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2024 Executive Forecast: What 9 Home Care Leaders Expect Next Year

Home Health Care

While home care providers are working to mitigate headwinds – such as the rising cost of delivering care and staffing challenges – they also have their eye on where the industry goes from here. As 2024 approaches, home care leaders are embracing AI, alternative payer sources, employee-centric solutions and much more.

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2022 Home Care Executive Forecast: ‘Buckle Up For A Wild Ride’

Home Health Care

This year saw home care providers further build on the spotlight the public health emergency placed on the industry. As part of our annual tradition, Home Health Care News caught up with eight home care leaders to document their predictions on trends, challenges and opportunities for the coming year.

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What should interoperability look like in eight years? ONC asked, you answered

Healthcare It News

All referral and transition of care data will be electronic, they predict, and care teams will be able to integrate electronic data from both within and outside of the healthcare system as part of workflow. Another foresaw interoperability enabling at-home care and price comparison of services, procedures or drugs.

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Voices: Julieann Esper Rainville, Chief Executive Officer, Viventium

Home Health Care

What are some industry challenges and market conditions in home care, home health, and hospice you pay the closest attention to? The big challenge in this industry is caregiver recruitment and retention, and according to the 2023 Home Care Pulse Benchmarking Report, turnover in 2022 was 77.1% — its worst since 2018.

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The PACE Solution to Increasing Demands for Long-Term Services and Supports in the U.S.

Sheppard Health Law

trillion spent on personal health care. [3] 5] PACE – The One-Stop-Shop Healthcare Service System Access to community-based, fully integrated care models is increasingly important as the U.S. 10] For example, PACE prioritizes individualized care by customizing patient care plans based on individual profiles (e.g.,

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Supporting the Continuum of Care for Serious Illness in Medicaid Managed Care

NASHP

People with serious and life-threatening health conditions experience care needs that drive costs, including hospital admissions , emergency department utilization , and nursing home care. Rhode Island is another state that has invested in coordinated care for complex populations enrolled in Medicaid. The state and U.S.

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Voices: Dr. Monika Virk, MD, Founder of HOP Into Homecare!

Home Health Care

Content was always lagging behind new regulations and evidence-based practices due to competing priorities. Moreover, the communication gap between different departments prevented us from assessing if the clinician was field ready. This challenge motivated me to find a solution to standardize orientation content for home care agencies.