receiving SS or RRB benefits (advise to apply at 21 months to avoid delay)
identity, worldview, values
3 elements of the acculturation index, home and host culture identification
Global Mindset
3 overarching skills for a global mindset (global approach leadership)-flexible and open minded, effective communicator and collaborator, balanced and emotionally resilient and autonomous
Mutual Trust Expectations
3 trust expectations: Competence-based: whether others can deliver Incentive-based: believes others are motivated Benevolence-based: others making good-faith efforts All 3 are weighed and overall trust is calculated. This trust judgement leads to trust behaviours and trust-related outcomes
symbols and behaviours, power distributions, problem solving processes
3 ways to identify the type of culture managers are dealing with
marginalization, separation, assimilation, integration
4 acculturation strategies: host culture identification/home culture identification 1: low/low 2: low/high 3: high/low 4: high/high (most adaptive)
character and integrity, altruism, collective motivation, encouragement
4 dimensions of ethical management. Character and integrity most universally endorsed
increases in national habitus
4 reasons: increased interdependence increasing density vertical diffusion of standards, tastes and practices we-feelings
global management model
4 steps to this model: developed targeted goals and objectives understand contextual demands and constraints identify managerial options and actions develop global management skills
Five core cultural dimensions
5 individualism vs collectivism power distance masculinity vs femininity uncertainty avoidance long vs short term orientation
goals, resources, culture, commitment, philosophical and operational
5 circumstances for successful global partnerships
If patient remains alive under medicare A hospice after 2 90-day periods, a doctor must re-certify every
60 days
Accident and Health Insurance
A broad term that covers specialty policies available through an employer. It's insurance coverage that pays benefits in case of sickness, accidental injury or accidental death. It sometimes pays for loss of income or for debt payment if it's in connection with a loan, may or may not include disability payments depending on type of policy
CIVIL CASE OR SUIT
A case brought by one or more individuals to seek redress ofsome legal injury (or aspect of an injury) for which there are civil (non-criminal) remedies.
BOARD-CERTIFIED CASE MANAGER
A case manager who has earned the certified case manager (CCM) credential offered by the Commission for Case Manager Certification (CCMC). This involves passing an evidence-based certification examination after meeting a set of criteria that qualifies the case manager to sit for the examination. Once certified, the case manager must maintain the certification by acquiring ongoing education through means of continuing education units (CEUs), and uphold the CCM Code of Professional Conduct for Case Managers.
Dementia
A chronic or persistent disorder of the mental processes caused by brain disease or injury and marked by multiple cognitive defects that include memory impairment, personality changes, and impaired reasoning.
HEALTH INSURANCE PORTABILITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY ACT (HIPPA)
A civil rights legislation that governs the portability andcontinuity of health insurance by protecting individuals against laws regarding preexisting health conditions and other restrictions especially when changing jobs or insurance carriers and plans. See also Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act's Privacy Rule.
Tort
A civil wrong, wrongful act, or infringement of a right leading to civil legal liability
GAG RULES
A clause in a provider's contract that prevents physicians orother providers from revealing a full range of treatment options to clients or, in some instances, from revealing their own financial self-interest in keeping treatment costs down. These rules have been banned by many states.
EPISODE OF CARE
A client's access to healthcare services or encounter with a healthcare provider. It is individual client-specific, time-limited and always has a beginning and end. The length of the client's encounter with care varies based on the client's health need(s), the type and intensity of the required services to effectively address the need, the care/practice setting where the client receives these services, and level of care. Time of the encounter may be measured in minutes (e.g., in a provider's clinic or office), hours (e.g., in the emergency department, ambulatory surgery center or a dialysis center), days (e.g., in a hospital setting) or weeks to months (e.g., in a skilled nursing or rehabilitation facility). A client suffering from an illness may require one or multiple episodes of care before the illness is resolved or client is considered stable.
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT)
A comprehensive list of codes used by physicians to bill for procedures and services
CASE MANAGEMENT PLAN OF CARE
A comprehensive plan of care for an individual client that describes the (1) problems, needs and desires determined based upon findings of the client's assessment; (2) strategies such as treatments and interventions to be instituted to address the problems and needs; and (3) measurable goals including specific outcomes to be achieved to demonstrate resolution of the problems and needs, the timeframe(s) for achieving them, the resources available and to be used to realize the outcomes, and the desires/motivation of the client that may have an impact on the plan. (CMSA, 2010)
CASE MANAGEMENT BODY OF KNOWLEDGE (CMBOK)
A comprehensive resource of essential knowledge in the field of case management that a case manager is expected to master and become knowledgeable, skilled, as well as experienced in, to effectively care for clients and their support systems and be considered a competent case management practitioner.
CASE MANAGEMENT MODEL
A conceptual or graphic representation of the practice of case management in an organization. It usually depicts the relationships among the key functions and stakeholders of case management, and the roles and responsibilities of case managers. IE:
CAPACITY
A construct that indicates the highest probable level of functioning a person may reach. Capacity is measured in a uniform or standard environment, and thus reflects the environmentally adjusted ability of the individual.
ADHESIVE CONTRACT
A contract between two parties where one party with stronger bargaining power sets the terms and conditions and the other party, which is the weaker of the two with little to no ability to negotiate, must adhere to the contract and is placed in a "take it or leave it" position.
DEVELOPMENTAL RETARDATION
A disability characterized by significant limitations both in intellectual functioning and in adaptive behavior as expressed in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills that originates before age 18. The term that has been suggested as a replacement for mental retardation. (Intellectual disability)
a
A disadvantage in a particular situation, sometimes caused by a disability-condition that interferes with a person's ability to function normally
CASE MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT
A division within a healthcare organization (e.g., provider, employer, or payor) responsible for the provision of case management services to clients and their support systems.
ASSUMPTION OF RISK
A doctrine based upon voluntary exposure to a known risk. It is distinguished from contributory negligence, which is based on carelessness, in that it involves a comprehension that a peril is to be encountered and a willingness to encounter it.
Medicare
A federal program of health insurance for persons 65 years of age and older, certain younger people with disabilities and people with ESRD; pays under prospective pay system.
Discount fee for service
A financial reimbursement system when a provider agrees to supply services on a FFS basis with the fees discounted by a certain percentage from the physician's usual and customary charges.
CAPITATION
A fixed amount of money per-member-per-month (PMPM) paid to a care provider for covered services rather than based on specific services provided. The typical reimbursement method used by HMOs. Whether a member uses the health service once or more than once, a provider who is capitated receives the same "lump-sum" payment regardless of how many services are rendered.
DIAGNOSIS-RELATED GROUP (DRG)
A fixed fee schedule used as a basis of payment for hospital inpatient services. Combines ICD-10 codes with demographics, comorbities etc. A patient classification scheme that provides a means of relating the type of patient a hospital treats to the costs incurred by the hospital. DRGs demonstrate groups of patients using similar resource consumption and length of stay. It also is known as a statistical system of classifying any inpatient stay into groups for the purposes of payment. DRGs may be primary or secondary; an outlier classification also exists. This is the form of reimbursement that the CMS uses to pay hospitals for Medicare and Medicaid recipients. Also used by a few states for all payers and by many private health plans (usually non-HMO) for contracting purposes.
DISABILITY INCOME INSURANCE
A form of health insurance that provides periodic payments to replace income when an insured person is unable to work as a result of illness, injury, or disease.
ADMISSION CERTIFICATION
A form of utilization review in which an assessment is made of the medical necessity of a client's admission to a hospital or other inpatient facility. Admission certification ensures that clients requiring a hospital-based level of care and length of stay appropriate for the admission diagnosis are usually assigned and certified, and payment for the services are approved.
COMPLAINT
A formal expression of concern that a board-certified case manager's behavior(s) does not adhere to CCMC's Code of Professional Conduct for Case Managers with Standards, Rules, Procedures, and Penalties.
CASUALTY INSURANCE
A general class of insurance and workers' compensation insurance. Mainly liability coverage of an individual or organization for negligent acts or omissions.
IMPAIRMENT
A general term indicating injury, deficiency or lessening of function. Impairment is a condition that is medically determined and relates to the loss or abnormality of psychological, physiological, or anatomical structure or function. Impairments are disturbances at the level of the organ and include defects or loss of limb, organ or other body structure or mental function, e.g. amputation, paralysis, mental retardation, psychiatric disturbances as assessed by a physical.
AGGREGATED DIAGNOSIS GROUPS (ADG)
A grouping of diagnosis codes that are similar in terms of severity and likelihood of persistence in a client's health condition over time. An individual client can suffer more than one health condition and therefore may have more than one ADG (total of 32 ADG clusters). Individual diseases or conditions are placed into a single ADG based on a set of criteria including likely persistence of diagnosis, severity of illness, etiology, diagnostic certainty, and need for specialty care interventions. System developed by Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University.
EX PARTE
A judicial proceeding, order, injunction, and so on, taken or granted at the instance and for the benefit of one party only, and without notice to, or contestation by, any person adversely interested.
CONTINUOUS QUALITY IMPROVEMENT (CQI)
A key component of total quality management that usesrigorous, systematic, organization-wide processes to achieve ongoing improvement in the quality of healthcare services and operations. It focuses on both outcomes and processes of care.
HEALTHCARE PROXY
A legal document that directs the healthcare provider/agencyin whom to contact for approval/consent of treatment decisions or options whenever the client is no longer deemed competent to decide for self.
Actionable Tort
A legal duty, imposed by statute or otherwise, owing by defendant to the one injured
ALTERNATE LEVEL OF CARE
A level of care that can safely be used in place of the current level and determined based on the acuity and complexity of the client's condition and the type of needed services and resources.
FORMULARY
A list of prescription drugs that provide choices for effective medications from which providers may select, that are covered under a specific health plan.
FEE SCHEDULE
A listing of fee allowances for specific procedures or services that a health plan will reimburse.
HEARING
A live proceeding done before a formal body with decision-making authority (e.g., CCMC's Committee on Ethics and Professional Conduct) for the purpose of presenting evidence about an issue (e.g., a complaint of an alleged ethical violation by a case manager) where concerned opposing parties (e.g., complainant and person complained against) are given the opportunity to share their side of the issue (e.g., experience, documentation of evidence, witnesses). This procedure ultimately allows the decision-making body to determine the outcome and share its conclusions with the opposing parties.
DECISION RULE
A logical statement of characteristics, conditions, or attributes (e.g., effectiveness, worthiness, financial savings) that explain the appropriateness of making a specific decision or choice. For example, a healthcare executive concludes that a case management intervention is of positive return on investment if it demonstrates cost savings.
HMO (Health Maintenance Organization)
A managed care organization that provides comprehensive medical services for a predetermined annual fee per enrollee. PCP is gatekeeper
EXCLUSIVE PROVIDER ORGANIZATION (EPO)
A managed care plan that provides benefits only if care is rendered by providers within a specific network.
CODING
A mechanism of identifying and defining client careservices/activities as primary and secondary diagnoses and procedures. The process is guided by the ICD-9-CM coding manual, which lists the various codes and their respective descriptions. Coding is usually done in preparation for reimbursement for services provided.
CONCURRENT REVIEW
A method of reviewing client care and services during ahospital stay to validate the necessity of care and to explore alternatives to inpatient care. It is also a form of utilization review that tracks the consumption of resources and the progress of clients while being treated.
GLOBAL ASSESSMENT LENS
A multidimensional assessment that affords case managers the ability to be thorough and organized with respect to designing an individualized case management plan of care for each client to meet the client's unique situation. It includes an overview of the biophysical, psychological, sociological, and spiritual dimensions care. It functions as a care approach for case management assessment, which provides a comprehensive overview of eight essential domains to be considered when contemplating a client's needs and opportunities. These domains include physical health, behavioral health, functional capacity, client engagement and self-management, social determinants of health, health information technology, data analytics and decision support, and transdisciplinary healthcare team.
CASE CONFERENCE
A multidisciplinary healthcare team meeting that is held to discuss a client or client's support system situation such as conflict in decision making between the client and client's support system, clarification of plan of care and prognosis, end of life issues, or an ethical dilemma. Depending on the purpose of the conference, the client and client's support system may or may not participate in the meeting. Other participants are the case manager, social worker, physician of record or primary care provider, specialty care provider, registered nurse, registered dietitian, physical therapist, occupational therapist, ethicist (if the purpose is an ethical dilemma) and others as necessary.
Adult day care
A non-residential facility that supports the health, nurtirtional, social, and daily living needs of adults Most cost effective - avg about $65 / day
IMPORTANT MESSAGE FROM MEDICARE (IM) -
A notice of discharge from the acute care setting that hospitalsare required to deliver to all Medicare beneficiaries (original Medicare beneficiaries and Medicare Advantage plan enrollees) who are hospitalized, informing them of their hospital discharge appeal rights.
DEPARTMENT
A part, division, or program within an organization that has specific focus, objectives, function, or responsibility. For example, a materials management department within a hospital responsible primarily for the procurement and distribution of materials and supplies needed in a hospital for patient care services.
GUARDIAN
A person appointed by the court to be a substitute decision- maker for persons receiving services deemed to be incompetent of making informed decisions for themselves. The powers of a guardian are determined by a judge and may be limited to certain aspects of the person's life.
EXPERT WITNESS
A person called to testify because of recognized competence in an area.
ADVOCATE
A person or agency who speaks on behalf of others and promotes their cause. The main focus of Case Management.
ADJUSTER
A person who handles claims (also referred to as Claims Service Representative).
CLAIMS SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE
A person who investigates losses and settles claims for an insurance carrier or the insured. A term preferred to adjuster.
DISABILITY
A physical or neurological deviation in an individual makeup. It may refer to a physical, mental or sensory condition. A disability may or may not be a handicap to an individual, depending on one's adjustment to it. Diminished function, based on the anatomic, physiological or mental impairment that has reduced the individual's activity or presumed ability to engage in any substantial gainful activity. Inability or limitation in performing tasks, activities, and roles in the manner or within the range considered normal for a person of the same age, gender, culture and education. Can also refer to any restriction or lack (resulting from an impairment) of ability to perform an activity in the manner or within the range considered normal for a human being.
BARRIER-FREE
A physical, manmade environment or arrangement of structures that is safe and accessible to persons with disabilities.
GLOBAL FEE
A predetermined all-inclusive fee for a specific set of related services, treated as a single unit for billing or reimbursement purposes.
COMORBIDITY
A preexisting condition (usually chronic) that, because of itspresence with a specific condition, causes an increase in the length of stay by about 1 day in 75% of the clients.
GATEKEEPER
A primary care physician (usually a family practitioner, internist, pediatrician, or nurse practitioner) to whom a plan member is assigned. Responsible for managing all referrals for specialty care and other covered services used by the member.
