More News Coverage of Accredited Members

Comfort Keepers of MetroWest, South Shore and Cape Cod:

…has hired 50 new caregivers and administrators and expects to hire at a rate of five new employees per week to keep up with increasing demand for in-home senior care services…

In addition to the [improving] economic situation, Mullaney credits the company’s growth in part to their recent accreditation by the Home Care Alliance of Massachusetts. Accreditation for in-home pay care is new to Massachusetts, and Comfort Keepers was among the first pay-for-care organizations to be accredited.

“Accreditation allows Comfort Keepers to be a preferred provider with government agencies. We were just approved by Massachusetts Brain Injury to be a preferred provider as well,” Raquel Mullaney said.

Greater Medford VNA & Additional Care

… is among the first in the state to earn accreditation from the Home Care Alliance of Massachusetts.

The alliance, which represents 170 home health and elder care agencies across Massachusetts, has created an accreditation protocol to promote quality services, ethical business standards and superior employment practices in an industry that lacks meaningful licensure in the commonwealth of Massachusetts even while it grows in popularity.

“We are proud to be in the initial group of home care agencies to promote these accreditation standards that convey Greater Medford VNA and Additional Care’s commitment to quality,” said the agency’s CEO Marie Knasas. “The peace of mind for our clients is paramount and we are hopeful people will continue to see the advantages of keeping people independent in their homes and communities.”

Bayada Nurses

…has expanded its Massachusetts service area to cover Martha’s Vineyard and the South Coast. Personal care and support services will be provided from Bayada’s Falmouth, service office to clients in Martha’s Vineyard and the Upper Cape (Bourne, Falmouth, Mashpee, and Sandwich), and South Coast (Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, Marion, Mattapoisett, and New Bedford).

“We’re thrilled to be able to provide even more people with Bayada’s high quality home health care services, which are delivered with compassion, excellence, and reliability,” said Neal O’Brien, director of Bayada’s Falmouth office….

Each Bayada Nurses Massachusetts office, including Falmouth, is accredited by the Home Care Alliance of Massachusetts and the Community Health Accreditation Program (CHAP).

Return to www.thinkhomecare.org.

CMS Announces New Proposed Rule on Quality of Care Complaints

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services released an announcement of a new proposed rule that would include home health and hospice agencies in the expanded list of providers required to give Medicare beneficiaries written notice of their right to file a quality of care complaint.

The written notice would consist of information on the beneficiary’s right to contact a Medicare Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) as well as how to contact their local QIO with quality of care concerns.

CMS will be accepting comments on this proposed rule until April 3 and links are available with more information on the rule itself and how to comment below.

 

Medicare proposes new rules for notifying beneficiaries of their right to lodge quality of care complaints

Providers Would Have to Give All Beneficiaries Written Notice of Their Rights

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a proposed rule today that would require most Medicare-participating providers and suppliers to give Medicare beneficiaries written notice about their right to contact a Medicare Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) with concerns about the quality of care they receive under the Medicare program.

Under current rules, only beneficiaries admitted to hospitals as inpatients are required to receive information about contacting their state QIO regarding quality of care issues. Today’s proposed rule would require that in order to participate in the Medicare program, providers and suppliers would need to inform beneficiaries of their right to complain to a QIO about quality of care, as well as how to contact their local QIO. In all, the following care settings are impacted by this proposal:

  • Clinics, rehabilitation agencies, and public health agencies that provide outpatient physical therapy and speech-language-pathology services
  • Comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facilities
  • Critical access hospitals
  • Home health agencies
  • Hospices
  • Hospitals
  • Long-term care facilities
  • Ambulatory Surgical Centers
  • Portable x-ray services
  • Rural health clinics and Federally Qualified Health Centers

“Today’s proposed rule would ensure that beneficiaries know they have a voice in the care they receive under the Medicare program,” said CMS Administrator Donald Berwick, M.D. “By requiring providers and suppliers to furnish QIO contact information to all beneficiaries, we are protecting beneficiaries’ rights to bring their worries about quality of care to a third party for review, which can lead to better care not only for the beneficiary, but for all patients in a given care setting.”

Since the 1970s, Medicare has contracted with private, mostly not-for-profit organizations such as QIOs to preserve beneficiaries’ access to high-quality, high-value healthcare.  QIOs are located in every state as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Each QIO is staffed by professionals, mostly doctors and other healthcare professionals, who are trained to review medical care and help beneficiaries with complaints about the quality of care they receive. These professionals also work directly with providers and facilities to make improvements in quality across all care settings.

One of the key tools QIOs use to improve quality of care is responding to complaints from Medicare beneficiaries regarding the care they receive from Medicare-participating providers and suppliers.  QIOs investigate these complaints, gather facts from all parties involved, and recommend action to help providers and suppliers improve quality of care.

“Medicare beneficiary complaints are an important source of information that QIOs use to improve the quality of care for all patients,” said Dr. Berwick. “Sometimes providers themselves are unaware of problems or the reasons for these problems until a beneficiary shows the courage to ‘speak up’ and report the issue to a QIO. By speaking up, beneficiaries can help other patients escape the same poor outcomes they have experienced.”

CMS will accept comments on the proposed rule until April 3, 2011 and will respond to comments in a final rule to be issued in the coming months. . To submit comments click here: http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=CMS_FRDOC_0001-0641

The proposed rule has been published today (2/2/11) at the Federal Register and can be found online at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2011-02-02/pdf/2011-2275.pdf

For more detailed information check out the CMS Overview webpage at http://www.cms.gov/qualityimprovementorgs It has more information about the QIO Program and how it works to improve care for Medicare beneficiaries and all Americans, including contact information for each of the 53 QIOs across the country.

Beneficiaries with questions or concerns about the quality of care they receive under Medicare can learn more about their rights by calling 1-800-MEDICARE or by reading Medicare’s fact sheet, “Quality of Care Concerns,” online at http://www.medicare.gov/Publications/Pubs/pdf/11362.pdf.

Return to www.thinkhomecare.org.

HCA Welcomes New Member: Art of Care Home Health Services

The Alliance is pleased to welcome its newest member, Art of Care Home Health Services, a private care agency in Allston, Massachusetts.

Return to www.thinkhomecare.org.