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2011 Annual Meeting Want To Improve Your Financial Outcomes – Manage Smarter!. Presented by: Lynda Laff Pat Laff. Managing Smarter. Efficient Home Care Means… Less care? Fewer staff? Cut middle management? Eliminate PI programs? Hiring freeze?
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2011 Annual Meeting Want To Improve Your Financial Outcomes – Manage Smarter! Presented by: Lynda Laff Pat Laff Laff Associates 2011
Managing Smarter • Efficient Home Care Means… • Less care? • Fewer staff? • Cut middle management? • Eliminate PI programs? • Hiring freeze? • Eliminate all educational travel? • No IT system upgrades??? • No “tools”? REALLY? Laff Associates 2011
How Did We Get Here? • Escalating health care costs – all sectors of the delivery system • CMS identified home care “behavioral changes” to influence payment • Practice variation among providers • Continued potentially avoidable events • Slow outcomes improvement • Continued re-hospitalization Laff Associates 2011
Continued Increase In Home Health Care Utilization Laff Associates 2011
Costs Increase But… Outcomes Do Not Improve • Costs continue to escalate with little improvement in outcomes • Major variations in the cost of care delivery vs. patient outcomes • No substantial improvement in re-hospitalization rates • High numbers of potentially avoidable events • Inadequate communication and coordination of patient care Laff Associates 2011
Cost Savings Laff Associates 2011
Statistics Don’t Lie Laff Associates 2011
MedPAC Findings • Volume of services continued to rise • Beneficiaries without a prior hospitalization account for a rising share of episodes * • Changes in therapy distribution • “Providers target therapy visit thresholds used to adjust home health payments”. • “Volume changes since implementation of PPS provide evidence of providers targeting the ranges that appear most profitable”. • Conclusion: overutilization and inadequate care FYI- Check out your coding process and marketing strategies! Laff Associates 2011
MedPAC Recommendations • Increased medical review in counties with aberrant home health utilization; suspend payment and limit provider enrollment. • Establish a per episode co-pay for home health episodes that are not preceded by hospitalization or post-acute care use. • Begin a two-year rebasing of home health rates in 2011 for implementation in 2014 • Modify the home health payment system to protect beneficiaries from stinting or lower quality of care in response to rebasing.. Laff Associates 2011
CMS Proposed Rule 2012 • Base rate reduction of to $2,112.37 from $2,192.07 ($79.70 or 3.64%) • Revise the case weight structure to decrease emphasis on therapy thresholds and misuse of HTN codes • Eliminate HTN codes 401.1, 401.9 from case mix • Redistribute dollars/weights for clinical and functional levels • Remove weighting of therapy thresholds • Decelerate therapy resources with higher weights Laff Associates 2011
Manage Smarter • To be profitable management must: • Know what it costs to provide services — by discipline • Monitor and manage ALLaspects of agency operations from intake to billing • Createappropriate efficiencies • Prevent redundancy and unnecessary hand-offs • Promote standardization for entire agency Laff Associates 2011
Manage Smarter • Clinical Management Information • Key Indicators • Routine Reports • Education • Clinical assessment • OASIS Accuracy • Supervision & Oversight • Documentation Timeliness • Care Plan Development • Clinical Quality - Accuracy • Continuity • Case management • Clinical model • Accountability/ Responsibility • Reward / incentive • Corrective Action Laff Associates 2011
Smart Moves • Patient Centered Care • Patient Outcomes at or above state and national averages • End result outcomes • Process measures • HHCAPS • Best Practice implementation • “Right-size” • May or may not add or eliminate positions • Focus on function and responsibility • Invest in people • Right person for the position • Invest in education Laff Associates 2011
Smart Moves • Eliminate “warm body syndrome” • Stop “fixing” • Implement and integrate Telehealth • Increase focus on preventing emergent care • Increase focus on timely intervention and preventing Potentially Avoidable Events • Increase efficiency by increasing case capacity of case manager • Decrease unnecessary utilization Laff Associates 2011