COMMISSION ON ACCREDITATION OF REHABILITATION FACILITIES (CARF)
A private non-profit organization that establishes standards of quality for services to people with disabilities and offers voluntary accreditation for rehabilitation facilities based on a set of nationally recognized standards.
COUNSELING
A process of interaction that takes place in a safe, supportive, and comfortable environment between a case manager and a client or client's support system. During this process, the client shares distressing or stressful experiences, situations, emotions, or thoughts in an effort to feel better. These experiences may include present or past circumstances of loss, bereavement, separation, life-changing events, or coping with sudden or chronic illness. Clients may seek counseling to help them explore a general feeling or emotion they are experiencing, how best to cope with it, or as an opportunity to undertake personal development. The case manager's role in a client's counseling is to facilitate effective client self- exploration, offer support to the client, be an active listener, and act in a nonjudgmental manner.
Biofeedback
A process of learning/retraining to control bodily awareness or function, utilizing electrical and other natural signals generates by the body-example HR
DISABILITY CASE MANAGEMENT
A process of managing occupational and nonoccupational diseases with the aim of returning the disabled employee to a productive work schedule and employment.
COUNSELING PROCESS
A process that uses relationship and therapeutic skills to foster the independence, growth, development, and behavioral change of persons with disabilities through the implementation of a working alliance between the counselor and the client. It involves communication, goal setting, and beneficial growth or change through self-advocacy, psychological, vocational, social, and/or behavioral interventions.
CERTIFIED VOCATIONAL EVALUATOR (CVE)
A professional specialized in vocational assessment and rehabilitation who has met the minimum requirements for nationally recognized voluntary certification.
DISABILITY MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
A program that focuses on assisting workers who have suffered from occupational health conditions or job-related injuries return to work. It facilitates accommodations in the workplace to prevent impairment incidents of injured workers from becoming disability circumstances. It also employs the services of health professionals such as disability management specialists and/or disability case managers who are responsible for training and establishing tools for disability management personnel, employers, and others involved in keeping workers healthy, motivated, and productive.
EXPERIENCE REFUND
A provision in most group policies for the return of premium to the policyholder because of lower than anticipated claims.
CERTIFIED NURSE LIFE CARE PLANNER (CNLCP)
A registered professional nurse who holds a board certification from the Certified Nurse Life Care Planner Certification Board. This health professional develops a client-specific lifetime plan of care, while applying the nursing process. The plan employs a comprehensive and evidence-based approach in the estimation of current and future healthcare needs of the client. Also included are the associated costs and frequencies of items and services.
CONDITIONAL REHABILITATION PROFESSIONAL
A rehabilitation professional who has not yet met all of the requirements to be a qualified rehabilitation professional.
CLAIM
A request for payment of reparation for a loss covered by an insurance contract.
CREDENTIALING
A review process to approve a provider who applies to participate in a health plan. Specific criteria are applied to evaluate participation in the plan. The review may include references, training, experience, demonstrated ability, licensure verification, and adequate malpractice insurance.
ADMISSION REVIEW
A review that occurs within 24 hours of a client's admission to a healthcare facility (e.g., a hospital) or according to the time frame required in the contractual agreement between the healthcare provider and the health insurance plan. This review ensures that the client's care in an inpatient setting is necessary, based on the client's health condition and intensity of the services needed.
CATASTROPHIC INJURY
A serious injury that results in severe and long-term effects on the individual who sustains it, including permanent severe functional disability. Examples are traumatic brain, spine, or spinal cord injury; multiple trauma; and loss of major body parts.
CARE MANAGEMENT
A set of activities intended to improve patient care and reduce the need for medical services by enhancing coordination of care, eliminate duplication, and help patients and caregivers more effectively manage health conditions. (A healthcare delivery process designed to achieve better health outcomes by anticipating and linking clients with the services they need more quickly. It also helps avoid unnecessary services by preventing medical problems from escalating.)
CULTURAL COMPETENCY
A set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and policies that come together in a system, agency, or among professionals and enables that system, agency, or those professionals to work effectively in cross-cultural situations, providing care that is respectful and knowledgeable of cultural backgrounds.
FRAME OF REFERENCE
A set of ideas, evaluative criteria, rules, assumptions, or conditions a person uses to understand, perceive, and approach a situation or an issue. It is also the viewpoint or context within which a person's thinking about something seems to occur.
CATASTROPHIC ILLNESS
A severe illness, medical condition, or illness that requires prolonged hospitalization or recovery and has heightened medical, social, and financial consequences (Cancer, leukemia, Heart attack, or Stroke)
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
A situation where an individual (e.g., an employee, executive, or public official) in a public or private organization who is in a position to exploit a professional or official capacity in some way that results in personal benefits at the expense of others in the same organization, agency, or community at large.Therefore an individual, especially one in a position of power, must not make decisions that are based on favoritism, personal gain, exploitation, or violation of the public trust.Such actions are forbidden under the Political Reform Act of 1974, whose purpose is to prohibit employees, especially public employees, from personally benefiting at the expense of the public interest (Political Reform Act of 1974, Government Code Section § 81000 et seq.). Because there are some legal gray areas surrounding conflict of interest, it often falls on the individual to recognize potential problems before they interfere with his/her duties.
CONSENT
A situation where an individual (e.g., an employee, executive, or public official) in a public or private organization who is in a position to exploit a professional or official capacity in some way that results in personal benefits at the expense of others in the same organization, agency, or community at large.Therefore an individual, especially one in a position of power, must not make decisions that are based on favoritism, personal gain, exploitation, or violation of the public trust.Such actions are forbidden under the Political Reform Act of 1974, whose purpose is to prohibit employees, especially public employees, from personally benefiting at the expense of the public interest (Political Reform Act of 1974, Government Code Section § 81000 et seq.). Because there are some legal gray areas surrounding conflict of interest, it often falls on the individual to recognize potential problems before they interfere with his/her duties.
CONFIDENTIALITY
A situation where information is kept limited to the person having the authority or right to possess the information. For example, healthcare providers keeping a patient's personal health information private unless consent to release the information is provided by the patient. Healthcare providers assume the duty of protecting personal information about the patients they care for from others who do not have the right to access such information. In accordance with the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act of 1997 (HIPAA), healthcare organizations and providers are required to have policies to protect the privacy of patients' electronic information, including procedures for computer access and security (University of Washington School of Medicine, Ethics in Medicine, Bioethics Topics, Confidentiality, https://depts.washington.edu/bioethx/topics/ confiden.html, accessed 6/4/2015).
DEDUCTIBLE
A specific amount of money the insured person must pay before the insurer's payments for covered healthcare services begin under a medical insurance plan- out of pocket expenses.
Actuarial Study
A statistical analysis of a population based on its utilization of specific healthcare services and demographic trends of the population. Results used to estimate healthcare plan premiums and costs.
INCENTIVE
A sum of money paid at the end of the year to healthcare providers by an insurance/managed care organization as a reward for the provision of quality and cost-effective care.
COPAYMENT
A supplemental cost-sharing arrangement between the member and the insurer in which the member pays a specific charge for a specified service. May be flat or variable amounts per unit of service and may be for such things as physician office visits, prescriptions, or hospital services. The payment is incurred at the time of service.
DISEASE MANAGEMENT
A system of coordinated healthcare interventions and communications for populations with chronic conditions in which client self-care efforts are significant. It supports the physician or practitioner/client relationship. The disease management plan of care emphasizes prevention of exacerbation's and complications utilizing evidence-based practice guidelines and client empowerment strategies, and evaluates clinical, humanistic, and economic outcomes on an ongoing basis with the goal of improving overall health. Focuses on groups of patients with conditions that have high financial costs and will benefit from integrated systematic management.
COMMON LAW
A system of legal principles that does not derive its authorityfrom statutory law, but from general usage and custom as evidenced by decisions of courts.
FUNCTIONAL CAPACITY EVALUATION (FCE)
A systematic process of assessing an individual's physical capacities and functional abilities. The FCE matches human performance levels to the demands of a specific job or work activity or occupation. It establishes the physical level of work an individual can perform. The FCE is useful in determining job placement, job accommodation or return to work after injury or illness. FCEs can provide objective information regarding functional work ability in the determination of occupational disability status.
CHANGE MANAGEMENT
A systems model that proposes several basic and specific elements for improving care in health systems at the community, organization, practice, and individual client levels. It ensures delivery of high-quality chronic disease care to clients with chronic illnesses. The elements of the model include the community, health system, self-management support, delivery system design, decision support, and use of clinical information systems. Evidence-based practices in each of these elements foster productive interactions between informed clients/support systems and their providers.
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
A technique or systematic process used to calculate and compare the benefits and costs of an action, intervention, service or treatment, and to determine how well, or how poorly, it will turn out. This analysis reveals whether the benefits outweigh the costs, and by how much so that the involved party is able to make appropriate decision(s).
Active listening
A technique that is used in counseling and training. A structured way of communicating and interacting that requires the listener to fully engage with the speaker by listening to direct and indirect communications to understand, remember, and respond to what is being said while suspending your own frame of reference, biases, distractions, and judgement. Essential to negotiating, improving personal relationships, fosters understanding, and facilitates cooperation and collaboration, helps to solve disputes and eliminate conflict.
EXPERIENCE
A term used to describe the relationship, usually in a percentage or ratio, of premium to claims for a plan, coverage, or benefits for a stated period of time. Insurance companies in worker's compensation report three types of experience to rating bureaus: (1) Policy year experience: Represents the premiums and losses on all policies that go into effect within a given 12-month period. (2) calendar year experience: Represents losses incurred and premiums earned within a given 12-month period. (3) accident year experience: Represents accidents that occur within a given 12- month period and the premiums earned during that time.
Actuary
A trained insurance professional who specializes in determining policy rates, calculating premiums, and conducting statistical studies.
Hospice
A type of care for terminally ill patients; an organization that provides such care
COINSURANCE
A type of cost sharing in which the insured person pays orshares part of the medical bill, usually according to a fixed percentage.
PPO (Preferred Provider Organization)
A type of health plan that contracts with medical providers, such as hospitals and doctors, to create a network of participating providers. You pay less if you use providers that belong to the plan's network. Contains cost by negotiating discounts for services with in network provider
Ethnographic interview
A type of qualitative research that combines immersive observation and directed one-on-one interviews. Four typical stages 1. apprehension 2.exploration 3.cooperation 4.participation (goal is to uncover emic insights, not impose own culture/cultural screens, thick description)
CONTINUED STAY REVIEW
A type of review used to determine that each day of thehospital stay is necessary and that care is being rendered at the appropriate level. It takes place during a client's hospitalization for care.
DICHOTOMOUS VARIABLE
A variable known to have only two characteristics or options when evaluated in a particular study or predictive modeling. For example, characteristics may be high or low, true or false, yes or no, present or absent.
ENCOUNTER
A visit by a health plan member to a provider for the purpose of providing healthcare services or assessing the health status of a patient.
CERTIFIED VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PROVIDER
A vocational rehabilitation practitioner who is registered in the workers' compensation agency or commission in the state/jurisdiction of employment. This registration certifies that the rehabilitation practitioner is certified to provide vocational rehabilitation services to individuals with disabilities.
Acuity
A way to measure complexity and severity of a patients health and medical condition or degree of illness
AFFIDAVIT
A written statement of fact signed and sworn before a person authorized to administer an oath.
HIPAA Title I
Ability to Transport Group Health plans w/ life events, divorce job loss, & pregnancy
Moral Agency
Ability to recognize needs and willingness to take action
Transitional work duty
Able to work but not regular job function; work at lower level until able to transition back to regular job.
ACO
Accountable Care Organization
Job Modification
Across the board change to the job description, targeting skills.
Rehabilitation Act of 1973
Act that prohibits discrimination based on physical or mental disabilities.
ADL
Activities of Daily Living. Routine activities carried out for personal hygiene and health and for operating a household. ADLs include feeding, bathing, showering, dressing, transferring in or out of bed or a chair, and using the toilet/continence.
ACOA
Adult Children of Alcoholics
COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES
Agencies, outside an institutional setting, which provide care,support, and/or services to people with disabilities.
AHRQ
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
CONSENSUS
Agreement in opinion of experts. Building consensus is a method used when developing case management plans.
AUTONOMY
Agreement to respect another's right to self-determine a course of action; support of independent decision making without the influence of others personal desires or moral content.
Long Term Acute Care Hospital
Also called transitional hospitals Focus on patients who stay more than 25 days on avg Patients transferred from intensive care unit Treat people with 1 or more serious condition who may improve Rehab, head trauma to, pain mgmt
GOLD STANDARD
Also known as "ideal practice"; refers to the best availableknowledge, evidence, or benchmark under reasonable or similar conditions.
FIELD CASE MANAGEMENT (FCM)
Also known as onsite case management. A form of care coordination and management whereby a case manager works with a client (worker) in person rather than virtually via telephone or other electronic ways of communication. Field case managers usually visit the client, the client's employer, work environment, treating physician, and other involved parties and collaborate with them on the return of the client to work.
ACTUAL VALUE
Also referred to as real value. Measures the worth one derives from using or consuming a good, product, service or an item, and represents the utility of the good, product, service, or item.
AAPM&R
American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
AHA
American Heart Association
AMA
American Medical Association
ANA
American Nurses Association
ANCC
American Nurses Credentialing Center
ADA Amendments Act ADAAA
Americans w/Disabilities Act Amendments of 2008
ADA
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
BENCHMARKING
An act of comparing/evaluating a work process with that of the best competitor. Through this process one is able to identify what performance measure levels must be surpassed. Assists an organization in assessing its strengths and weaknesses and in finding and implementing best practices.
COORDINATION OF BENEFITS (COB)
An agreement that uses language developed by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and prevents double payment for services when a subscriber has coverage from two or more sources. Determines which insurance plan is primary and secondary and establishes order of which claims are paid.
Administrative services only (ASO)
An arrangement by which an organization funds its own employee benefit plan (assuming responsibility for all the risk), such as a health plan, but hires an outside firm to perform specific administrative services.
HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT (HRA):
An assessment of a client conducted to identify the presence of risk and determine how such risk may influence health-seeking behavior (e.g., access to healthcare services). This assessment may cover various aspects of a client's condition - e.g., level of physical activity and exercise; nutritional status; general health, safety, social, and environmental wellness; emotional awareness; mental, intellectual, and occupational wellness; and culture including values, spirituality, and beliefs
COMMUNITY ASSESSMENT RISK SCREEN (CARS)
An assessment tool used to determine the risk forrehospitalization or emergency department admittance of elderly clients. The tool focuses on the client's current health status and lifestyle behaviors similar to the health risk assessment (HRA) tool (Cesta and Tahan, 2003).
