Case Management Certification Article on HCAHPS Scores

Secure Your Score: A Few Tips to Improve Your Practice’s HCAHPS Score

Something healthcare practitioners should give a lot of attention to is the HCAHPS. This acronym stands for Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems. This is a survey that is filled out by patients to indicate their satisfaction or lack thereof with the services rendered at a medical facility. You can think of HCAHPS as a performance review performed by actual patients.

Hcahps is required by CMS, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. It is used for all hospitals in the United States. It is performed over the phone after a patient is discharged. The results of these surveys become part of the public record and are used by the government to determine reimbursement for that facility. It’s extremely important to receive good scores on this survey. Below are a few tips you can use to improve your practice’s HCAHPS scores.

Make Your Team Cognizant of HCAHPS

Obtaining high scores on HCAHPS requires good communication among all the staff members of a medical facility. It must be communicated to nurses, doctors and other staff members that HCAHPS is a strong priority. They must be made aware of the scores that have been received. There should be an open dialogue on how to improve scores and ways different staff members can do their part to improve the patient experience. Consider having staff meetings about HCAHPS specifically especially if low scores are an issue.

Treat Patients with Respect and Courtesy

Low HCAHPS scores may be an indication that patients believe they are not being treated with the right amount of respect and courtesy by nurses, doctors and others that work in a medical facility. The first question on the survey in fact regards the courtesy shown to a patient by nurses. Lack of respect and courtesy as perceived by the patient can throw off the entire score.

Sometimes, there may be a difference in perceptions regarding an interaction between a healthcare professional and a patient. Just because the healthcare professional believes the interaction went well does not mean the patient feels the same way. In this case, some additional training may be required. The patient should be properly greeted, and the healthcare professional should maintain eye contact with that patient. Having a friendly demeanor and making small talk can also go a long way with helping to improve patient satisfaction.

Listen to Patients

Another important question on the HCAHPS survey regards whether or not a patient was listened to properly. Listening is an important part of the healthcare process. It is one of the ways healthcare professionals like nurses and doctors gather evidence to help make informed decisions regarding patient care. Patients may be experiencing specific symptoms that they find very worrying. If a healthcare professional does not properly listen to what patients have to say and instead interrupts or ignores them, this can be very distressing.

Communicate Clearly with Patients

Listening is only part of proper communication with patients. You also need to be able to explain medical conditions, care plans, tests, prescriptions, etc. In a way that the patient understands. Whether or not this communication was clear enough is also something that is scored on the HCAHPS. Try to avoid technical medical jargon and explain things in ways that individual patients can comprehend. Don’t be afraid to use tools to help educate patients either. A DVD with animations that demonstrate how a certain medical procedure is performed can be an effective teaching tool.

Overall, HCAHPS is important. If you don’t receive good scores, you have an issue that must be immediately addressed. Improving HCAHPS scores isn’t only important because it’s used as a measuring tool by CMS. If you want to be a good healthcare practitioner, patients should feel satisfied with the care they receive in your facility.

 

Please also review our Case Management Certification

Healthcare Case Management Article

Good article for those interested in Healthcare Case Management.

The article, Care Management for Children With Medical Complexity: Integration Is Essential, by Richard C. AntonelliRenee M. Turchi state, 

“In the report “Effectiveness of a Comprehensive Case Management Service for Children with Medical Complexity,” Simon et al1 examine the impact of a care management intervention that is based in a pediatric academic medical center on quality and cost outcomes for children with medical complexity (CMC) and their families. Rigorously designed studies like this are important and timely because increased attention is being given to achieving the national strategic priority to improve outcomes for high-resource–using children and youth.”

To read the entire article, please click here

If you would like to learn more about Healthcare Case Management, then please review our certification program and see if it matches your academic and professional needs.

Grief Counseling Certification Article on Barrenness

Good article about grief of not being able to experience child birth or have a child.  This type of loss is not a direct loss but an indirect loss of a particular experience which can be sorrowful as well

The article, Does it still hurt that I can’t have a baby?, by Danielle Ripley-Burgess states,

“I quickly entered the world that all new moms with babies know – the exhausting world of translating looks and grunts, cries and smiles. The world of praying the swaddle holds and changing shirts every few hours so you don’t smell like spit up. The tiptoes out of the bedroom once you finally get the baby to sleep.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Grief Counseling Certification

Meditation Instructor Certification Article on Essential Oils

Good article on six essential oils that can help one with meditation.

