Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Inspecting Nursing Homes

For nursing homes to be a part of Medicare and Medicaid, Congress has certain requirements nursing homes must meet. The state governments are working with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to perform health and fire safety inspections and investigate complaints of nursing homes.
Certified nursing homes must meet 180 regulatory standards to protect nursing home residents. These standards include medication, food preparation, abuse, etc.. The team is made up of trained inspectors, including 1 RN. These inspections take place at least once a year – more frequently for poor performance. The inspections make sure the nursing homes are performing at “minimum” standards. The quality of nursing homes can change (for better or worse) in a short amount of time. These changes occur when a nursing home’s administrator/ownership changes or when the home’s finances suddenly change.
Bottom Line: A passing grade still leaves room for concern.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

The value of using a legal nurse consultant to review your malpractice and negligence cases

Do you believe it is best to have physicians screen your cases? Physicians review a case based on the performance of the MD. What about the performance of the Hospital? Nurses have firsthand knowledge of the impact hospital policies have on patient safety. In a study titled "The Economic Value of Professional Nursing" (Medical Care, Jan 2009) the authors looked at RN hours per patient day in relation to nursing sensitive patient outcomes. There was a strong correlation between increasing RN hours and decreasing rates of urinary tract infection, pressure ulcers and falls; moderate correlation between hours and adverse drug events and post surgical infections. These patient outcomes are all part of the Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goals. If a hospital is staffing short, they are not complying with the Joint Commission's Patient Safety Guidelines.

Would an MD include this in their analysis?

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Using Word 2007

Many times when completing reports or chronologies I have had to scroll back and forth between 2 areas. I recently came across this from Tom at http://www.inter-alia.net:

Word tip:

In 2007: while you're in the document, click the small horizontal line just above the ruler toggle -- it's just above the scroll bar in the upper right corner of your document. When you click the line, you'll see a line appear across the screen; pull it about halfway down your document screen. This gives you two different views of the same document -- you can independently scroll above and below, to see different areas of the document on the same screen. Now you can edit your document without too much back and forth.

This will save all of us time...and therefore money!

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Real cost savings for your personal injury cases!

Have you ever considered all the expenses of a personal injury case? Just look at what 5 hours can cost you while investigating the merits of the case using the treating physician. Most physicians do not like working with attorneys on these cases and so are difficult to contact. Many times the attorney does extensive medical research in preparation for meeting with the MD, and will also loose time playing phone tag.
Consider these two scenarios:
1)
· Attorney spends 5 hours contacting MD, researching injury, organizing medical records
o $250/hr x 5 hrs = $1250
· MD charges 5 hours to screen medical records, typically reading only physician records
o $500/hr x 5 hrs = $2500
· Total cost to learn merit of the case
o $3750
2)
· Attorney contacts Schaab Consulting after initial client call, arranges for screening, organizing of records, and a brief report including research.
o $250/hr x 30min = $125
· Schaab Consulting provides above services in 5 hours, including review of all records provided and recommendation to obtain further records
o $100/hr x 5 hrs = $500
· Total costs to learn merits of the case
o $625