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Pre-Conference Sessions Descriptions

The following Pre-Conferences are running concurrently from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 14, 2010. Lunch is included.

Cost: $150 Member $250 Non-Member.

You can only register for one of these pre-conferences:

WEDNESDAY, July 14, 2010
Pre-Conference Sessions
(Separate registration is required)
9:00 am to 3:00 pm

Pre-Conference 1: HOME HEALTH AGECY FINANCIAL BASICS: For Rookies and Veterans Looking for a Refresher

Session 601
The Medicare HHA Cost Report and its Trail of Documents, Blood, Sweat and Tears

9:00am to Noon

Get an understanding of one of the most difficult and vital filing documents, the Medicare HHA cost report! This program will demonstrate to the participant the basic structure and understanding of the cost report, as well as assist attendees’ understanding of what information can be developed from an accurate and complete cost report.

Objectives:

  1. Review cost reporting requirements. Identify the purpose of cost reports and the cost report filing process;
  2. Review the flow of the cost report;
  3. Discuss Medicare cost reporting data requirements and non-allowable costs; and
  4. Identify CMS and other documentation requirements that are part of a cost report filing.

Faculty: Thomas E. Boyd, MBA, Boyd & Nicholas, Inc. Rohnert Park, CA; Dave Macke, Von Lehman & Company, Inc. Fort Mitchell, KY.

Course level: TBD

Prerequisite: TBD


Establishing Fundamental Financial Systems

1:00 to 3:00pm

Home health personnel new to the industry, new agencies and even established agencies will benefit from an understanding of the fundamental financial tools for developing and maintaining positive financial outcomes. This session identifies the minimum financial and statistical data that must be maintained and understood by management staff. Specific management reports will be analyzed. Expected financial outcomes will be identified for the successful agency.

Objectives:

  1. Discuss the basic accounting and statistical structure for a home health agency;
  2. Recognize the capabilities of your IT systems and the related management expectations of your systems;
  3. Identify specific interim analysis procedures along with industry standards for statistical and financial outcomes; and
  4. Recognize the external requirements for accuracy of financial data and reports.

Faculty: Steve Peterschmidt, Peterschmidt & Associates, Albuquerque, NM; and Vern Peterschmidt, Peterschmidt & Associates, Albuquerque, NM

Course level: Basic; nursing CEs 5.0; accounting CPEs 5.0 (NASBA/MAS)

Prerequisite: Basic knowledge of financial systems and Medicare HHA Cost Report

Pre-Conference 2: Hospice Financial Management

Session 701
HOSPICE BOOT CAMP: Seasoned Campers Only!

9:00 am to 3:00pm (Lunch from noon to 1 p.m.)

This pre-conference program provides an extensive and practical overview of the financial aspects of the hospice industry, including discussion of national economic and policy changes which will impact hospice operations, regulatory issues and revenue enhancing strategies. The Hospice Boot Camp is designed specifically for professionals seeking to acquire the skills and knowledge needed to manage hospice financial operations.

During the sessions learn:

  • Discussion of Palliative Care Services and the financial accounting implications.
  • Overview of the hospice benefit and discussion of the financial accounting for all services including bereavement, physician services, volunteers, music, massage, pet and other therapies, liaisons or community representatives.
  • Strategies for Cost Containment and other operational efficiencies
  • Strategies for Revenue Enhancement including public education and marketing methodologies
  • Cost Reporting for the Future. Cap management, PIP implications. New billing operational requirements.
  • Provision of Inpatient Services, owned or leasing arrangements, Respite and Residential Services.

Objectives:

  1. Identify hospice financial management essentials
  2. Discuss crucial reimbursement and revenue strategies to achieve bottom-line success with hospice; and
  3. Cite health system dynamics that impact on the future opportunities for hospice and palliative care.

