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Outline . I - Overview of organizationII - Why develop a primary care program?III - History of the Community Health Center movement IV - Common terms and acronyms. . Outline . V - Community assessment stepsVI - Governance structureVII -
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1. Fulfilling the VNA Mission with Primary Healthcare Services Presented at VNAA Annual Meeting on April 26, 2007 by.....
Linnea Windel, President/CEO
Darlene Varney, VP of Patient Services/COO
Lisa Hill, VP of Finance/CFO
2. Outline I - Overview of organization
II - Why develop a primary care
program?
III - History of the Community
Health Center movement
IV - Common terms and acronyms
3. Outline V - Community assessment
steps
VI - Governance structure
VII - Community support steps
VIII - Grant application process
4. Outline IX - Key financial
considerations
X - Program development
XI - Where we are today
XII - Resources
XIII - Contact information
5. I - Overview of organization VNA of Fox Valley history
VNA programs
VNA key statistics
6. VNA of Fox Valley History 1918 – VNA (Aurora Child Welfare Clinic Association) opens in Aurora with focus on caring for crippled children
1930-1940 – VNA begins school nursing services and provides mother/baby care
1946-1954 – VNA takes the lead in communicable disease control, providing tuberculosis treatment clinics, home lead investigations and immunizations
7. VNA of Fox Valley History (cont.) 1965 – VNA becomes first agency in Illinois to become licensed to provide Home Health under the Medicare benefit
1980 – VNA begins the Women, Infants and Children (WIC) Nutrition Program for Southern Kane County
1988 – VNA’s Women’s Wellness Clinic opens; VNA flu shot program established
1993 – VNA adds Medicare-certified Hospice Program; VNA introduces new Healthy Families America program to reduce incidence of child abuse and neglect
8. VNA of Fox Valley History (cont.) 1994 – VNA provides more than 3,300 tetanus shots in just a few days in response to devastating flood in area
2002 – VNA becomes a Federally Qualified Health Center and begins offering comprehensive primary healthcare at Aurora and Elgin locations
2002 – VNA Dental Clinic opens
2006 – VNA purchases new facility
2007 – New VNA Health Center opens in June
9. VNA programs VNA Home Health
VNA Hospice
VNA Community Wellness
VNA Health Centers
10. VNA Home Health VNA Nurse Specialties
Home Infusion Therapy
Wound Care
Mother, Baby & Pediatric Care
Advanced Nurse Practice Service
Mental & Behavioral Healthcare
Palliative Care
Rehabilitative Therapies
Nutrition/Dietitian Services
Medical Social Work
Certified Nurse Aide Care
11. VNA Hospice For the final stages of illness – medical, psychosocial, emotional and spiritual support for patients and their families
Bridge home care for those with serious illnesses
Grief support groups, programs and resources
12. VNA Community Wellness Women, Infants and Children (WIC) Program
Healthy Families America
Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening
Reach Out and Read
Community Immunization Program
Health Screenings
School-Based Health Center
13. VNA Health Centers Located in Aurora and Elgin
Complete primary healthcare
Wellness and annual preventative services
Complete obstetrical services
Diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic illness
Pharmacy assistance
Laboratory testing
Dental Clinic
14. VNA key statistics Over 40,000 people served annually
200 employees
$13m operating budget
6 locations
15. II - Why develop a primary care program? Community need
Approximately 53 million underinsured and uninsured people in U.S.
By 2010, Community Health Centers are projected to care for 20 million people
16. Why develop a primary care program? (cont.) Community Health to care for people of all ages...in home and clinic settings
Improves existing home care and community health programs
17. Why develop a primary care program? (cont.) Diversification of services
Increases organization’s visibility and prominence in community
18. III – History of Community Health Center Movement 1960s – Activists worked to secure federal funding for healthcare in low-income communities
Dr. H. Jack Geiger led the movement when President Johnson declared “War on Poverty”
19. History of Community Health Center Movement (cont.) 1965 – Federal funding approved; Health Center model combined local community resources with federal funds to establish neighborhood clinics
Bipartisan support throughout its history
20. History of Community Health Center Movement (cont.) Major expansion during Bush Administration
Today – 1,000 Federally Qualified Health Centers with 5,000 sites
21. IV – Key terms and acronyms FQHC – Federally Qualified Health Center
“Look-alike” – Clinic that has FQHC status without federal funding
CHC – Community Health Center (generally denotes federal funding)
BPHC – Bureau of Primary Health Care
FTCA – Federal Tort Claims Act
22. Key terms and acronyms (cont.) 330(e) Funding – Federal funding for CHCs
MUA – Medically Underserved Area
MUP – Medically Underserved Population
HPSA – Health Professional Shortage Area
340B Pharmacy
Provider – Physician, Nurse Practitioner or Physician Assistant
PCA – Primary Care Association
23. V - Community assessment steps Data sources
Data analysis
Communicating the data
24. Data sources U.S. Census
State Primary Care Association
CDC Wonder
State Department of Public Health
State Department of Human Services
Local Health Department
25. Data sources (cont.) Local Law Enforcement (crime stats)
Department of Labor (unemployment stats)
Local health care studies (hospitals, United way, foundations, etc.)
