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Summary ORGANIZATION LEADERSHIP AND INTERPROFESSIONAL TEAM DEVELOPMENT WESTERRN GORVERNOR UNIVERSITY AUGUST 9 2018

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ORGANIZATION LEADERSHIP AND INTERPROFESSIONAL TEAM DEVELOPMENT WESTERRN GORVERNOR UNIVERSITY AUGUST 9 2018

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  • April 4, 2022
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Running Head: ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP 1




ORGANIZATION
LEADERSHIP AND
INTERPROFESSIONAL
TEAM DEVELOPMENT
WESTERRN GORVERNOR
UNIVERSITY AUGUST 9
2018

,ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP
2




Business Practices in Patient and Family Centered Care

Business Practices

The business of providing healthcare is just like any other business. It derives benefits from

the practices that support innovation; from practices that support growth. A successful business is

one that can do so much more with less. Any successful healthcare provider, whether it be a

hospital, clinic, private practice or community health center, strives to be effective while being

efficient. Being an effective healthcare business must incorporate satisfaction measurements of

staff, family and patients. Without all of these to some degree, a healthcare business will struggle

and then ultimately fail. The reasoning behind this is that these three groups of people are the

backbone of a healthcare business. If any of these groups is dissatisfied, they won’t return.

Dissatisfied patients will go elsewhere for their care, families won’t bring their loved ones back,

and unhappy staff will find other jobs. Without the patient, there is no one to provide care for.

Without the families of patients, there is no one to support outside of the facility the care that was

begun inside the facility. And without the staff, there is no one to provide the care at the level

expected and deserved by the patients.

A successful healthcare business model is based on patient-centered care. Patient- centered

care has been researched and shown to contribute to the improvement in safety and quality of care,

while reducing care-related costs (Akinci & Patel, 2014). Decreased costs includecosts for training

and retraining staff due to inefficient practices, costs for excess supplies wasted, and readmissions

due to ineffective treatment. A successful healthcare business is guided by the needs of patients

and families. This framework, paired with consistent patient and family

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3




engagement has been shown to improve hospital performance and business outcomes (Burger,

2014).

Regulatory Requirements

The concept of improving the American healthcare system by instituting 6 goals was

discussed in a 2001 report by the Institute of Medicine. One of these goals was notably patient-

centerdness. This specific concept leads to lower overall costs, a higher quality of care and better

health (Millenson & Berenson, 2015). In recent years since this report was published, new laws

have been instituted in the US, aimed at putting specific practices into place that are centered

around the patient. The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, or

HITECH, includes regulatory standards for the implementation and use of electronic health

records (EHR). These standards are one type of Meaningful Use (MU) standards implemented as

laws and regulations to improve the efficiency of the American healthcare system. An additional

MU standard is the patient’s engagement with and viewing of their EHR (Millenson & Berenson,

2015).

Initiatives for patient and family engagement, patient satisfaction and shared decision

making are included in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). This piece of legislation was signed into

law and implemented in 2010 to expand quality and affordable healthcare to more Americans.

Within the ACA law are provisions that move the Medicaid and Medicare payor systems from

“fee-for-service” to payments based on the quality of the service delivered (McMorrow &Polsky,

2016).

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is a federal agency that assesses

accountable care organizations (ACOs) on a static list of 33 quality measures. Twenty-five

, ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP
4




percent of these quality measures directly relate to the experience of the caregiver and the patient

(Millenson & Berenson, 2015). Several regulatory standards enforced by The Joint Commission

(TJC) relate specifically to patient-centered care. Within those standards, healthcare organizations

are required to effectively communicate with patients when treatment and services are being

provided, coordinate a patient’s care, treatment and services based on a patient’s needs, and

respecting a patient’s right to receive information in an understandable manner for each individual

patient (AHRQ, 2013).

Reimbursement

When a healthcare organization or hospital implements policies that places at the center

of their care model the patient and their needs, and educates and empowers patients to be an

integral part of their own care, patient outcomes improve and patient satisfaction increases

(AHRQ, 2013). Patient satisfaction is measured by surveys conducted as part of the Hospital

Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) and required by the

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS). These survey scores also tie into the reimbursement

paid to hospitals by CMS. Based partly on these survey scores, hospitals can prepare to either lose

or gain 2% of their CMS payments in the fiscal year (Letourneau, 2016).

The implementation of HITECH in 2009 resulted in incentive payments to hospitals and

physicians totaling more than $28 billion for the adoption of electronic health records that meet

Meaningful Use stage 1 and stage 2. Patient engagement goals are included in Meaningful Use

stage 3, which will carry its own set of incentives for both private practice physicians and hospitals

(Mellenson & Berenson, 2015). These incentives will eventually expire when Meaningful Use

becomes mandatory. When this happens, CMS payments to providers will be based on these same

goals. In theory, once this change occurs, providers risk losing payments for

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