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
An educational model in which students with disabilities receive their education in a general educational setting with collaboration between general and special education teachers. Implementation may be through the total reorganization and redefinition of general and special education roles, or as one option in a continuum of available services
AMBULATORY PAYMENT CLASSIFICATION (APC) SYSTEM
An encounter-based classification system for outpatient reimbursement, including hospital-based clinics, emergency departments, observation, and ambulatory surgery. Payment rates are based on categories of services that are similar in cost and resource utilization. (Procedures rather than diagnosis)
AGREED MEDICAL EXAMINATION
An evaluation conducted by a provider who is selected by agreement between an injured workers' attorney and the insurance claims administrator and/or attorney. The parties agree to conduct a medical examination and prepare a medical- legal report to help resolve an existing dispute. The evaluation also serves to determine what portions of the work-related injury have contributed to the disability and what portions have resulted from other sources or causation.
COLLABORATIVE CARE
An evidence-based approach that involves the provision of mental health, behavioral health, and substance use services within a primary care setting.
CASE MIX COMPLEXITY
An indication of the severity of illness, prognosis, treatmentdifficulty, need for intervention, or resource intensity of a group of clients.
BENEFICIARY
An individual eligible for benefits under a particular plan. In managed care organizations beneficiaries may also be known as members in HMO plans or enrollee's in PPO plans. A person who derives advantage from something- especially a trust, will, or life insurance policy.
ERGONOMIST
An individual who has (1) a mastery of ergonomics knowledge;(2) a command of the methodologies used by agronomists in applying that knowledge to the design of a product, process, or environment; and (3) has applied his or her knowledge to the analysis, design, test, and evaluation of products, processes, and environments.
DOMESTIC CARRIER
An insurance company organized and headquartered in a given state, under the laws in that state, is referred to in that state as a domestic carrier.
CAPTIVE INSURANCE
An insurance company owned and controlled by its insured. Typically a parent group or company creates a licensed insurance company to provide coverage for itself.
CLAIMS ADJUSTER
An insurance professional who investigates claims byinterviewing the claimant and other involved parties (e.g., employers and witnesses), reviews related records to determine degree of liability and damages, and assures that an insurance policy exists and covers the claimed damages. In healthcare, a claims adjuster also assures that medical care is available to the worker as needed based on the injury or occupational illness.
HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATION (HMO)
An organization that provides or arranges for coverage of designated health services needed by plan members for a fixed prepaid premium. There are four basic models of HMOs: group model, individual practice association (IPA), network model, and staff model. Under the Federal HMO Act an organization must possess the following to call itself an HMO: (1) an organized system for providing healthcare in a geographical area, (2) an agreed-on set of basic and supplemental health maintenance and treatment services, and (3) a voluntarily enrolled group of people.
Network model
An organizational arrangement in which an HMO contracts with more than one medical group practice. A provider network
CASE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
An organized approach to the provision of case management services to clients and their support systems. The program is usually described in terms of (1) vision, mission and objectives;(2) number and type of staff including roles, responsibilities and expectations; and (3) a specific model or conceptual framework that delineates the key case management functions which may include clinical care management, transitional planning, resources utilization and management, bed capacity management, clinical documentation enhancement, quality and variance/delays management and others depending on the healthcare organization.
DATABASE
An organized, comprehensive collection of client care data. Sometimes it is used for research or for quality improvement efforts.
COMPLICATION
An unexpected condition that arises during a hospital stay orhealthcare encounter that prolongs the length of stay at least by 1 day in 75% of the clients and intensifies the use of healthcare resources.
CONTEMPT OF COURT
Any act that is calculated to embarrass, hinder, delay orobstruct the court in the administration of justice, or that is calculated to lessen its authority of its dignity.
CATASTROPHIC CASE
Any complex medical condition or illness with multiple providers that has heightened medical, social, and financial consequences that responds positively to the control offered through a systematic effort of case management.
BRAIN INJURY
Any damage to tissues of the brain that leads to temporary or permanent impairment of the normal function of the Central Nervous System. (Loosely used term for neurological disorder indicating impairment or injury to brain tissue)
Change agent illness
Any illness that affects an individual's life, communication, education, in physical, social, or psychological ways
ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY
Any item, piece of equipment, or product, either acquired commercially off the shelf, modified, or customized, that is used to increase, maintain, or improve functional capabilities of individuals with disabilities.
DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITY
Any mental and/or physical disability that has an onset before age 22 and may continue indefinitely. It can limit major life activities. Individuals with mental retardation, cerebral palsy, autism, epilepsy (and other seizure disorders), sensory impairments, congenital disabilities, traumatic brain injury, or conditions caused by disease (e.g., polio and muscular dystrophy) may be considered developmentally disabled.
ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY SERVICES
Any service that directly assists an individual with a disability in the selection, acquisition, or use of an assistive technology device.
EVIDENCE
Any species of proof, or probative matter, legally presented at the trial of an issue, by the act of the parties and through the medium of witnesses, records, documents, concrete objects, and the like, for the purpose of inducing beliefs in the minds of the court or jury as to their contention.
Medicare patients admitted to skilled nursing or long-term care facility are eligible for Medicare Part D
Any time during stay or for 2 months after leaving - patients who have lived out of country can apply within 2 months of moving back - Patients who move out of their prescription drug plan's service area can change plans beginning 1 months before move or up to 2 months after
ASSISTIVE DEVICE
Any tool that is designed, made, or adapted to assist a person to perform a particular task or ADL
ADVERSE EVENTS
Any untoward occurrences, which under most conditions are not natural consequences of the client's disease process or treatment outcomes.
transferable skills analysis
Assessed current and projected employment based on skills, abilities, and aptitude of client
DISCHARGE SCREEN
Assessment of the client/support system's discharge needs using a set of criteria that results in identifying clients who are to benefit from healthcare services or resources after an episode of illness and/or to prevent need for acute care rehospitalization.
CORE THERAPIES
Basic therapy services provided by professionals on a rehabilitation unit. Usually refers to nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, neuropsychology, social work and therapeutic recreation.
Etic
Behavioral science that is studied from outside of the social group being studied by someone who is does not participate int eh culture being studied.
Ethnocentricity
Belief that your own cultural or ethnic group is superior to that of another.
indemnity
Benefits in the form of cash payments rather those services. Hospital bills patient and then insurance pays patient. Aka fee for service
Extra-contractual benefits
Benefits not covered under the health plan but are given to the insured for cost savings Ex: CHHA wound care after d/c from SNF
BATNA
Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement, allows CM to explore alternative solutions, alternative course of action a party can take if negotiations fail and an agreement cannot be reached. Having a strong alternative waiting in the wings to have the power to say "no" if need be.
Client engagement
Builds on client activation with behaviors like maintaining health and diet. Activation= tools and engagement= using tools
6 Domain for CM practice
Case Management Concepts Case Management Principles and practices/strategies Psychosocial & support systems Healthcare Management & delivery Healthcare Reimbursement Vocational concepts/strategies
CMSA
Case Management Society of America
CMG
Case Mix Group
DISABILITY CASH BENEFIT
Cash paid by a disability benefits insurance agency to a worker out on disability who has otherwise lost wages due to an inability to work. The cash is paid over a specific period of time and is equivalent to a predetermined percentage of the worker's weekly wages and is based on the average wages of the worker during a specific number of weeks (usually less than 10 weeks) most adjacent to the week during which the worker sustained the injury or illness. This benefit is also paid for a limited time period as stipulated by the disability insurance plan and based on state specific laws.
CONFIDENTIAL COMMUNICATIONS
Certain classes of communications, passing between personswho stand in a confidential of fiduciary relation to each other (or who, on account of their relative situation, are under a special duty of secrecy and fidelity), that the law will not permit to be divulged.
CCM
Certified Case Manager
Knights of Columbus
Charitable endeavors including needs of people with physical/developmental disabilities - Special Olympics
CHAMPVA
Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Veterans Administration
DME criteria
Client must have an office visit where the PCP must sign a prescription and create face-to-face documentation stating that the requested DME is to help a long lasting medical condition or injury, is for home use, used for medical reason.
DISCHARGE OUTCOMES (CRITERIA)
Clinical criteria to be met before or at the time of the client's discharge. They are the expected/ projected outcomes of care that indicate a safe discharge.
Disorientation
Cognitive disability where the senses of time, direction, and recognition of people and places become difficult to distinguish. A lack of awareness of self, place, and/or time seen in multitude of conditions
Family-Centered Model of Care
Collaborates with the family & healthcare team to support patient healthcare decisions
Guidelines for denial of hospital review committee determines an admission is not medically necessary
Committee must provide written notification to the hospital, patient, and practitioner responsible for the care of the patient
self-funded
Companies contract with TPA (third party administrator) or ASO (administrative services only) to hand out administrative aspects of insureance (ex:claims)
Analogous
Comparable or similar in certain respects, typically in a way which makes it clearer the nature of the things compared.
CORF
Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility
CPR
Computer-based patient record
FIRST-LEVEL REVIEWS
Conducted while the client is in the hospital, care is reviewed for its appropriateness.
avoid, compete, accommodate, collaborate, compromise
Conflict handling, 4 possible outcomes Importance of outcome/important of relationship 1 low,low 2 high,low 3 low,high 4 high,high 5 medium,medium
CLIENT-RELATED OUTCOMES
Consequences or results of care activities, processes, orservices that are directly related to the client's condition,health status, and/or situation.
Domains of Case Management
Consists of knowledge associated with SM process, resources, and skills needed to ensure the effective and efficient delivery of safe, quality health and human services to clients/support systems. Care delivery/reimbursement, psychosocial concepts, quality & outcomes, rehab, legal
COBRA
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act- it requires employers to allow eligible employees, their spouses & dependents to maintain health insurance after loss of employment for 18 to 36 months, must elect coverage within 60 days of plan termination
Subrogation
Contractual right to recover payments made to a claimant for healthcare costs after the claimant has received payment for damages in legal action
Generalist Model of CM
Coordinates care with providers, maintains relationship with client but does not provide direct care
Appeal (legal in nature)
Court of appeals reviews written material from a trial court proceeding to determine if errors were made that might lead to a reversal of the courts decision
Behavioral Culture
Culture as a shared, learned human behavior, way of life- behaving a certain way merely because other persons do as well. Almost fully etic (culturally neutral)
CPT
Current procedural terminology: A listing of descriptive terms and identifying codes for reporting medical services and procedures performed by health care providers and usually used for billing purposes.
DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE
Deals with the moral basis for the dissemination of goods and evils, burdens and benefits, especially when making decisions regarding the allocation of healthcare resources. It assumes that there is a large amount of fairness in the distribution of goods. Equal work should provide individuals with an equal outcome in terms of goods acquired or the ability to acquire goods
DBA
Defense Base Act of 1941- an extension of the federal worker's compensation program that covers longshoremen and harbor workers.
1st step in developing healthcare management program
Define population to be served
Kubler Ross's 5 stages of grief
Denial anger bargaining Depression acceptance
Appeals
Denials of urgent care must be decided by insurance company within 72 hours. 30 days to review and make decision about non-urgent care that patient has not yet received 60 days for care already received
DOD
Department of Defense
DHHS
Department of Health & Human Services
Client activation
Describes the knowledge, skills, ability, willingness, and confidence a person has to allow him or her to become actively engaged in their own health needs
Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care
Designates someone to make decisions regarding medical & end of life care if the client becomes incapacitated and unable to handle matter on their own.
ADJUSTED CLINICAL GROUP (ACG) SYSTEM:
Developed by the School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, this system clusters clients into homogenous groups based on measuring morbidity to ultimately improve accuracy and fairness in evaluating healthcare provider performance, identifying clients at high risk, forecasting healthcare utilization, and setting equitable payment structure and rates for the providers of care. The System accounts for the burden of morbidity in a client population based on disease patterns, age, and gender and relies on the diagnostic and/or pharmaceutical code information found in insurance claims or other computerized client health records.
DSM-IV
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. A guide used for the diagnosis of all currently recognized psychiatric and mental health disorders
ACTIVITY LIMITATIONS
Difficulties an individual may have in executing activities. An activity limitation may range from a slight to a severe deviation in terms of quality or quantity in executing the activity in a manner or to the extent that is expected of people without the health condition.
DMAA
Disease Management Association of America
DISCHARGE STATUS
Disposition of the client at discharge (e.g., left against medical advice, expired, discharged home, transferred to a nursing home).
Nonmaleficence
Do no harm
DNR
Do not resuscitate
DUAL RELATIONSHIP
Dual relationships exist when a case manager has responsibilities toward a third party other than the client (e.g., case manager/payor/client or case manager/ employer/client). Can also mean there exists multiple roles between the CM and client (e.g. client is also a family member/friend/student)
Patients who are already eligible because of disability and turn 65 can enroll for Medicare Part D
During period extending form 3 months prior to turning 65 to 3 months after
Life Care Plan
Dynamic document which provides an organized plan for current and future needs of a person who experienced a catastrophic injury chronic illness/life change
clinical pathways
EBP guidelines and treatment guidelines Apply. Eat research when making decisions about HC Provides outcome focused care within certain timeline Model that standardizes appropriate services and treatment within an appropriate length of stay
CASE MIX GROUP (CMG)
Each CMG has a relative weight that determines the base payment rate for inpatient rehabilitation facilities under the Medicare Perspective Payment System. See also IRF-PAI, RIC.
ERISA
Employee Retirement Income Security Act.- law that sets minimum standards for most voluntarily established retirement and health plans in private industry to provide protection for individuals in these plans.
ADA Title I
Employers with 15 or more employees are prohibited from discriminating against people with disabilities.
Utilization management
Ensures that services provided are medically necessary and provided at appropriate level and reduced cost level Prospective reviews Concurrent reviews Retrospective reviews
DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT (DME)
Equipment needed by patients for self-care. Usually it must withstand repeated use, is used for a medical purpose, and is appropriate for use in the home setting.