The article, “6 Essential Oils For Meditation That’ll Help You Clear Your Mind & Find Your Center” by  Annakeara Stinson states

“Meditation is one of those things that is at once profoundly simple, and yet somehow really difficult, too. But it’s also one of those things that seems too beneficial not to try. Of course, there are a few tools that make it a little easier, like essential oils for meditation, which can help set the mood and calm your mind so you’re actually able to get your zen on.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Meditation Instructor Program

Grief Counseling Certification Article on Marriage and the Loss of a Child

So many times the loss of a child can cause a marriage to fall apart.  These secondary losses are a result of the primary loss and the stress that emits from that loss.

The article, We Lost Our Newborn Baby. Can This Marriage Survive?, by Steve Almond and Cheryl Strayed

“One thing that’s vital to realize is that it’s not the sorrow of a child’s death that tears certain couples apart. It’s a sense of isolation within that sorrow. You and your husband should consider it your central goal to share your feelings with one another, even and especially the difficult feelings: ones of helplessness, confusion, guilt, depression and even rage.”

To read the entire response, please click here

Please also review our Grief Counseling Certification and see if the program matches your academic and professional needs

Bereavement Counseling Certification Article on Time to Grieve

Good article on the reality that grief does not just end immediately allowing one to return to life.  Some may have the luxury and the time to grieve but unfortunately many also do not have that ability to properly find the time they  need to grieve and recover.

The article, “Having Time To Grieve Shouldn’t Be A Luxury” by Ann Brenoff looks at why three days is not enough to recovery, she states,

“Lori McCoy was a supervisor overseeing 911 dispatchers in San Mateo County, California, back in 1991 when she got the diagnosis that her 6-week-old son Joshua had spinal muscular atrophy, a progressive neurodegenerative disease similar to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Bereavement Counseling Certification to learn more.

Bereavement Counseling Training Article on Addiction and Death

Good article on the nature of grief when things do not always end so well.  In these cases, there are a variety of ambiguous feelings as well potential guilt during the grieving process over the deceased.

The article, An Addict Brother’s Death; a Sister’s Guilt-Ridden Grief, by  

“The most dangerous delusion we carry around when it comes to death is the notion that we should never speak ill of the dead. We erase their defects and destructive conduct. We gussy up their legacy and imagine them ascending to heaven.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Bereavement Counseling Training and see if it meets your needs.

Grief Counseling Certification Article on Death of a Classmate

Classmates can also grieve the loss of a friend or schoolmate.  It can also affect them mentally and remind them of their own mortality.

The article, Alone in my grief’: why some students are left to mourn alone when a classmate dies, by Rebecca Tan states

“When former College student Aran Rana of the Class of 2019 died in Hong Kong this year, his closest friends found out in the same way and at the same time that over 10,000 other undergraduates did: five paragraphs in an email notification from the University.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Grief Counseling Certification, as well as our Child and Adolescent Grief Counseling Program

Substance Abuse Counseling Certification Article on Abuse and Addiction

Child abuse is seen to be a closely related to issues of later substance abuse

The article, Research finds substance abuse varies widely in association with child abuse, neglect, Source; The University of Kansas states

“Alcohol and other drug use are regularly linked to child abuse or neglect in families, but simply assuming the former causes the latter is not taking a deep enough look. A University of Kansas professor has authored a pair of studies examining how a range of parental alcohol and substance use behaviors are related to abusive and neglectful parenting behaviors and argues that a more thorough understanding can help address the associated problems to better serve families.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Substance Abuse Counseling Certification

Bereavement Counseling Training Program Article on Discussing Death

Talking about death is important.  It is not gruesome or unhealthy to do but in fact a good reality a check and a way to express ideas and feelings when it is not too late

The article, A Talk About Death Can Be The Most Meaningful Conversation Of Your Life, by Shannon Burberry states, 

“I recently participated in a roundtable discussion about death, dying and funerals (you can view the video here) and I was surprised at how reluctant we are to discuss this very important — and natural — topic with the ones we love. The women who participated are very open-minded and, as someone who is entrenched in end-of-life decisions every day, I was genuinely shocked that many hadn’t yet considered what they would like for their own end-of-life celebration.”

To read the entire article, please click here

Please also review our Bereavement Counseling Training Program and see if it matches your academic and professional needs.