Management Reports / Statistics • Case Weight • Case weight variance – SOC to EOE less than 2% • EOE case weight - (NOT SOC) is the case weight to “hang your hat on” • % of re-certifications and LOS • Worry if you have a LOS over 60 days! • Visit Utilization Averages • Ratio nursing/therapy - shoot for 5-7 SN vs. 3-4 therapy • Average visits per episode • Worry if average total visits per episode is over 17 • Be aware that it must be improved if average IS 17 Laff Associates 2011
Management Reports / Statistics • Actual Revenue versus Anticipated Revenues • Downcodes • Actual revenue = EOE • Timeliness of RAP Submission • Set a standard of 7-14 days • % of Therapy Visits per Threshold • Look for therapy threshold “clusters” (will likely disappear in 2012) Laff Associates 2011
Management Reports / Statistics • Productivity by discipline • Actual # of patients visited (not weighted) • Cases Managed per Clinician • Goal of 20 – 25 (without telehealth) • Goal of 25-30 (with telehealth) • WHO IS REALLY MANAGING THE PATIENT? • OASIS Errors by Clinician • You cannot afford repeated errors! Laff Associates 2011
Smartest Moves • Productivity expectations • SN -Minimum average of 5 actual visits per day – 6 – 6.25 weighted visits • PT – Minimum average of 5.5 actual visits per day – 6.5 weighted visits • Supervisor/Manager – 1 per 5-7 FTEs (depends on function) • OASIS Reviewer – w/data manager - 75 - 85 patients • Adequate OASIS review process • Data management tool to decrease review time and increase accuracy Laff Associates 2011
Management Statistics • OASIS Corrections Completed • Do you ask for justification when errors not corrected? • Outcomes Improvement • Patient Declines – actual or documentation? • Potentially Avoidable Events • 2011 Surveyor Guidelines • Tier I PAEs • Emergent care for injury caused by a fall at home • Emergent care for wound infections, deteriorating wound status. Laff Associates 2011
Potentially Avoidable Events • Tier 2 PAEs • Emergent Care for Improper Medication Administration, Medication Side Effects • Emergent Care for Hypo/Hyperglycemia • Substantial Decline in ≥ Three Activities of Daily Living • Discharged to the Community Needing Wound Care or Medication Assistance • Discharged to the Community Needing Toileting Assistance • Discharged to the Community with Behavioral Problems • Have you audited each of them? • Are your audits documented? • What have you done to prevent them in the future? Laff Associates 2011
You May Be At Risk If…. • A review of operations and records indicates presence of one or all of the following; • Many OASIS item inconsistencies • Large variance in SOC/EOE • DX Coding errors • Very low average EOE case weight - 1.100 • High LUPA rate – over 12% • Higher than average therapy utilization • LOS average over 60 days / multiple re-certifications • Multiple recertifications per patient with “rotating primary DX” • Skilled service provided to large % of patients is “Observation & Assessment” Laff Associates 2011
Accountability • Primary case management – • Clinician – with patient contact • May be RN or PT • Must be accountable for patient and financial outcomes • Accurate assessment • Appropriate care plan • Constant knowledge of; • Goals of care • Projected visits vs. actual • Team performance – Therapists must be included in the team • Patient response to care • Need for change in plan Laff Associates 2011
Smart Moves • OASIS Accuracy • Who is reviewing the OASIS? • Is that a primary function? • Is that individual qualified? - RN COS-C • Manual review or Data Scrubber? • Duplicative functions • Corrections versus consequence…. • Management oversight Laff Associates 2011
Smart Moves • Adequate education • Validate and reinforce • How do you know? • What checks are in place? • How long does it take? • Who is validating what? • Were the suggested corrections actually made? • What “tools” do you use? • Are there repeated errors? If so – WHY? • Repeated errors cost money Laff Associates 2011
Do You EverHave Enough Staff? • How do you know???? • It depends…….. • Clinical Model • Agency Size and Scope • Geography • Volume • Paper or Point of Care • Clerical versus Clinical Function Laff Associates 2011
When is Enough Enough? • The Clinical Director comes to you and says “I don’t have enough nurses to see all these new patients. What’s the first thing you do? • Call a temp agency • Put an add in the paper • Review statistics Laff Associates 2011
Need More Staff??? • Review Statistics!!! • Validate Need Before You Jump the Gun! • Must ensure you are adequately staffed…but not over staffed!!! • Management • Field Staff Laff Associates 2011