Faculty: : Robert Simione, Managing Principal, Simione Consultants, Hamden, CT; Donna Gouveia, Chief Executive Officer, Visiting Nurse Service of Greater Rhode Island, Lincoln, RI; Larry Leahy, Vice President of Finance; Foundation Management Services, Inc., Denton, TX; and Michael T. Ferris, Director, Marketing, Sales and Customer Service Consulting Division, Simione Consultants, LLC. Hamden, CT

Course level: Intermediate; nursing CEs 5.0; accounting CPEs 5.0 (NASBA/SKA)

Prerequisite: Basic knowledge of hospice and financial management

Pre-Conference 3: Technology

Session 801
A Care Transition Model: Powered by Technology, Transforming Financial Incomes

9:00 am to 3:00pm (Lunch from noon to 1 p.m.)

Panel 1: Cost Effective Model: Leveraging Technology in a Clinical/Financial Performance System

This panel will identify clinical financial performance systems that can be implemented to assist in building care pathways for chronic disease management.

Objectives:

  • Discuss care pathways for chronic diseases that predict clinical outcomes and insure cost containment; and
  • Describe clinical financial performance systems that rely on value based purchasing and financial incentives.

Moderator: Michael Lemnitzer, Philips Telehealth Solutions, Framingham, MA

Panelists: Paula Suter, RN, Baptist Home Health Network; Ray Darcey, Sentara Enterprises

Panel 2: Client Centered Care: The Financial Benefits of Integrating Technology

This panel will highlight actual examples of how technology can be incorporated into patient-centered planning and care by focusing on programs that produce financial benefits.

Objectives:

  • Relate examples of patient centered planning and care through home care versions of “medical home models” and examples of home care/physician partnered models;
  • Explain transition procedures for pre and post admission to home care, describing the involvement of telehealth nurses both pre and post hospital discharge; and
  • Present examples of how telehealth call centers can be involved in care transition protocols and outsourcing of in-house monitoring of vital signs.

Moderator: Charlie Daniels, HealthMEDX, Ozark, MO

Panelists: Cynthia Acosta, PT, AseraCare Home Health; Susan Quinn, Ed. D, MBA, RN, Penn Care at Home

Panel 3: Care Coordination: Creating Benchmarks for Clinical Outcomes

This panel discussion will outline benchmarks for technology and non-technology best practices in clinical performance.

Objectives:

  • Cite examples of “Episode management” in the establishment of a Utilization Management System with markers to predict outcomes.
  • Identify the common mistakes uncovered in Recovery Audit Contractor audits and how to avoid them through proactive best practices.
  • Discuss an automated medication management and reconciliation system.
  • Highlight benchmarks to improve the efficiencies of clinical performance and clinical quality performance

Moderator: Laurie Neander, At Home Care, Oneonta, NY

Panelists: Kristy Wright RN, MBA, FAN, VNA Western Pennsylvania; Bridget Gallagher GNP, MSN,

Panel 4: Collaboration: Interoperable Technologies and Successful Partnerships

In order to achieve the financial benefits of technology, it’s important to create a circle of healthcare partner-providers through interfaced technology and a feedback process that will aggregate disease-specific outcome data among all partners.

Objectives:

  • Compare competitive and non-competitive examples of successful interfaced technology partnerships;
  • Discuss examples of successful EHR partnerships and major EHR providers; and
  • Illustrate how recent technology bridges gaps in care, citing past, present and future example that deliver higher quality outcomes, increased profitability, and improved communication.
  • Moderator: Thomas Check, Visiting Nurse Service of New York, New York, NY

Moderator: Tom Check, Visiting Nurse Service of New York

Panelists: Dan Cobb, HealthMEDX, Inc.; Raj Shetye, LHC Group, Inc.

Course level: Intermediate; nursing 5.0 CEs; accounting CPEs 5.0 (NASBA/SKA)

Prerequisite: Basic knowledge of relationship of home health finance, clinical and quality indicators and benchmarking.

 

 

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