University studies
Focus groups
Community survey
Physician survey
26. Data analysis Comparison to local, state and national statistics
University resources
27. Communicating data Organization Board of Directors
Local, state and federal government
Local business and community leaders
State Primary Health Care Association
28. VI - Governance structure Consumer majority requirement
Size
Meeting schedule
Affiliations
29. VII - Community support steps Making the case
Political advocacy
State and national associations
30. VIII – Grant application process Selecting a consultant
Completing the Need for Assistance worksheet
Develop a rough budget quickly
Bylaws development
31. Grant application process (cont.) Board composition
Organization’s patient demographics (if applicable)
Ability to show readiness
Letters of support
Floor plan
32. IX - Key financial considerations Revenue increases
Increased expenses
Expense savings
Cash flow implications
Critical financial monitoring factors
33. Revenue increases New start grant average $600,000/yr for 2 yrs initially
“Cost” based reimbursement for Medicaid and Medicare
Attracts additional local government and philanthropic grants
34. Increased expenses Grant writing consultation expertise
Facility and equipment needs
Recruiting expense to attract and retain providers
Provider wages during practice building phase
35. Increased expenses (cont.) Additional auditing expenses to meet requirements of A-133
Additional accounting support to meet all federal reporting requirements
Annual updated applications
Cost reports to State Medicaid and Federal Medicare
Annual Universal Data Set (UDS) report
Federal Financial Status Report (FSR)
Quarterly report on federal funds drawn
36. Increased expenses (cont.) Software to meet government reporting, billing and accounting and internal practice management needs
Initial deeming process and bi-annual provider recredentialing
37. Expense savings Malpractice Insurance: Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) of 1992 and 1995 provides umbrella of professional liability coverage to deemed CHC
All employees and individually contracted physicians are covered as federal employees without cost
Prior to deeming, VNA purchased insurance on each provider (purchase of insurance for OB/GYN prohibitively expensive)
38. Cash flow implications Federal grant is not restricted to retrospective expense vouchering
State of Illinois Medicaid program is very slow to pay but a successful expedited payment application speeds payments to 60-day turnaround
Patients on VNA sliding-fee scale are requested to pay prior to service
39. Critical financial monitoring factors Payor mix
Provider productivity
40. X - Program development Program details
Key staff positions
Hiring providers
Physical space considerations
Cultural sensitivity
Risk management
Monitoring
41. Program details Converted from Public Health to Primary Care Model
Preventive, acute and chronic care
Men, women and children
42. Program details (cont.) 24-hour-a-day availability
Inpatient service
Referral for specialty care
Casemanagement
43. Program details (cont.) Appointments and walk-ins
Managing clinic flow
Prescriptions
Federal program expectations
44. Key staff positions Director of Clinical Services
In charge of day-to-day clinic operations
Medical Director
Works with providers and medical community
45. Key staff positions (cont.) Nursing staff
In charge of clinic flow as well as nursing care
One nurse for every 2 providers
46. Key staff positions (cont.) Translation
Support staff
One CNA or CMA per provider
Front line staff
47. Hiring providers Providers need to understand the community health model
Began with one gynecologist; added OB/GYN
Pediatricians
Family practice physicians and nurse practitioners
48. Physical space considerations Started by adding exam rooms
Ideal to have 3 exam rooms per provider
Added dental offsite
Expanding to new 36-exam room site
49. Cultural sensitivity Language barrier
Cultural issues related to healthcare
50. Risk management Combined policies and procedures from state-funded programs and incorporated federal guidelines
Clinical protocols per federal guidelines
Medical Director heads Quality Improvement team
51. Monitoring Volume
No-show rates
Scheduling
52. XI – Where we are today 4 clinic locations
20,000 patients
Establishing mammography and pharmacy services
EMR
Opening new main location June 11, 2007
53. XII – Resources Bureau of Primary Health Care
National Association of Community Health Centers
State Primary Health Care Association
54. XIII – Contact information VNA of Fox Valley
400 North Highland Avenue
Aurora, Illinois 60506
630.978.2532
www.vnafoxvalley.org
Email:
lwindel@vnafoxvalley.com
dvarney@vnafoxvalley.com
lhill@vnafoxvalley.com