Staffing-Statistics to Review • Number of ACTIVE patients on your census list • “Clean” census list • All discharges removed at least weekly • Identify why “old” patients remain – someone is not “managing” well… • Expectations for staff productivity • Visits per day, per week • Actual performance of staff – how many actualun-weighted visits per day did they perform last week? • Identify “weakest links” and investigate why…. Laff Associates 2011
Standardize Productivity • Do you expect the same level performance from each clinician? • If not – why not? • Are your expectations per clinician met? • Are they reasonable? Maybe too reasonable??? • Do you use remote monitoring? • Do you supervise, monitor and enforce the expectations? • Or are you using the “warm body approach?” • Is there a consequence for non-performance? Laff Associates 2011
Set Realistic Expectations • Number of visits per day is dependent upon your clinical model; • Do your field nurses case manage a census of patients” • If so – is the number consistent among your staff? • Do you have admission nurses? • Do you use a point of care documentation system? • How many miles does a clinician average per day/week? • How are they compensated? • How often are the patients’ care case conferenced? Laff Associates 2011
Smartest Moves…It Depends… • Primary Care Case Management • Clinician manages – 20 – 25 patients…it depends…. • Effective use of Telehealth will increase clinician case capacity • Responsible for entire episode of care • Responsible for patient and financial outcomes • Don’t come into the office to get NRS • Adequate supervision • Supervision – primary responsibility • Ability to enforce process and policy for productivity, OASIS corrections, appropriate care delivery Laff Associates 2011
Achieving Positive Financial Outcomes Let’s talk about controlling costs…. • Direct Cost per Visit by Discipline • Compensation methodology and incentives • Productivity and efficiency of staff • Case Capacity • Outcome achievement • Consider a Weekender Program! • Appropriate utilization of services and supplies • Frequencies and durations • Provision of supplies • Clinical oversight Laff Associates 2011
Achieving Positive Financial Outcomes • Gross profit issues – Control the Direct Cost/Visit & NRS • Direct Costs are the majority of agency’s total operating expenses • The majority of the direct cost/visit is compensation and related taxes (staff and direct supervision) • The cost/visit of premium-based fringes is directly proportional to visits made • The cost of mileage/auto reimbursement is directly related to geographically sequential patient scheduling, the size of the territory and a global vision of the entire week • An agency specific formulary and trunk supply protocol, electronic ordering with independent oversight and patient specific direct delivery reduces costs and increases productivity Laff Associates 2011
Weekender Program • Begins Friday at noon..ends Monday at noon • Friday admissions – patients with weekend follow-up visits • Monday morning conference call with weekday RNs • Converts Agency from 5 days/ week plus weekends to 7 days/week • Frequencies spread over 7 days, not just 5 days • Do all weekend visits • Takes weekend on-call • Eliminates weekday staff weekend rotation and compensatory time Laff Associates 2011
Weekender Program • Shares case management responsibilities with weekday RN – patients with weekend frequencies • Weekend differentials apply • Considered full-time for Fringe Benefits Laff Associates 2011
Achieving Positive Financial Outcomes Who owns the patient? • Using a combination of Admission and Visit RNs /LPNs challenges both good clinical and financial outcomes • Lacks care consistency and continuity • Limited, if any, patient care oversight • Cause of patient dissatisfaction • Primary Care Case Management achieves all of the desired patient care outcome goals and is the best approach towards best financial outcomes • Completely integrates with incentive compensation for both the field clinician and their immediate supervisor! Laff Associates 2011
Achieving Positive Financial Outcomes • Align Clinical and Case Conference Modelswith Compensation! • Incentive Compensation… • Determines ownership of the patient, resource utilization and care oversight and outcomes achieved • Matches clinician responsibilities and achievements • Not based upon the length of time or just a fixed salary to accomplish their patient needs • Reinforces consistency and continuity of patient care • Reduces the direct cost of care for those disciplines Laff Associates 2011