Transitional subacute
Est stay 3-30 days 5-8 hours nursing services/day
Long-term transitional subacute
Est stay >25 days rehab/nursing 6-9 hours/day Often transferred to long term care facilities
Vocational Rehabilitation
Fed-state eligibility based on career development program. Provides services to individuals with disabilities Acquire skills needed to get/keep job
Medicare Hospice Benefit
Federal program for medicare-eligible patients Life expectancy 6 mos or less Multiple settings - home, outpatient, inpatient Can return to regular medicare at any time
Financial Resources alternatives
Financial service provided outside traditional means to pay for insurance and fees patients may use; long-term care insurance, accelerated death benefits, viatical settlements, reverse mortgages
Core Cultural Dimensions 5 (Basic Idea)
Five main questions concerning global managers, derived from the old models 1. Power distribution 2. Social relationships 3. Environmental relationships 4. Time and work patterns 5. Uncertainty and social control
Rotary international
Focuses on 6 areas for grants, 2 that focus on health: disease prevention and treatment (combat spread of HIV/AIDS)
Subacute care/transitional care
For patients who are stable and do not require hospital acute care but who require more intensive skilled nursing care, therapy, and physician services than are provided in SNFs. Ex: TPN, IV therapy, wound care
FAM
Functional Assessment Measure
FAST
Functional Assessment Staging Tool
DISABILITY BENEFIT
Funds from public or private sources provided for an individual who has a disability. Disability benefits for most Americans are covered and paid by the Social Security Administration (a government agency) through either of two main programs: (1) Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), for those who have worked in recent years; or (2) Supplemental Security Income (SSI), for low-income individuals who are disabled or who have become disabled and are unable to return to work
Social security disability insurance SSDI
Given to those unable to work bc disability 18 years but less than 65 5 month waiting period After have for 2 years, eligible for medicare
Axis V
Global Assessment of Functioning that allows the clinician to rate the level of danger to one's self and functioning. GAF 0-100 with 100 exhibiting no symptoms.
BENEFIT PROGRAMS
Government agency, or employer to individuals based on some sort of an agreement between the parties; for example between an employer and an employee. Benefits vary based on the plan and may include physician and hospital services, prescriptions, dental and vision care, workers' compensation, long-term care, mental and behavioral health, disability and accidental death, counseling and other therapies such as chiropractor care.
Kiwanis
Grants to clubs/organizations that support children
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)
Group of agencies that establish standards for hospitals and health organizations which they apply during inspections that lead to accreditation
Medicare ACO
Group of drs, hospitals, HC providers who voluntarily come together to give coordinated, high quality care, to Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries (cost saving) Patient centered
Quality improvement organization (QIO)
Group of health quality experts to improve the care delivered by Medicare
Performance Improvement (PI)
HC organizations fxns and processes and how they affect the ability to reach desired outcomes and meet clients needs
HEALTH INSURANCE PORTABILITY ANDACCOUNTABILITY ACT'S PRIVACY RULE
HIPAA's Privacy Rule was initially published in 2000 as a national law that ensures clients' medical information is kept confidential. The Rule offered clients greater rights for protection of individually identifiable health information and files and demands that all healthcare providers maintain strict confidentiality and privacy (Department of Health and Human Services, Federal Register, 45 CFR, Parts 160 and 164, 2000).
a
HMO contracts with a group of physicians to provide services for a fixed monthly fee per enrollee
Ergonomic approach
Handling the client in a way that is comfortable and efficient for you and the client. End user: Client is leader of CM decision making process
EMPLOYABILITY
Having the skills and training that are commonly necessary in the labor market to be gainfully employed on a reasonably continuous basis, when considering the person's age, education, experience, physical, and mental capacities due to industrial injury or disease.
HCFA
Health Care Financing Administration. See CMS.
HIPAA stands for
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
Adult day healthcare programs
Health focused programs with RNs and therapists
Creditable coverage
Health insurance, prescription drug, or other health benefit plan that meets a minimum set of qualification. Medicare expectations is that a supplemental prescription drug coverage pays on average as much as the standard Medicare prescription drug coverage.
Birthday rule
Health plan uses the parent whose birthday is 1st to determine child's primary and secondary insurance policy
HEDIS
HealthCare Effectiveness Data Information Set- performance measurement set for MCO to set quality of systems
Intensity of Service
Healthcare cost trend factor that can be mostly directly impacted by case manager CM needs to be aware of how intensity of service affects the clients plan of care
Targeted approach of CM
Healthcare management focuses on needs of specific patient or group of patients with similar problems.
HCC
Hierarchical conditions category-a risk-adjustment model originally designed to estimate future health care costs for patients.
Ethical principals
Higher order norms or fundamental assumptions that are consistent with a society's moral principles and constitutes higher standards of moral behavior
HHA
Home health aide
Under Medicare, eligibility for home health care
Homebound does not literally mean patient is never able to leave home
Red flag concerns
Homelessness poor living conditions limited financial and insurance resources dependency on others for care
impairment, disability, handicap
I: problem with structure of organ or body (can't move legs) D: functional limitation to activity (can't walk) H: disadvantage is n filling a role (cant work)
Integrative model of care
IDT model of care that encompasses medical, psychosocial and social needs of the patient
Basic idea - Hofstede
Idea that people have the same hardware, but different thinking and behavioral patterns- how a society handles inequalities among people, belief, and behavior and are intolerant of unorthodox behavior and ideas. 4 dimensions- individualism-collectivism, uncertainty avoidance, power distance, and masculinity-femininity.
Healthcare Analytics
Identify at risk people who could benefit from CM services
malpractice
Improper care or treatment by health care professional. Wrong conduct, negligent.
Palliative care is meant to
Improve QOL, relieve suffering. Does not include treatments to prolong life
IMPEACH
In the law of evidence, it is to call in question the veracity of a witness, by means of evidence adduced for that purpose.
Polypharmacy in Older Adults
Inadvertent prescriptions from multiple medications from multiple providers
drivers of globalization
Include technological advancement, international trade, and international investment making it easier for people, goods, and ideas to move across borders. Based on increased customer demands, increased technological innovation, and a growing role for emerging markets increased use of shared R&D, global sourcing increasingly global financial markets evolving government trade policies ALSO: ideology, power relations
DME
Includes but is not limited to- cane, brace, commode chair, crutches, hospital bed, wheelchair, walkers, ventilators, oxygen, pressure mattresses, lifts, etc.
FUNERAL EXPENSE BENEFIT
Includes financial support for funeral expenses survivors of the diseased worker may incur. This benefit is payable to the deceased worker's family or dependent(s) up to the maximum allowed under the law at the time of the worker's injury resulting in death.
FUNDING SYSTEMS
Individuals or agencies that provide financial resources to support the care of those who are poor, vulnerable, lack health insurance coverage or unable to independently assume such responsibility. These may include charitable or religious organizations, and public or private agencies.
IHI
Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Accelerated Death Benefits
Insurance policy rider allowing insured person with terminal illness to use some of policy's benefits prior to death for LT care and medical expenses
Core components of Case Management
Intake, Needs Assessment, Service Planning, and Monitoring and Evaluation. The process if to assess a client's relationships, healthcare management, community resources and support, service delivery, and psychological intervention.
BAD FAITH
Intentional dishonest act by not fulfilling legal or contractual obligations, misleading another, entering into an agreement without the intention or means to fulfill it, violating basic standards of honesty in dealing with others. Helpful if an insurance company violates a good faith deal letting the policy holder sue the company on a tort claim in addition to a standard breach of contract, policyholder may recover an amount larger than the initial claim.
Case Management Society of America
International not for profit organization dedicated to support the advancement of case management
Vocational rehab
Job requirements must be the focus, not individual worker's skills
FRAUD
Knowingly and willfully executing, or attempting to execute a scheme or artifice to defraud any healthcare benefit program or to obtain, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, any of the money or property owned by, or under the custody or control of, any healthcare benefit program. Fraud is an intentional deception or misrepresentation that someone makes, knowing it is false, that could result in an unauthorized payment.
Cross Cultural Competence
Knowledge of other beliefs, values and attitudes, the ability to appreciate and respect other feelings, the capacity to adapt one's own behavior, the ability to reflect on one's own sensitivities.
Cross Cultural Sensitivity
Knowledge, awareness, and acceptance of other cultures, combines cognitive and affective skills to reduce misunderstandings and avoid inappropriate behavior through heightened tolerance of different cultural attitudes.
ADVANCE DIRECTIVE
Legally executed document that explains the client's healthcare related wishes and decisions. It is drawn up while the client is still competent and is used if the client becomes incapacitated or incompetent. Can include a living will, personal directive, advance directive, medical directive, or advance decision.
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) rehab
Less intense level. Patient tolerated 3 hours of therapy per day
Intermediate Care
Level of care for patients who require more assistance than custodial care and may require nursing supervision but do not have skilled need. Insurance companies don't pay
Viatical Settlements
Life insurance is personal property & can be sold. Terminally ill pt sells policy to a 3rd party for cash
Kinds of Advanced Directives
Living will Medical power of attorney General power of attorney
2 essential components of risk management program
Loss control and loss prevention Helps to minimize costs
Medicare Part B
MD services, outpatient services, some home health, DME, ER care, outpatient PT/OT, labs
BONA FIDE
Made with earnest intent, without intention to deceive. Literally translated as "in good faith"
Clinical quality measures (CQMs)
Measure health outcomes, clinical process, cl safety
Quality Indicator
Measures of outcomes
Quality indicator
Measures of structure, processes, outcomes. Provide hospital/providers as starting point to improve care EB and identifies variations in quality of care Types: clinical, financial, productivity, utilization, quality, client experience
Functional capacity assessment
Measures persons ability to perform specific work related tasks
Cost-effectiveness analysis
Measures the effectiveness of an intervention rather than monetary savings
Medicare Part C is also called
Medicare Advantage Plan (private insurance through HMO, PPO etc)
Prospective Payment System (PPS)
Medicare reimbursement fixed payment based upon DX & standard function assessment-Payment made based on predetermined fixed amount.
Hospice
MedicareA covers two 90day & unlimited 60day benefit periods, with physician revert every 60days
Resource utilization groups (RUGs)
Method of classification for health care reimbursement for SNF pt's
Ambulatory Payment Classification (APC)
Method of paying for a facility outpatient services for the Medciare program- Outpatient Perspective Payment System for Hospitals only
AIA model
Model which highlights three key ingredients in effective interpersonal communication, stresses conveying meaning: Attention Interpretation Action
BEYOND (OUTSIDE)-THE WALLS CASE MANAGEMENT
Models where healthcare resources, services and case managers are based externally to an acute care/hospital setting that is in the community. A way to meet the needs of high-risk patients through clinical outcomes, member satisfaction, and cost containment.
DAMAGES
Money awarded by a court to someone who has been injured (plaintiff) and that must be paid by the party responsible for the injury (defendant). Normal damages are awarded when the injury is judged to be slight. Compensatory damages are awarded to repay of compensate the injured party for the injury incurred. Punitive damages are awarded when the injury is judged to have been committed maliciously or in wanton disregard of the injured plaintiff's interests.
COMPENSATION
Money that a court or other tribunal orders to be paid, by a person whose acts or omissions have caused loss or injury to another, in order that the person demnified may receive equal value for the loss, or be made whole in respect to the injury.
Savings report
Most common method of assessing the effectiveness of case management Cost saving analysis is used to show effectiveness of CM work
acute care
Most intensive level of care Patient is treated for a brief sudden but severe episodes of illness such as medical and surgical management or trauma/emergency treatment which cannot be taken care of in a less intense setting. Usually provided in a hospital, LTACH, IRF, ER, transitional hospitals.
Hospice under Medicare A
Must have less than 6 months to live (2 90-day periods)
CCM certification
Must meet once qualification from both sections 1. Rx, RN, or LCSW, 2. work supervised by CCM for 12 months, work supervised for 24 months by CM without CCM, or supervise CM department for 12 months.
Core Measures
National standards of care and treatment processes for common conditions shown through scientific evidence to improve client outcomes. 8 core measures: Cardiology, Gastroenterology, HIV/Hepatitis C, Medical Oncology, Obstetrics/Gynecology, Orthopedics, Pediatric
CARE GUIDELINES
Nationally recognized and professionally supported plans of care recommended for the care management of clients with a specific diagnosis or health condition and in a particular care setting. Usually developed based on the latest available evidence and modified as necessary by healthcare professionals upon implementation for the care of an individual client. See also case management plan.
indemnity plan
No INN/ONN, NO PCP, mbr pays deductible, no referrals needed
DENIAL
No authorization or certification is given for healthcare services because of the inability to provide justification of medical necessity or appropriateness of treatment or length of stay. This can occur before, during, or after care provision.
National Quality Forum (NQF)
Non profit membership organization to improve quality of HC When a measure is endorsed by NQF it can be used in hospitals, HC SYSTEM, govt agencies Endorse consensus stnds, increase quality performance info to public
Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF)
Nonprofit accreditation of health/human services Focuses on improving outcomes, client satisfaction Accreds:rehabs,DME, aging services etc
Precontemplation
Not intending to change behavior.
BENEFICENCE
Obligation and duty to promote good or to support a patients legitimate interests and decisions. Compassion; taking positive action to help others; desire to do good; core principle of client advocacy. Actively preventing or removing harm.
APPROVAL
Offer or receive affirmation, sanction, or agreement about a decision, action, service, treatment, or intervention. In health insurance, it is the act of authorizing or affirming a service to a client that implies agreement to be responsible for reimbursing the provider of the service the related cost of providing the service to a client/support system.
FAIR HEARING
One in which authority is executed fairly; that is consistent with the fundamental principles of justice embraced within the conception of due process of law.
CLAIMANT
One who seeks a claim or one who asserts a right or demandin a legal proceeding.
Case load calculation
Online tool which takes into account several factors to determine the appropriate caseload for CM setting, complexity of cases, experience of CM, types of contact
FreshStart
Online-based hypnotehrapeutic approach to nicotine addiction, for INDEPENDENT USE
Diversity Management
Organizational actions that aim to promote greater inclusion of employees from different backgrounds into an organization's structure, intended to create and maintain a positive work environment where the similarities and differences of individuals are valued.
ANCILLARY SERVICES
Other diagnostic and therapeutic services that may be involved in the care of clients other than nursing or medicine. Includes respiratory, laboratory, radiology, nutrition, physical and occupational therapy, and pastoral services.
END-RESULT OUTCOMES
Outcomes that occur at the conclusion of an episode of care and indicate the achievement of target goals. For example, deciding to transition a client from the acute care to home setting after successful tolerance of oral antibiotics or transitioning a workers' compensation client back to work after successful job modification intervention(s).
Preferred Provider Organization
PPO, preferred provider group/ organization where group of medical providers provide medical services on a negotiated fee
Supported Employment
Paid employment in integrated setting with support for people with severe disability Provides training and a job coach to help severely disabled people succeed in meaningful job placement.
Accountable Care Organization (ACO)
Part of Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) Volunteer group/network of providers including primary care physicians, specialists, other healthcare providers and medical facilities that form an organization to provide and coordinate care to groups of beneficiaries (minimum 5,000) who work together collaboratively and accept collective accountability for the cost and quality of care in return for financial incentives for improving/decreasing spending. - Must participate for minimum of 3 years - Must institute quality measures + cost containment strategies - receives percentage of savings ACOs became popular in the Medicare fee-for-service benefit system as a result of the Affordable Care Act. ACOs are formed around a variety of existing types of provider organizations such as multi specialty medical groups, physician-hospital organizations (PHO), and organized or integrated delivery systems.
