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Pay-for Performance: The Beginning. CMS: Reporting Hospital Quality Data for Annual Payment Update (RHQDAPU)Hospitals failing to report receive reduced payments (2% less)As of October 1, 2008, CMS stopped paying for certain hospital-acquired conditionsIncludes several conditions which are nur
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1. Nursing Makes Cents Pay-for-Performance: A Double-Edged Sword for Nursing?
2. Pay-for Performance: The Beginning CMS: Reporting Hospital Quality Data for Annual Payment Update (RHQDAPU)
Hospitals failing to report receive reduced payments (2% less)
As of October 1, 2008, CMS stopped paying for certain hospital-acquired conditions
Includes several conditions which are nurse-sensitive
3.
Third party payers are following the lead of CMS
Accreditation organizations are adopting many of the indicators of quality & safety into their requirements
Pay-for Performance: The Beginning
4. CMS identified no pay conditions:
Pressure ulcers*
Falls & associated trauma*
Catheter-associated urinary tract infections*
Vascular catheter-associated infections*
Objects left inside surgical patients
Surgical site infection in some cases
Deep vein thrombosis/pulmonary embolism following certain surgeries
Air emboli
Blood incompatibility reactions
*Nursing sensitive conditions
Hospital-Acquired Conditions
5. May be added in the future:
Legionnaires disease
Poor glycemic control
Delirium
Ventilator-associated pneumonia
Staph aureus septicemia
Clostridium difficile disease
Surgical site infection post specified elective procedures
Iatrogenic pneumothorax
Hospital-Acquired Conditions
6. P4P: A Double-Edged Sword? Potential Positives + Potential Negatives - Recognizes nursing contributions to quality which may stimulate investment in nursing
Ties nursing to measures which impact the financial profitability of the institution If reduction in reimbursement is anticipated, resources may be cut
Culture of blame
Increased dissatisfaction, intention to leave, and turnover
7. P4P: A Double-Edged Sword?
Potential Positives +
Potential Negatives -
Recognition of nursing impact may propel addition of nursing to quality & management teams
Staffing could be ruled by patient need, not numbers May focus on only those quality goals which are subject to P4P
Does not quantify nursing intensity by individual patient
Does not separate nursing services from room & board or per diem rates
8. Become familiar with measured outcomes, public reporting, and financial incentives tied to nursing
Analyze financial impact of nursing on healthcare institutions
Demonstrate nursing contributions to quality care & safety
Remember that not all nursing measures contribute to a businesss bottom line What Can Nurses Do?
9. Educate staff on how to detect & document conditions present on admission
Participate in quality & safety research
Advocate for nursing participation in financial decisions
Advocate for research that addresses nursing contributions, payment systems that account for nursing intensity, and integration of nursing information into clinical support decisions What Can Nurses Do?
10.
The worth of a thing is best known by the want of it.
James Kelly (18th century) Something To Think About