Achieving Positive Financial Outcomes Key Ingredients! • Effective Clinical Management (Supervisory) staff • Primary Case Management • Case Conference Model – Controls visit utilization • Every Patient…Every 14 days from SOC date! • Reviews prior 14 days utilization and outcome achievement • Plans next 14 days utilization and outcome goals • Tools for efficiency • Laptops with power cords to car power source and air-cards • Smart cell phones • Patient specific electronic ordering and delivery of NRS Laff Associates 2011
Achieving Positive Financial Outcomes Primary Care Case Managers are responsible for the: • Case Management of their patients • Primary visits, including admission, resumptions and recerts, most follow-ups and the discharge. • Achieve the desired patient outcomes and HH-CAHPs results • Self scheduling! • Places responsibility where it belongs • Provides for more autonomy and control of clinician’s day… • Eliminates the cost of schedulers Laff Associates 2011
Incentive Based Compensation • Compensates the staff for what they do, not for how long it takes them to complete what they do! • Rewards efficiency, productivity, capacity and clinical (HH-CAHP) outcomes achievement • Improves team chemistry…Encourages under-performing staff to improve or seek a successful career elsewhere • Assures that clinicians meet and exceed individual productivity and case capacity goals • Applies to Weekender staff IT WORKS! Laff Associates 2011
Incentive Based Compensation • Can apply to all disciplines, depending upon patient census and discipline demand • Exempt status does not apply to LPNs, PTAs, COTAs and HHAs (FLSA) • Most effective for RNs, PTs and OTs • Supervisory responsibility • Visits are Unique • No portion of compensation is based on time (Hourly) Laff Associates 2011
Visit Weights • Visit weighting – Based the Requirements and Complexities of completing OASIS C • Admission (evaluation) Visit 1.90 • Non-OASIS Evaluation Visit - mainly therapy 1.60 • Resumption Visit 1.30 • Recertification Visit 1.20 • Discharge Visit 1.25 • Follow-up Visit 1.00 • Virtual Telephone Visit (Telehealth) 0.25 Laff Associates 2011
Questions Often Asked( Visit Weight – Time Equivalents Based upon OASIS C) Laff Associates 2011
Incentive Based Compensation • Bonus structure for Primary Care Case Managers • Calendar quarter or 12 week period (based upon payroll periods) • Accumulated Visit Weights = $ per hands-on visit for every visit • Total Cases Managed = % of earnings for the measured period • Outcomes Achieved = % of earnings for the measured period • Bonus structure for their immediate “supervisors” • Same as above, plus • Other to address problem areas, such as • OASIS error rates • Timeliness of corrections, etc. • Time to RAP and EOE billing Laff Associates 2011
Case StudyAlterna-Care Home Health Agency • Located in Central Illinois • Main office located in Springfield, IL with branches in Jacksonville, and Litchfield, IL • Serves over 2000 patients annually in 31 contiguous counties • Free-standing for profit agency • Over 50 employees Laff Associates 2011
Benefits of Incentive Compensation • Lost a nurse and didn’t have to be replaced • Improved communication with nurses and supervisor • Documentation is timely and better quality • Telehealth is being used more consistently and the telephone follow up visits are visit weighted • Incentive compensation has improved ER and Hospital outcomes Laff Associates 2011
Incentive Compensation Results • Nursing productivity increased • Timeliness of documentation improved. For the first time anyone can remember, all nurses notes were completed within 24 hours. • MD verbal orders and recertifications were completed on time • Visit frequency orders were accurate • Case loads increased per nurse • Nurses made more visits per day and made more money • Monitors were in patient homes and no longer on the shelves Laff Associates 2011
Average Patient Caseload 2009 vs. 2010 • 2009 -7.5 nurses with an average monthly case load of 36.3 (unduplicated patients) • 2010 -6.5 nurses with an average monthly case load of 44.9 (unduplicated patients) (excludes PT only patients) Laff Associates 2011
Visit ProductivityAverage Visits Per Nurse Laff Associates 2011
HHCAHPS Laff Associates 2011