Main role of Case manager
Patient advocate
True/False
Patients can have multiple benefits periods in 1 years, but have to pay deductible for each
ASSIGNMENT OF BENEFITS
Paying medical benefits directly to a provider of care rather than to a member. This system generally requires either a contractual agreement between the health plan and provider or written permission from the subscriber for the provider to bill the health plan.
Medicare Part A
Pays a 100% days 1-60 for each benefit period, patient pays deductible
Liability Insurance
Pays damages for bodily injury or loss of property (ex: injury resulting from unsafe conditions)
Indemnity Insurance
Pays in the form of predetermined payments for loss/damages rather than for healthcare services
FIDUCIARY
Person in a special relationship of trust, confidence, or responsibility in which one party occupies a superior relationship and assumes a duty to act in the dependent's best interest. This includes a trustee, guardian, counselor or institution, but it could also be a volunteer acting in this special relationship.
Axis II
Personality disorders and developmental disorders (OCD, Borderline personality)
Abuse
Physical, mental/emotional, or sexual mistreatment of one person by another
Staff Model HMO
Physicians are on the staff of the HMO and provide care exclusively for the health plan enrollees
the donut hole in medicare
Point of coverage when the participant and drug plan have spent a specified dollar amount; gives discounts on drugs
prejudice
Positive or negative belief held about an individual or group
Soft savings
Potential savings. Costa avoided due to CM intervention Ex: no hospital readmission
CASE LAW
Precedent or common law-the collected body of prior judicial decisions written by courts and similar tribunals in the course of deciding past cases and resolving ambiguities to determine outcomes for a current case, this must be followed until or unless a new law is created or a higher court rules differently
Medicare Part D
Prescription Drug Coverage
Patient safety indicator (PSI)
Preventable instances of complications resulting from exposure to HC system Ex: hemorrhages or foreign body left in body
CARE CONTINUUM ALLIANCE
Previously known as the Disease Management Association of America (DMAA) is an industry trade group of corporations and individuals that promotes the role of population health improvement in raising the quality of care, improving health outcomes, and reducing preventable health care costs for individuals with and at rick for developing chronic conditions.
CASE MANAGER
Principal Term: A health and human servcies professional who is responsible for coordinating the overall care, services and resources delivered to an individual client or a group of clients and their support systems based on the client's health and human services issues, needs and interests.
HEALTH
Principal Term: An individual's physical, functional, mental, behavioral, emotional, psychosocial and cognitive condition. Refers to presence or absence of illness, disability, injury or limitation which requires special attention for management and resolution including use of health and/or human services type intervention or resource.
COMMUNITY SERVICES AND RESOURCES
Principal Term: Healthcare programs that offer specific servicesand resources in a community-based environment as opposed to an institutional setting, that is, outside the confines of healthcare facilities such as hospitals and nursing homes. These programs are either publicly or privately funded or charitable in nature.
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES CONTINUUM
Principal Term: The continuum of care that matches ongoing needs of case management clients and their support systems with the appropriate level and type of health, medical, financial, legal, psychosocial, behavioral and sprirtual care and services across one or more care settings. The continuum includes multiple levels that vary in complexity and intensity of healthcare services and resources including individual care providers and organizations or agencies.
CAREGIVER
Principal Term: The person responsible for caring for a client in the home setting. Can be a family member, friend, volunteer, or an assigned healthcare professional.
CLIENT'S SUPPORT SYSTEM
Principal Term: The person(s) identified by each individual client to be directly or indirectly involved in the client's care. It "may include biological relatives [family members], spouses, partners, friends, neighbors, colleagues, or any individual who supports the client [caregivers, volunteers, clergy, spiritual advisors]" (CMSA, 2010, p. 24).
Frequent Flyers
Principal management focus: short term face to face for specific expertise Mode of interaction: face to face and virtual Key success factors: moderate awareness of cultural differences, multilingual skills, deep understanding of global issues Typical cultural challenges: global myopia, overemphasis on global issues
Functional Job Analysis
Process of collecting specific data to define job requirements, both essential and non essential duties, helps to write job descriptions.
Root Cause Analysis (RCA)
Process used by providers and administrators to indentify the basic or causal factors that contribute to variation in performance and outcomes or that underlie the occurrence of a sentinel event An analytical technique used to determine the basic underlying reason that causes a variance or a defect or a risk. A root cause may underlie more than one variance or defect or risk. determines underlying cause of adverse events; used after incident to uncover primary cause
Alateen
Program for teens with alcoholic parent - includes tutoring, mentoring, counseling
Value Based Purchasing
Program offers financial incentives to hospitals to improve quality of care.
Purpose of stop-loss insurance
Protect insurance company against excessive payments
HEALTH INSURANCE
Protection which provides payment of benefits for coverage for covered sickness or injury. Included under this heading are various types of insurance such as accident insurance, disability income insurance, medical expense insurance, and accidental death and dismemberment insurance
Tuberculosis Medicaid program
Provdied by DSS Coverage for eval/tx of TB For uninsured or underinsured and do not qualify for regular medicaid Must be citizens or legal residents Must have lived in US for 5 years
Inpatient Rehabilitation
Provide intense, multidisciplinary therapy to patients with functional loss Patient must be able to tolerate a minimum of 3 hours of therapy a day, 5-7 days a week and be medically stable
National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA)
Provides a systematic review of managed care organizations for accreditation
National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA)
Provides accreditation fo HC organizations and manages care organizations CM acced: comprehensive and EB dedicated to quality improvement, PCSP Care coordination, patient centered, quality of care HEDIS
Children's health insurance program (CHIP)
Provides health insurance coverage for uninsured and underinsured children who have household income above the Medicaid qualifying income
CHAMPVA for Life
Provides healthcare benefits to families of permanently disabled veterans, or soldiers killed in line of duty, not eligible for Tricare. Covers 65 or older, is a Medicare supplement.
Indian Health Service
Provides helath services to members of any federally recognized tribes and Alaska natives directly or through contracted services
Private CM model
Provides individual care focusing on needs of patient
Axis IV
Psychosocial and environmental problems that may affect the mental disorder (housing, education, legal, economic)
contemporary truisms
Public vs Private sector: public sector provides technologies, private companies rely on these, should the state stay out of the private sector? Innovation is a force of good: not for all stakeholders Knowledge economy: contemporary organizations use advanced knowledge, or do they limit their knowledge to what limits their doubt Fast-changing international environment: is the environment actually changing rapidly, growth has been stable for 40 years and the most influential new technologies are in the past Trickle-down economies: attracting large financial institutions leads to increased prices before the wealth reaches lower levels Flexible labor market: even though the workforce is more skilled than ever, there is polarization in earnings, lower-skilled work is less secure, social contract between employer and employee is broken Technological solutionism: technology does not have all the answers because institutions are too hypocritical, corrupt and bureaucratic. Overton window: the current policy
Utilization review accreditation commission URAC
Puts consumer at center of HC decisions and ensure client gets right car, in the right setting, at the right time. CM standards applied across the HC setting CM standards: policy, quality mgmt, compliance, oversight of fxns, credentialing
pediatric quality indicator (PDI)
Quality of care for neonatal and children under 17 in hospital or identify avoidable hospitalization
inpatient quality indicators (IQI)
Quality of care in hospital, inpt mortality, misused utilization of procedures
CASE RATES
Rate of reimbursement that packages pricing for a certain category of services. Typically combines facility and professional practitioner fees for care and services. also known as Bundled or Episode based payment.
Goal of risk management
Reduce adverse events, decrease malpractice claims, and minimize finical loss.
FUNCTIONAL INDEPENDENCE MEASURE (FIM[TM])
Referred to today as FIM[TM] instrument, it is an 18-item instrument with an ordinal scale ranging from 1 (total assistance) to 7 (complete independence) that is used worldwide in the in-patient medical rehabilitation setting to measure a client's ability to function with independence. The instrument allows healthcare professionals to evaluate the amount of assistance required by a client to safely and effectively perform basic life functions. An FIM[trademark sign] score is collected within 72 hours after a client's admission to a rehabilitation unit, within 72 hours before discharge, and between 80 to 180 days after discharge. This instrument is copyrighted and maintained by the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation (UDSMR), which is a division of the University of Buffalo Foundation Activities, Inc (UBFA), the not- for-profit corporation that developed and owns the FIM[trademark sign] instrument. (Medfriendly, 2010)
Impairment
Refers to a problem with a structure or organ of the body.
HANDICAPPED
Refers to the disadvantage of an individual with a physical or mental impairment resulting in a handicap.
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Refers to the many ways of transferring thought from oneperson to another through the commonly used media of speech, written words, or bodily gestures.
Family Model
Regional organizing model: principal emphasis on extended family members as both investors and principal beneficiaries based on confucianism- Related Chinese cultural characteristics: 5 cardinal virtues: filial piety, absolute loyalty, strict observance of seniority, mutual trust 1 Guanxi: strong personal relationship with continual exchange of favors face: dignity, prestige rank & harmony 2 Flat informal structure, centralized top-down (human orientation, collectivism, high power distance) 3 Relationship based (collectivism, universalism) 4 Importance of guanxi-government (reliance on implicit social rules & lack of stable legal environment) 5 Family management (harmony) 6 Business as a property and revenue for family (collectivism, ingroup)
Work hardening
Rehab real/simulared work activities designed to restore physical function
Bundled reimbursement
Reimbursement of health care providers according to expected cost for a clinical episode of care in one single payment for all services performed for that episode of care.
GLOBE project basic idea
Relationship between culture and succesful leadership
Medicare Select
Requires use of specific providers form of managed care Provides same 12 basic programs as Medigap, but premiums usually lower because patients have less flexibility
work conditioning
Restore function so client can return to work under direction of PT 2-4 times a week
Hospital risk management departments
Role is to anticipate potential malpractice claims
ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING (ADLS)
Routine activities an individual tends to do every day for self-care and normal living. These include eating, bathing, grooming, dressing, toileting, transferring (such as walking, bed to chair) and continence. Assessment of an individual's ability to perform these ADLs is important for determining an individual's ability, independence, disability or limitations. This assessment determines the type of long-term care and benefit coverage the individual needs. care may include placement in a nursing home, skilled care facility or home care services.Benefit coverage may include Medicare, Medicaid or long-term care insurance.
Health coaching
Secondary prevention; already suffering from chronic didease (ie. disease management)
CQI
See Continuous Quality Improvement.
FIM INSTRUMENT
See Functional Independence Measure (FIM).
HHRG
See Home Health Resource Group
ICD-9-CM
See International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision,Clinical Modification
CARE SETTING
See also practice setting, level of care. A place across the continuum of health and human services where a client may receive healthcare services dependent on need. Care settings vary based on intensity and complexity of the services provided to clients; that is, from least complex (e.g., prevention and wellness) to most complex (e.g., acute and critical care services).
HEALTH POLICY
See also public policy. The course of action to address a healthcare issue of concern by the community at large or specific group(s) within the community. This process involves the interplay of numerous individuals and interest groups collaborating to influence health policymakers to act in a particular way.
EPO
See exclusive provider organization.
FCE
See functional capacity evaluation.
IDS
See integrated delivery system.
Composite view of self
Self concept Collection of beliefs, preferences, opinion, attitudes of oneself in an organized manner
honor culture
Self worth: internal and external, socially claimed, dynamic Power and status: hierarchical, dynamic, contested Sensitivity and response to insults: high, DIY Confrontation style: direct and indirect, expressive Reconciliation, warmth: short-term irrationality, hospitality, exceed expectations of close circle
dignity culture
Self worth: mostly internal, self reliant, stable Power and status: egalitarian, dynamic Sensitivity and response to insults: low, ignore, refer to rule of law Confrontation style: direct, rational (cost/benefit) Reconciliation, warmth: rational, express positivity
Viatical Settlement
Selling of one's life in insurance policy to a 3rd party before one's death. Policy holder benefits rather than beneficiaries. Usually sold 40-90% face value depending on life expectancy (< time = > $) Life expectancy is less than 5 years Sale of life insurance policy by policy owner BEFORE the policy matures
Ergonomic studies of workstation
Serve to Breyer fit equipment to the employees
EFFECTIVENESS OF CARE
Services that are of proven value and have no significant tradeoffs- the benefits so far outweigh the risks that all patients with a specific medical condition should receive them. The extent to which care is provided correctly (i.e., to meet the client's needs, improve quality of care, and resolve the client's problems), given the current state of knowledge, and the desired outcome is achieved.
State health exchange
Shared group insurance for individuals and small businesses
Face culture
Sociological concept linked to the dignity and prestige that a person has in terms of their social relationships- more meaning within the context of Chinese culture
CATASTROPHIC CASE MANAGEMENT
Specialized and intricate Case Management services for individuals with complex and life-altering conditions (e.g., severe injury, multiple comorbidities, and permanent disabilities). Often includes a full spectrum of services for the individual or worker with a catastrophic injury or illness to assist the individual to secure optimal care and achieve full recovery.
Broker model
Standard model of Case Management, designed to identify needs of the client in one or two contact & assess to identify needs and resources.
Culturally mandated protocols
Standards of behaviors used by people to show respect to one another and other cultures. Includes appropriate topics for discussion, messaging formatting, conversational formalities.
Surgical site infections are most commonly cause by
Staphylococcus aureus Enterococcus spp S epidermidis
Maximum medical improvement
States further treatment will not substantively change the medical outcome.
Decisional Managerial Roles (Mintzberg)
States that making decisions is the most crucial part of any managerial activity. 4 roles- entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator
resocialized, alienated, proactive
Steers, 3 coping strategies for returning expatriates
Adaptation
Strategy for work in diverse groups to change process to suit different conditions-IE: conflict from decision making, misunderstanding from communicative differences. Team members attribute a challenge to culture and not to personality, higher-level managers not there and team members must be aware it takes time to implement changes.
Exit
Strategy for work in diverse groups: 1. team member cannot adjust to the challenge, unable to continue 2. team is permanent rather than temporary, emotions beyond point of intervention, too much face lost 3. talent and training costs are lost
Methadone
Strong opioid agonist used for the treatment of heroin addiction
Al-Anon
Support for ALL family members of person with alcoholism
COMMUNITY-BASED PROGRAMS
Support programs which are located in a community environment, as opposed to an institutional setting.
CARE COORDINATION HUB:
System of delivering integrated healthcare services to clients with special emphasis on collaboration, coordination and communication among multiple healthcare providers, care settings and agencies in an attempt to ensure client's safety and the provision of quality, cost-effective case management services.
Delphi Technique
Systematic Method of group decision-making and forecasting by obtaining professionals opinions for quality indicators. Uses rounds (series of questionnaires)
Health literacy
The ability to obtain, communicate, process, and understand and make basic health information. Signs that a patient may have low health literacy include making statements that another family member handles their medications, or deferring questions about their health history to a family member. Asking the client questions such as "Are you confident filling out medical forms by yourself?" and "How well do you understand your medical conditions?" are ways that the case manager assess for a patients health literacy
EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
The ability to sense, understand, and effectively apply the power and acumen of emotions as a source of energy, information, connection, and influence. It also is the ability to motivate oneself and persist in the face of frustration; control impulse; regulate one's mood; and keep distress from swamping the ability to think, empathize, and hope.
EXTERNAL BENCHMARKING
The act of comparing or evaluating the current performance of an organization or program against externally available data, standards, performance of competitors, national databases, or ideal practices.
ADVOCACY
The act of recommending, pleading the cause of another; to speak or write in favor of. (CMSA Standards of Practice, 2010, p 24). Used to achieve the best outcome for the client, provider, and payer.
HANDOFF
The act or an instance of passing something or the control of it from one person or agency to another. In healthcare context, handoff is passing of accountability and responsibility for a client's care from one clinician to another within a care setting or across care settings. This act is especially necessary during a transitions of care situation.
Benefits
The amount payable by the insurance company to a claimant or beneficiary under claimant's specific coverage as stipulated in the agreed upon health plan
AUTHORIZATION
The approval of client care services, admission, or length of stay by a health benefit plan (e.g., HMO, PPO) based on information provided by the healthcare provider.
CERTIFICATION
The approval of client care services, admission, or length of stay by a health benefit plan (e.g., HMO, PPO) based on information provided by the healthcare provider
Ethnographic fallacies
The assumption that we can make inferences about society based on individuals- 3 Types 1) Behavior-ethnography cannot be reduced to behavior 2) Idealist-cultural analysis does not aim for mental schemes 3) Cognitivist-culture is not a monolithic logical cognitive structure to be analyzed
DEATH BENEFIT
The benefit payable to eligible dependent(s) of the worker(i.e., spouse, children) whose occupational disease or on-the-job injury has resulted in the worker's death. This benefit may be payable at the rate of two-thirds of the deceased worker's average weekly wage at the time of the accident, not to exceed the maximum allowed under the law for all eligible dependents.
ALGORITHM
The chronological delineation of the steps in, or activities of, client care to be applied in the care of clients as they relate to specific conditions/situations.
DISENGAGEMENT
The closing of a case is a process of gradual or sudden withdrawal of services, as the situation indicates, on a planned basis.
CASE MANAGEMENT PROCESS
The context in which case managers provide health and human services to clients and their support systems. The process consists of several steps or sub- processes that are iterative, cyclical and recursive rather than linear in nature and applied until the client's needs and interests are met. The steps include screening, assessing, stratifying risk, planning, implementing, following-up, transitioning, post-transitioning communication, and evaluating outcomes. The process, with special intervention by case managers, work together with clients and their support systems to evaluate and understand the care options available to the clients; identify what is best to meet their needs; and institute action to achieve their goals and meet their interests and expectations.
CONTINUUM OF CARE
The continuum of care matches ongoing needs of the individuals being served by the case management process with the appropriate level and type of health, medical, financial, legal and psychosocial care for services within a setting or across multiple settings. 5 factors: 1. Well-being/independence 2. Risk factors/behaviors 3. Clinical DX 4. treatment 5. Outcome
CARE COORDINATION
The deliberate organization of patient care activities between two or more participants (including the patient) involved in patient's care to facilitate the appropriate delivery of health care services.
ELIGIBILITY
The determination that an individual has met requirements to obtain benefits under a specific health plan contract.
ADAPTIVE BEHAVIOR
The effectiveness and degree to which an individual meets standards of selfsufficiency and social responsibility for his/her age-related cultural group.
FIDELITY
The ethical principle that directs people to keep commitments or promises. Loyalty, faithfulness
Adherence
The extent to which a persons behavior corresponds w/agreed recommendations. Taking medications, following diet, exercising, or executing lifestyle changes.
EFFICIENCY OF CARE
The extent to which maximum care is provided to meet the desired effects/outcomes to improve quality of care and prevent the use of unnecessary resources.
EVALUATING OUTCOMES
The final step of the case management process, which is achieved by evaluating the results and consequences of the case management services provided to clients and their support systems.
APPEAL (CARE PROVISION RELATED)
The formal process or request to reconsider a decision made not to approve an admission or healthcare services, reimbursement for services rendered, or a client's request for postponing the discharge date and extending the length of stay.
HANDICAP
The functional disadvantage and limitation of potentials based on a physical or mental impairment or disability that substantially limits or prevents the fulfillment of one or more major life activities, otherwise considered normal for that individual based on age, sex, and social and cultural factors, such as caring for one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing, learning, working, etc. Handicap is a classification of role reduction resulting from circumstances that place an impaired or disabled person at a disadvantage compared to other persons.
CULTURE
The historical thoughts, communications, actions, customs, beliefs, values, and institutions of racial, ethnic, religious, or social groups regarded collectively as a group of people passed on by to the next generation.
Act of Omission
The intentional or unintentional neglect to perform an act or fulfill a duty that has been agreed on or required by law, where there is a duty to an individual or the public to act
COMPETENCE
The mental ability and capacity to make decisions, accomplish actions, and perform tasks that another person of similar background and training, or any human being, would bereasonably expected to perform adequately.
In regard to the psychosocial aspects of chronic illness and disability it is important for the case manager to know:
The more self-efficacy a client has, the more likely he or she will persevere when obstacles arise.
DIAGNOSTIC AND STATISTICAL MANUAL OF MENTAL DISORDERS, 5TH EDITION (DSM-5)
The most recent edition of the American Psychiatric Association's manual that is used by clinicians and researchers to diagnose and classify mental disorders (American Psychiatric Association, 2013).
Length of stay
The number of days a person stays in a healthcare facility.
ENROLLMENT
The number of members in an HMO. The process by which a health plan signs up individuals or groups of subscribers.
Burden of proof
The obligation of a party in a dispute to provide sufficient warrant for their position or prove that a change from current policy is necessary. May pass from party to party.
AFFECT
The observable emotional condition of an individual at any given time.
COMPLAINANT
The party who files a complaint or on whose behalf a complaint is filed. A client, a member of the client's support system, an employer, a payor representative, or another case manager may file a complaint with CCMC.
DEFENDANT
The person against whom an action is brought to court because of alleged responsibility for violating one or more of the plaintiff's legally protected interests.
EFFICACY OF CARE
The potential, capacity or capability to produce the desiredeffect or outcome, as already shown, e.g. through scientific research (evidence-based) findings.
HABILITATION
The process by which a person with developmental disabilities is assisted in acquiring and maintaining life skills to: (1) cope more effectively with personal and developmental demands; and (2) to increase the level of physical, mental, vocational and social ability through services. Persons with developmental disabilities include anyone whose development has been delayed, interrupted or stopped/fixed by injury or disease after an initial period of normal development, as well as those with congenital condition.
DISCOVERY
The process by which one party to a civil suit can find out about matters that are relevant to his/her case, including information about what evidence the other side has, what witnesses will be called upon, and so on. Discovery devices for obtaining testimony, requests for documents or other tangibles, or requests for physical or mental examinations.
DISCHARGE PLANNING
The process of assessing the client's needs of care after discharge from a healthcare facility and ensuring that the necessary services are in place before discharge. This process ensures a client's timely, appropriate, and safe discharge to the next level of care or setting including appropriate use of resources necessary for ongoing care.
EDUCATION
The process of assisting clients and their support systems to learn to behave in a manner conducive to the promotion, maintenance, or restoration of health. It entails formal and/or informal learning experiences that provide clients/support systems the opportunity to acquire information and skills needed to make quality health decisions, improve health literacy, and develop lifestyle behaviors that are conducive to health and wellness.
ASSESSING
The process of collecting in-depth information about a client and her/his support system in order to identify the needs and decide upon the best case management services to address these needs. Similar to screening, however to a greater depth.
ASSESSMENT
The process of collecting in-depth information about a person's situation and functioning to identify individual needs in order to develop a comprehensive case management plan that will address those needs. In addition to direct client contact, information should be gathered from other relevant sources (patient/ client, professional caregivers, non-professional caregivers, employers, health records, educational/military records, etc.).
EXPERIENCE RATING
The process of determining the premium rate for a group risk, wholly or partially on the basis of that group's experience.
CASE-BASED REVIEW
The process of evaluating the quality and appropriateness of care based on the review of individual medical records to determine whether the care delivered is acceptable. It is performed by healthcare professionals assigned by the hospital or an outside agency (e.g., Peer Review Organization [PRO]).
IMPLEMENTATION
The process of executing specific case management activities and/or interventions that will lead to accomplishing the goals set forth in the case management plan.
COORDINATION
The process of organizing, securing, integrating, and modifying the resources necessary to accomplish the goals set forth in the case management plan.
McDonaldization theory
The process of rationalization, taken to extreme levels, substituting logically consistent rules for traditional rules by breaking them down into the most basic tasks to find the single most efficient method for completing each task. 4 components- efficiency, calculability, predictability, control (Ritzer, cultural convergence theory)
DISENROLLMENT
The process of terminating healthcare insurance coverage for an enrollee/insured.
Risk Stratification
The process to see what level of risk a person might have when exercising. Factors include: Known diseases Sign or symptoms Cardiovascular risk factors Is person low, moderate, high risk
DELEGATION
The process whereby an organization permits another entity to perform functions and assume responsibilities on behalf of the organization, while the organization retains final authority to provide oversight to the delegate.
EVALUATION
The process, repeated at appropriate intervals, of determining and documenting the case management plan's effectiveness in reaching desired outcomes and goals. This might lead to a modification or change in the case management plan in its entirety or in any of its component parts.(CCMC Certification Guide, p 7)
Cultural Retooling
The psychological process of adaptation to another culture, the process of incorporating new behaviors into ones cultural repertoire. 2 forms of this: instrumental integrative
return on investment
The ration of care costs to savings
Dignity
The right of a person to be values and respected for their own sake and to be treated ethically. trust: high mindset: analytical/linear negative emotions: suppress dominant strategy: Q&A
ERGONOMICS (OR HUMAN FACTORS)
The scientific discipline concerned with the understanding of interactions among humans and other elements of a system. Applies theory, principles, data and methods to environmental design (including work environments) in order to optimize human well-being and overall system performance.
Episodes of Care
The set of services provided to treat a clinical condition or procedure, value based bundle payment is a single payment for treating a patient with a specific medical condition across the continuum of care. Pays predetermined amount in lump sum-Bundled/case rate -Prospective payment system PPS
DIFFUSION OF INNOVATION
The spread of new technologies, ideas, or ways of doing things in a particular culture. It is the process of communicating change for the purpose of increasing the rate of its adoption and acceptance.
ASSURANCE/INSURANCE
The spreading of risk among many, among whom few are likely to suffer loss. The terms are generally accepted as synonymous. The term assurance is used more commonly in Canada and Great Britain.
IMPLEMENTING
The step in the case management process during which case managers execute specific case management activities and/or interventions to accomplish goals set forth in the case management plan of care and during the planning step.
FOLLOWING-UP
The step of the case management process when case managers review, evaluate, monitor and reassess the client's health condition, needs, ability for self-care, knowledge of health condition and case management plan of care, outcomes of the implemented treatments and interventions, and continued appropriateness of the plan of care.
CASE MIX INDEX (CMI)
The sum of relative weights assigned to a DRG of all patients/cases seen during a 1-year period in an organization, divided by the number of cases hospitalized and treated during the same year. CMI is used in determining the allocation of resources to care for and/or treat the patients in that group.
BENEFIT PACKAGE
The sum of services for which a health plan, government agency, or employer contracts to provide. In addition to basic physician and hospital services, some plans also cover prescriptions, dental, and vision care.
Surgical Site Infections are most commonly found in
The superficial incision and are most commonly caused by bacteria on patient skin
DEPOSITION
The testimony of a witness taken upon interrogatories not in open court, but in pursuance of a commission to take testimony issued by a court, or under a general law on the subject, and reduced to writing and duly authenticated, and intended to be used upon the trial of an action in court.
CASELOAD
The total number of clients followed by a case manager at any point in time
EXCHANGE VALUE
The tradability of a good or service and its associated price(i.e., what it is traded or exchanged for). Most often, exchange value is expressed using money (Smith, 2011).
HEALTHCARE HOME
The usual setting or level of care the client/support system selects to use on a routine basis to receive healthcare services such as a large or small medical group, a single practitioner, a community health center, or a hospital outpatient clinic. This is the central point for primary clinician caring for the client to coordinate necessary care and services based on the client's needs and preferences and among various care settings and providers.
CLIENT SOURCE
The way a case manager comes in contact with a client to provide case management services, usually taking place either by a referral from another healthcare provider, the client or a member of the client's support system. In some case management programs, client source may be based on screening of the client during a healthcare encounter; in other organizations it is only based on a referral.
CLINICAL REVIEW CRITERIA
The written screens, decision rules, medical protocols, orguidelines used to evaluate medical necessity, appropriateness, and level of care.
COGNITIVE REHABILITATION
Therapy programs which aid persons in managing specific problems in perception, memory, thinking and problem- solving. Skills are practices and strategies are taught to help improve function and/or compensate for remaining deficits.
geertz definition of culture
Thick description: does not assume functionality is historical allows internal paradox aims to uncover the emic self-understanding emphasizes language as vehicle of self-understanding Important: does not focus on our projections emphasizes symbols, stories
COMMUNITY SKILLS
Those abilities needed to function independently in thecommunity. They may include telephone skills, money management, pedestrian skills, use of public transportation, meal planning and cooking.
Nonconformance costs
Those related to errors, failures or defects (ex: malpractice, infections, staff shortages, service duplication
Conformance Costs
Those related to preventing errors (like monitoring and evaluation)
Ambiguity, interference, lack of equivalence
Three major constraints to successful knowledge transfer and translation
HIPAA
Title I guarantees health insurance access portability and renewal, prohibits discrimination based on health status
Agency for HC Research and Quality (AHRQ)
To produce evidence to make health care safer, higher quality, more accessible, equitable, and affordable, and to work within the US Department of Health and Human Services and with other parnets to make sure that the evidence is understood and used appropriately. Publishes national clinical practice guidelines.
Milliman care guidelines
Took to ensure client is receiving correct level of service
American Nurses Association (ANA) staffing decisions
Tool developed to serve as guideline for determining RN staffing solutions, based on the needs of patients and qualifications of staff to allow RN to deliver safe, quality care at every practice level and setting. Acuity levels are important to balancing caseloads
FEE-FOR-SERVICE (FFS)
Traditional insurance billing method where providers are paid for each service performed, as opposed to capitation. Fee schedules are an example of fee-for-service.
TRICARE
U.S. government health insurance plan for all military personnel
Quality Assurance
Use of activities and programs ensuring quality of patient care
OASIS: prospective assessment
Used by HH agencies
BODY OF KNOWLEDGE (BOK)
Widely recognized information, standards, methods, tools, and practices about a specific field.
Collaboration
Working together to achieve better results
DISCLOSURE
Written authorization regarding the sharing of a client's information with other parties or in proceedings such as a complaint of an alleged ethical violation, which otherwise parties have no business being aware of such information.
Geriatric depression scale (GDS)
a 30 item self-report assessment used to identify depression in the elderly
a
a PCP that manages all referrals for speciality care and other services
patient centered medical home
a care delivery model whereby patient treatment is coordinated through their primary care physician to ensure they receive the necessary care when and where they need it, in a manner they can understand (Model of care)
Point of Service (POS)
a combination of a PPO and HMO plan using a contracted network of providers and PCP as Gate Keeper to control referrals. out-of-network services incur higher deductible-I'm network providers are lower cost
Predictive Modeling
a data-mining technique used to predict future behavior and anticipate the consequences of change
Orthosis
a device used to support a weak or ineffective joint or muscle to restore function
Social Security disability insurance(SSDI)
a federal program that provides supplemental income to people who have employment restrictions due to disability
code of ethics
a formal statement of ethical principles and rules of conduct; CM's primary obligation- the client
vocational rehabilitation
a government service that provides training, career counseling, and job placement (Diverse Options)
global team
a group of heterogeneous employees from two or more countries (or companies) who work together to coordinate, develop or manage some aspect of a firm's global operations. Advantages: more creative and innovative ideas and solutions more comprehensive, realistic and acceptable sol. better understanding of culturally diverse markets effective with customers of different cultures Disadvantages: less close-knit groups more time needed to reach consensus culturally induced conflicts and misunderstandings
Medicaaid
a joint federal and state program that provides basic health insurance for persons with disabilities for or who received certain government benefits(ssi)
Medicaid
a joint federal and state program that provides basic health insurance for persons with disabilities for or who received certain government benefits(ssi)
Medical durable power of attorney
a legal document that names a surrogate decision-maker in the event the patient is unable to make decisions
Independent Practice Association (IPA) model
a legal entity(private practice) sponsored by physicians that contracts with HMO : bound by terms of contract
Outcome and Assessment information set OASIS
a nursing assessment instrument completed by Home Health agencies at the time the patient has entered for Home Health Services score determines Home Health Resource Group (HHRG)
Ticket to work program
a program that helps people with disabilities get back to work
Coinsurance
a provision under which both the insured and the insurer share the covered losses, cost-sharing
Neuropsychologist
a psychologist who studies how dysfunctions of the brain affect behaviors
I-QOL
a self-report instrument containing 22 items covering 3 domains of quality of life
benefit period
a specified amount of time during which benefits will be paid.
neoliberalism
a theory of political economic practices that proposes that human well-being can best be advanced by liberating individual entrepreneurial freedoms and skills within an institutional framework characterized by strong private property rights, free markets and free trade. The role of the state is to create and preserve an institutional framework appropriate to such practices" Ideology of pragmatists
Risk stratification
a tool for identifying and predicting which patients are high risk
Health risk assessment (HRA)
a tool to assess a patient's health status, risk of negative health outcomes, and readiness to change behaviors
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
a well-researched, clinical questionnaire used to assess personality and psychological problems
unskilled
a worker that has not been trained or educated to do a specific type of job
Tort Liability
a wrongful act for which damages can be sought by the injured party
emic
accounts, descriptions expressed in terms of the conceptual schemes and categories regarded as meaningful and appropriate by the native members of a culture
Neglect
active or passive failure to provide the basic care supervision or services necessary to avoid physical or emotional harm
Goal of palliative care
adequate pain management relief of symptoms support patient and caregivers or family Psychosocial, spiritual, bereavement support
Medicare admission criteria for Inpatient Rehab
admitting Dx, recent loss of ADL, MD DX with potential Improvement, if previously in rehab has to have occurrence that shows pt can reestablish function
Medicare part C
allows participants to choose a Medicare Advantage plan, HMO type coverage
Newborns and Mothers Health Protection Act of 1996 (NMHPA)
an amendment to title VII of Civil Rights Act of 1964, that cover private/public hospitals length of stay following childbirth, pregnancy must be treated same as other employee related iilnesses
Self-insured
an employer that meets the state legal and financial requirements to assume all of its health care costs for its employees
CASE RESERVE
an estimate of the amount set aside by insurance companies to pay policyholders who have filed or are expected to file legitimate claims on their policies.
communication
an interactive process between senders and receivers in which senders encode their messages into a medium then transmit them to receivers, who in turn, decode the message, interpret them and respond appropriately
Reverse mortgage
an option for a patient who is a homeowner and 62 years of older to borrow against for health care needs
Third Party Administrator (TPA)
an organization separate from the insurer that handles administrative functions such as review claims & UR
Healthcare Maintenance Organization HMO
an organization that provides or arranges for coverage of health services for fixed fee
Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine (REALM)
assesses the ability of adult pt to read medical words& lay terms for illnesses & body parts
PHQ-9
assessment that evaluates degree of depression
Minimum Data Set (MDS)
assessment to used in SNF to place patients in RUG to determine reimbursement
Rancho Los Amigos
assessment to used to assess cognitive functioning after a traumatic brain injury
three faces of power
based on Schattschneider (Some issues are organized into human interaction, others are not) 3 faces of power: Overt power: decide an issue in one's favor Covert power: set agenda in favor of certain issues Ideological power: prevent issues from ever arising
Medicare Part A
basically covers inpatient hospital expenses for patients who meet certain conditions
Medicare benefit period
begins on admission, ends 60 days after discharge from inpatient status
Transtheoretical Model
behavioral model that describes stages of readiness for change
particularism
belief that what is right is in the eye of the beholder, situation dependent, and that people in different cultures may have different beliefs about it truth is subjective society can tolerate ambiguity right or wrong determined by circumstances and relationships, not just religion, rules and laws
sequential approach
both parties go through a proposed contract item by item and get agreement on each item sequentially
holistic approach
both parties work their way through the entire proposed agreement, but do not agree to anything until they have completed their review, discussion in its entirety
Mental Status Exam
broad preliminary assessment of behavior and mental state
Hospital length of stay
calculated in days, for newborn begins at the time of the delivery or last time of delivery in the event of multiple births. if the delivery occurs outside ohospital begins at time mother or newborn is admitted in hospital
Injured Workers
can change provider one time without prior approval from insurance company
Medical Home model
care focus on primary provider care and relationship between patient, family, and physician
Pallative care
care for seriously ill persons focused on providing relief from symptoms
Palliative care is
care that provides comfort rather than curative treatment
CMP
case management plan
CMI
case mix index
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
cash assistance to people who are poor and older, or poor with disabilities
Home Health Agencies
charge hourly, avg $25 /hr
Reportable events requiring full CM services
child/elder abuse violent crime domestic violence
wang and huang
chinese "relationship" concept does not fit fit hofstede's individuality dimension chinese culture is not collectivistic emphasis on reciprocity, with individual agency "Self" is not independent but socially interdependent (cultivated) Exam: Able to bridge incommensurability through focusing on the differences between Western and Confucian rule-systems on placing individuals in society
moral relativism
claims that there are no absolute moral facts, on any topic or issue more than one position can be morally correct, depending on the situation or cultural environment. 2 forms: descriptive: people's moral beliefs differ from culture to culture normative: not just convictions but moral facts themselves can differ from culture to culture Challenges to this: no culture can be wrong external criticism is illegitimate limits the potential for moral progress
moral absolutism
claims that there are some moral facts in the world that are universally and indisputably true, irrespective of culture Challenges to this: problem of definition and application: we would need absolute knowledge (this would eliminate moral problems) value conflict (idea of a supreme good denies the possibility of moral conflict)
Resource utilization groups (RUGs)
classifiies SNF patients into 7 major hierarchies and 44 groups, based on MDS for reimbursement
requirements to achieve global team synergy
clear, engaging purpose performance goals and measures people results driven processes preparation and practice
Test of Functional Health literacy assessment (TOFHLA)
complex assessment consists of two parts (numbers/documents & reading comprehension) to assess health literacy
a
condition that interferes with a person's ability to function normally
Informed Consent
consent given by patient, next of kin, legal guardian for services
Milliman care guidelines
considered general recovery guidelines
Palliative care program
constant review of pt needs and tx, while noting their religious beliefs, cultures & values
Outcome and Assessment Information Set (OASIS)
contains data items developed for measuring patient outcomes for the purpose of performance Improvement in home healthcare, required for all Medicaid and Medicare beneficiaries
Soft savings
cost savings that can't be measured, ex: avoidance of hospital readmission
chronic care model
created to address deficiencies in chronic care, the Aging population and patients with chronic conditions. Can be applied to many chronic conditions in many healthcare settings
language and linguistic structures, selective participation, cognitive evaluation, cultural logic
culturally mediated cognitions (cultural screens)
Per diem
daily rate allowance for insurance payment to a faciltiy
Non-maleficence
deals with the practitioner (do no harm)
Goal of Medication Reconciliation
decrease med errors, omissions, duplication of drugs, drug interactions, & dosing errors
Hall
descriptive etic model of cultural dimensions: context (high vs low) space (center of power vs center of community) time (monochronic vs polychronic)
trompenaars
descriptive etic model of cultural dimensions: Layers: explicit culture, norms and values, implicit assumptions Dimensions: universalism vs particularism individualism vs collectivism specific vs diffuse neutral vs affective achievement vs ascription time perspective relationship with the environment
hofstede
descriptive etic model of cultural dimensions: power distance uncertainty avoidance individualism vs collectivism masculinity vs femininity time orientation indulgence vs restraint
schwartz
descriptive model conservatism vs autonomy hierarchy vs egalitarianism mastery vs harmony
a
descriptive model power distance, uncertainty avoidance, humane or.m institutional collectivism, in group collectivism, assertiveness, gender, future or., performance or.
steers
descriptive model power: hierarchical vs egalitarian social relationship: individualist vs collectivist environmental: master vs harmony time: monochronic vs polychronic uncertainty & social control: universalistic vs particularistic
individual
difference factors for expatriate success: Positive: cultural intelligence self-efficacy language ability previous international experience extraversion agreeableness Negative: neuroticism -
direct context
difference factors for expatriate success: Positive: job factors (role discretion and clarity) Negative: job factor (role conflict) cultural distance culture novelty
SSI supplemental security income eligibility
disabled, blind, retirement age
institutional facts
distinctive features of these facts (opposed to natural or social facts) are: they have a subjective ontology: must be collectively recognized they are functional they are symbolic: status is irrespective of their physical structure they create deontic powers (rights, duties) which have to be collectively recognized & accepted
functional, historical
edgar schein: "a pattern of shared basic assumptions that a group has learned as it solved its problems of external adaptation and internal integration...". Type of definition (2)? artifacts -> values -> assumptions
EHR
electronic health record
Inpatient Rehabilitation hospital
eligibility: tolerate 3 hours of therapy/day 5-7 days a week, require skilled service (pt, pt, st, etc) Intense therapy
Inpatient Rehabilitation
eligibility: tolerate 3 hours of therapy/day, require skilled service
respondant superior
employer is responsible for actions of employees
Chronic subacute
est stay 60-90 days 3-5 hours nursing services/day
Supremacy of values
feeling that one's own values reign supreme over all those involved
Rotary International
first focuses on six areas for grants:, two focus on Health disease and prevention( HIV/AIDs) maternal and child health.
Long Term Acute Care Hospital (LTAC)
focus on patients who require stay more than 25 days and treatment of serious conditions: may improve to go home
chronic care model
focused on proactive evidenced based, population based, & patient-centered care for patients with chronic medical conditions
LEAN approach (quality improvement technique)
focused on what's valuable to customers, pt, payers, providers, regulatory bodies
Public Health nursing model of care
focuses on an entire population that has similar health issues
Medical-social model of CM
focuses on needs of long-term care patients combine medical services with social services
Key component of Case Managers job
follow-up and monitoring
Medicare hospice benefit covers inpatient respite care...
for up to 5 consecutive days short-term relief to primacy caregiver
instrumental
form of cultural retooling: necessitating, suppressing transforms experienced emotions, but not experienced psychological states could feel inauthentic (as emotions suppressed)
integrative
form of cultural retooling: self-licensing, personalizing (more adaptive) transforms psychological states and experienced emotions
Retrospective review
form of medical records review that is conducted after the patient is discharged
Wickline vs. State of California
found the CM's are liable for damage if their referral is careless and leads to patient harm
mental
geert hofstede: "the collective programming of the mind that distinguishes one group or category of people from others". Type of definition (1)? [practices] symbols -> heroes -> rituals -> values
Contemplation stage
getting ready to change possibly within 6 months
globalists
globalization is real and tangible, new global structure with new rules Positive _______: stretched social relations improving quality of life, raise living standards, multicultural understanding, development of new technologies Pessimistic _______: world becomes less diverse and more homogenous, dominance of the global north, uneven development, pollution
Home Health Care
health care services provided in a patient's home, to qualify patient must be homebound
motivational interviewing
helps clients explore and resolve ambivalence and find the best possible solution
60% rule for Inpatient rehab facilities (IRF)
helps define IRF by requiring 60% of admissions have one of 13 qualifying medical conditions, tracked for the fiscal year
Descriptive Culture Models
hofstede, hall, steers, aslani, GLOBE, trompenaars, schwartz
Reintegration plan for patient with TBI should include
housing financial support job training family support medical support assistive devices environmental modifications safety follow up
OSHA
in the Department of Labor to maintain a safe and healthy work environment
Red Flag
indicator that the case is not routine and could benefit from a case manager: risk indicator
SSDI eligibility requires
individual must be unable to perform the work they previously did and the disability must be expected to last at least one year or result in death
monitor, disseminator, spokesperson
informational managerial roles (Mintzberg)
Maximum Medical aMMI
injured worker is at level physician determines further treatment will not change outcome
long term disability
insurance issue to an employee group or individual to replace a portion of an individual's income lost as a result of serious prolong illness during the normal work career
OASDI: Eligibility for Retirement
insurance program for Oasis virus and disability Center of Social Security Act
stop loss
insurance that is brought by insurers to limit loss for Catastrophic, unpredictable incidents
Malpractice Insurance
insurance to cover liability assumed during practice
Work hardening
intensive rehab offered 8 hrs a day for 5 days a week Intense structured program focused on specific tasks, designed to return worker to full employment Goals: increased confidence, control of manifestation of condition, increased work tolerance and rate Attainment of a level of competence that allows a client to return to work
liaison, leader, figurehead
interpersonal managerial roles (Mintzberg)
Handoffs
involves three types of transfers from one provider to another, one setting to another, or one level of care to another
Managed Care
is a Cost Containment Healthcare System overseen by an organization other than the physician or patient
TRICARE
is a U.S. government health insurance plan for active military personnel, national guard, reserves, retirees, their families and some former spouse's.
predictive modeling
is a data-mining technique used to predict future behavior and anticipate the consequences of change Predict outcomes for individual patients, identify risk early Mathematical process that quantifies a clients likely future health costs compared to others in the population
JCAHO stands for:
joint commission on accreditation of health care organizations
normative approach
leadership approach: leader as a global manager (global mindset, cultural intelligence)
contingency approach
leadership approach: leader as a local or regional manager (GLOBE project) seems most suited "When in Rome..."
universal approach
leadership approach: leader as a universal leader (mainly: charismatic or transformational leadership traits) Also: trustworthiness, integrity, visionary, inspirational, motivational, communicative, team builder
Sub-acute Care
level of care where patient doesn't require hospital care but more intensive than SNF services
Aggregate Limits
limits the amount that can be paid in a policy period/year, form of stop-loss
Long-term care facilities
mainly provide assistance and care for elderly patients, usually called residents
Reasonable Accommodation
make an existing facility accessible and usable for individuals with disabilities; can include job adaptation for individuals
Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
measures level of coma in the acute phase of an injury
a
measures level of coma in the acute phase of an injury
Concurrent review
method of reviewing patient care and services during a hospital stay to validate care necessity
Magnuson Model
model to determine the patient intensity or Acuity levels.
Medication reconciliation
must be completed to avoid or prevent polypharmacy
Persons vulnerable for pitfalls in transitions of care
non English-speaking, different cultural backgrounds, children with special needs, frail elderly person, cognitive impairments, complex conditions, disabilities, low-income
Uilization Review Accreditation Commission (URAC)
non-profit organization that provides accreditation to Health Care organizations
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF)
offers 24-hour skilled nursing and personal care also Rehab Services
Healthcare reimbursement
one major category of knowledge necessary for case manager
National Quality Forum (NQF)
organization that's set standards used to measure public report Healthcare quality
social constructionism
paradigm in social science: interpretive (hermeneutic) model, largely qualitative, social reality is not objective but intersubjective
positivism
paradigm in social science: preferably quantitative, natural and social reality are ruled by causal laws, social science must follow example of natural sciences
competitive bargaining
part of competitive negotiation, win-lose game Preparation: identify economic benefits and defense Relationship-building: weakness in opponent, reveal little Information exchange & 1st offer: little information as possible, explicit, hard offer (unrealistic) Persuasion: dirty tricks and pressure Concessions: high initial demands, slowly Agreement: sign only when winning and tight contract
problem solving bargaining
part of problem solving negotiation, win-win game Preparation: define long-term goals, overcome cross-cultural barriers Relationship-building: adapt to culture, separate people from the problems and goals Information exchange & 1st offer: give and demand, accept cultural differences in speed, make reasonable offer Persuasion: seek new and creative options in the interest of both parties Concessions: search for mutually acceptable criteria Agreement: sign when interests are met, adapt to cultural differences in contracts
When medication reconciliation should be done?
patient is moved within a hospital, transfer to another facility, discharge, & at each MD visit
Outlier payment
payment due to unusual variation in the type or amount of medically necessary care
No-fault auto insurance
pays for injury/damages resulting from driving care (coverage varies by state)
Indemnity Plan
pays predetermined payment for loss or damage rather than health care service
Spend down
people spend down assets on medical bills to qualify for medicaid
Medical Battery
performing the wrong medical procedure or performing a procedure without the patient's consent
forms of abuse
physical , emotional /psychological, Financial
Four key Functions of Case Manager
planner , assessor, facilitator , & advocate
Transtheoretical Model of Change
precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance
Stages of Change
precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance, termination
Common complications of SCI
pressure sores UTIs DVT Pulmonary emboli pneumonia automatic dysreflexia
TRICARE for Life
primarily a supplemental insurance with those with Medicare A & B coverage, &eligible for TRICARE in US. Is the primary insurance overseas.
Expatriate
principal management focus: long term face to face presence overseas mode of interaction: largely fact to face- key success factors: deep cultural knowledge of business practices, multilingual skills, understanding global issues- typical cultural challenges: regional myopia, overemphasis on local issues
virtual managers
principal management focus: remote technical management in specialized areas mode of interaction: largely virtual key success factors: modest awareness of cultural differences, multilingual skills useful (not crucial) typical cultural challenges: technological myopia, ignorance of cultural influence on communication
Predictive model
process used by Managed care organizations to identify target high costs/expenditures and services
Quality Improvement
process used to identify and resolve deficiencies and improve care outcomes
American with Disabilities Act
prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in employment, Transportation, public accommodation, communications & governmental activities
American Disabilities Act
prohibits discrimination in employment , accommodatios of people with disabilities
Mental Health Parity Act of 1996
prohibits lifetime or annual dollar limits on Mental Health Care unless same limits apply to medical/surgical tx
home health care
provide care in a patient's home; nursing care, personal care, therapy, etc. person must be home bound to qualify
Primary care physician (PCP)
provider who assumes ongoing responsibility for overall health treatment of a patient
Workers Compensation
provides coverage of injury or illness that occurred while at work or work-related task
Knights of Columbus
provides funding for charitable endeavours with a focus on disabilities
western cultural biases in negotiation
rationality (analytical thought and logic) economic capital, pareto optimality (mastery, individualism, weak social ties) dispositional attributions (individualism) direct information sharing (low context) direct voice (individualism, egalitarianism)
Due diligence
reasonable steps taken by a person in order to avoid negligent action.
Hospice care requires
recertification of Hospice every days 60 days if patient remains alive after 6 months
Prophylactic broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy before and after surgery can
reduce infection by 40-80%
Within the walls (WTW)
refers to activities within the hospital
Beyond the Walls (BTW)
refers to case management in outpatient and Community settings
habitus
refers to learned practices and standards that have become so much part of ourselves that they feel self-evident and natural. Our culturally and socially shaped second nature. Becomes our self.
transitions of care
refers to the movement of patients between locations Healthcare Providers or different levels of care within same facility. Narrow subset of the broader concept of Transitional Care
ideology
refers to the relationship between ideas (whether implicit or explicit, whether dominant or marginal) and social reality (whether true in a narrow epistemological sense or in the sense of lived experience) and the mechanisms through which these ideas are formed.
investor model
regional organizing model: principal emphasis on stockholders and investors as principal beneficiaries Characteristics: mastery-oriented (achievement, mastery, individualism, universalism) powerful-CEOs (individualism, agreement) professional management (universalism, individualism) fluid org. design (looseness, individualism, specificity) low job security (low human orientation, high performance orientation, mastery)
mutual benefit model
regional organizing model: relative balance between stockholders and investors, most employees, local community and public Characteristics: supervisory and management boards (relative moderate individualism, long term orientation) Codetermination (individualism, low power distance) Meister & Technik (mastery, achievement, low power distance)
network model
regional organizing model: sequential emphasis on corporate network, individual company shareholders and permanent employees. Characteristics: Keiretsu: Japanese form of corporate organization, a network of affiliated companies (kaisha), form an alliance for mutual success Seniority & group -based rewards (human orientation, lower performance orientation, ascription, collectivism) Internal financing, Trading company, Weak executives (collectivism, uncertainty avoidance) Lifelong employment (collectivism, long term orientation, human orientation, paternalism)
Claims
request for payment or reparation for a loss covered by insurance contract.
Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act of 1998 (WHCRA)
requires insurance coverage of breast reconstruction following mastectomy
HIPAA Title II
requires written consent and permission from the patient to share information
world is spiky
richard florida: "surprisingly few regions truly matter in today's global economy" Due to: path dependence: current world still reflects traditional colonial powers location paradox: resilience of highly specialized regions (ex: silicon valley) coordination: required by complicated infrastructure states still matter
mental, behavioural
ruth benedict: "the personality of a society as expressed in its habits that distinguishes it form others". Type of definition (2)?
Health Coach
secondary prevention, already has chronic condition, focused on assisting them to attain their own healthcare goals
GUIDELINES
see practice guidelines
Pharmacy Benefit Management (PBM)
services used to control the cost of prescription drugs
Indirect costs
shared costs (ex: infrastructure costs, costs of custodial services)
Integrated delivery system
single group of organizations that provide care across a continuum of settings
Internationalists
skeptical of globalization, disputing evidence of a fundamental shit, emphasizes continuities, majority of economic and social activity is regional
universalism
some people believe that what they hold to be morally right is universally correct and true, and that people who disagree with their beliefs are simply wrong or misguided truth is absolute society requires certainty and predictability right or wrong determined by religion, laws etc.
global manager
someone who works with or through people across national boundaries to accomplish global corporate objectives. 3 categories: expatriates: long-term face-to-face, high cultural embeddedness, low tech dependence, overemphasis on local issues frequent flyers: short-term face-to-face, low-med cultural dependence and tech dependence, overemphasis on global issues virtual managers: low to no cultural embeddedness, high tech dependence, ignorance of impact of cultural differences on the local uses of communication and IT
HIPAA Title IV
specifies conditions for Group Health Plans regarding coverage of persons with pre-existing conditions
HIPAA Title III
standardized is the amount that may be saved per person in pre-tax HSA
State children's health insurance program (SCHIP)
state insurance for low income. uninsured children not eligible for medicaid
structural intervention
strategy for work in diverse groups: team is affected by emotional tensions relating to fluency issues or prejudice, perceived status differences inhibits certain members team or tasks can be subdivided to mix cultures or expertise sub groups can strengthen pre-existing differences, subgroups have to fit back together
managerial intervention
strategy for work in diverse groups: violations of hierarchy have resulted in loss of face, ground rules being absent have caused conflict high levels of emotion, stalemate reached, higher level management is willing and able to intervene team has become overly dependent on manager
mental retardation
subaverage intellectual functioning during developmental period
Reserves
sum of money insurance company or self-insured funds set aside to pay claims cost
Medigap
supplemental insurance plans that help pay expenses not covered by Medicare
Competence
the ability to do something successfully or efficiently, mental capacity
Transitional Care
the actions to assure coordination and continuity of care as patient transfer between different locations or different locations within same facility
normative control
the attempt to elicit and direct required efforts of members by controlling the underlying experiences, thoughts and feelings that guide their actions Most important aspect: identity regulation
context of global managers
the characteristics of the global environment that can limit what managers must do (demands), and what they must not do (constraints). 3 elements of complex environment surrounding a manager's job are identified: cultural environment (beliefs, values) organizational environments (stakeholders, structures) situation contingencies (people, goals, roles)
Comorbidity
the co-occurrence of two or more disorders in a single individual
Verocity
the duty to present information honestly and truthfully
transformationalists
the form of global social relations does not display a significant shift, the characteristics are distinctive. Autonomy of nation states is constrained, but globalization is not inevitable
Pooling risk
the grouping of high risk beneficiaries
Levels of Care
the intensity of effort required to diagnose, treat, preserve or maintain an individuals functional status
glocal
the local interpretation and translation of normative ideas, management practices, popular cultural imaginations, circulating within and between different action nets
psychological adjustment
the process of developing a way of life in the new country that is personally satisfying Stress/strain perspective: characterizes this through frustration, anxiety, depression etc. Through this also comes culture shock (Oberg), 4 stages: honeymoon, disillusionment, adaptation, biculturalism Stress-adaptation-growth model: spiral of stress and adaptation, leading to growth-over-time
socio cultural adjustment
the proficiency and ability an individual has to interact completely with the host culture. May go hand in hand with quality of life Made up of: Acculturation (acquiring new culture & language) Deculturation (letting go of old cultural practices)
Indemnity Benefits
the provider bills the patient for services, insurance reimburses patient
Ostensible Agency
the relationship that exists between the case manager(agent) and a referral provider
Primary nursing model of care
the same nurse provides comprehensive care for the member the entire period of care
meaningful use
the use of certified EHR technology to achieve health and efficiency goals
work hardening
therapy designed to simulate real job duties in order to build up strength and improve endurance 3-5/wk with a goal to return to work
job accommodations
things that help workers with disabilities to do their jobs
Goal of the URAC
to encourage continued Improvement in quality and efficient Healthcare Management to education and accreditation
honor
trust: low mindset: moderately linear negative emotions: express dominant strategy: hot S&O
symbolic
type of culture definition: based on arbitrarily assigned (sometimes even contradictory) meanings that are shared by a community thinking: 3/4, almost fully emic
structural
type of culture definition: consists of patterned and interrelated ideas, symbols, and behaviours acting: 3/4, very etic
historical
type of culture definition: culture as social heritage, passed onto future generations acting: 1/4, emic and etic
mental
type of culture definition: culture is a complex of ideas, or learned habits, that curtails impulses (social control) and distinguishes people from animals thinking: 4/4, emic and etic
topical
type of culture definition: everything on a list of "topics" considered culture, religion, economy etc. thinking: 1/4, very etic
normative
type of culture definition: primarily consists of ideals, values, norms, laws and rules for living thinking: 2/4, quite emic
functional
type of culture definition: the way humans solve problems of adapting to the environment (external) and of living together (internal) acting: 2/4, quite etic
low context
type of culture: overt message content, non-verbal cues often unimportant, medium<message, status difference rarely affect medium and message
high context
type of culture: subtle message content, non-verbal cues important, medium>message, status difference often affect medium and message
collaborative
type of organizational decision making (high participation): NL, DE, SWE moderate problem analysis, slow decision making moderate acceptance and implementation
consultative
type of organizational decision making (moderate participation): Japan slow problem analysis and decision making rapid acceptance and implementation
signs of abuse
unexplained bruising, malnutrition, unkempt, multiple ER visits
Work Adjustment
use of simulated work activity to develop work behaviors, attitudes, characteristics
Polypharmacy
using multiple medications, or more than medically necessary, common in elderly
Pre-admission Certification
utilization review process that examines proposed Services before admission
Trompenaars basic idea
variation in values and personal relationships across cultures
Lions club
vision resource, and disabilitie, diabetic prevention and treatment