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Reading Rehabilitation

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Title: Reading Rehabilitation


1
Reading Rehabilitation
  • Implementing Patient-Focused Care

2
Reading Rehab Hospital Roots HealthSouths RRH
Facility
  • Built in 1925 the historic Stone Manor on a
    30-acre campus.
  • The million dollar home.
  • Was originally the home of Isaac Eberly, a
    prominent businessman and hosiery mogul.

3
Leading Change
  • Clint Kreitner CEO of RRH from 1989-2000
  • History
  • Early career as a Naval officer
  • Respected entrepreneur with 4 successful
    companies
  • On board of RRH for 3 years

4
Kreitners Forecast
  • Kreitner The hospital had an awesome
    reputation, a dedicated staff, and no debt.
  • Instincts his insight of business told him that
    RRH was headed for difficult times
  • Reasons
  • Over 50 of RRH referels came from one large
    hospital
  • Industry was inflicting double digit annual
    increases on the U.S. economy
  • Action
  • He began forums with the staff to communicate
    need for change
  • Opened the financial books to the staff to show
    them what he saw

5
Staff Reaction
  • This type of communication was a first for RRH
    and not typical for that industry.
  • It made many of the staff feel uncomfortable
    because they had been in a thriving industry for
    15-20 years and did not want to believe they were
    in trouble.
  • Needless to say, his opinion was not universally
    shared due to his lack of healthcare industry
    experience.

6
Rehabilitation Services
  • Brief History of RRH from 1958 to present
  • In 1998 RRH had 76 beds, 116 therapists and 25
    million in revenue
  • Most patients came to RRH after treatment of an
    illness or injury at an acute care hospital
  • Rehab hospitals restore basic functioning, such
    as walking, climbing stairs, getting dressed, and
    feeding oneself
  • Used Functional Independence Measures (FIM's)
  • Goal was to help patients leave functioning as
    independentely as possible 

7
Rehabilitation Services
  • RRH, like other rehab hospitals, also differed
    from acute care hospitals in being smaller than
    most of them. 
  • RRH's annual revenues of 25 million compared to
    more than 200 million for the largest and 45
    million for the smallest acute care hospital in
    its region
  • RRH admitted patients with a wide range of
    diagnoses
  • Head injury
  • Stroke
  • Spinal cord injuries
  • Orthopedic problems
  • Received care from 5 disciplines
  • Physiatrists (rehab dr.)
  • Nurses
  • Social workers
  • Physical therapists
  • Occupational therapists
  • If patient had head injury or stroke
  • Psychologists
  • Cognitive therapists
  • Speech therapists

8
Effectiveness
  • Measured effectiveness by using three
    dimensions 
  • Average length of stay
  • Increase of functional outcomes
  • Patient satisfaction
  • Average length of stay compared favorably to the
    national average which was 21 days
  • Achieved nearly the same increase in the level of
    functional independence
  • Patients were more satisfied with quality of care
    at RRH compared to national benchmark)
  • Patient care declined over the next 8 years
  • This was due to shorter lengths of stay rather
    than due to fewer patients
  • Fewer patient days Less revenue 

9
Mission
  • Mission of Reading Rehabilitation
  • As a subsidiary of Adventist Health Ministries,
    Inc, Reading Rehabilitation Hospital was a non
    profit organization in Pennsylvania.
  • The well being of the patient is the number one
    priority of the RRH, together with its sister
    companies.
  • Because of the centers affiliation with the
    Adventist church, commitment to the patients
    well being became stronger.
  • The mission of the Reading Rehabilitation center
    did not limit itself to the physical healing, but
    spiritual healing as well.

10
Purpose
  • The organizations values, as well as strategic
    and operational decisions were also base on this
    vision.
  • The mission and vision of Reading Rehabilitation
    Hospital was put at a test due to the competitive
    world of health care.
  • As mentioned by Kreitner, the CEO brought in
    since 1989, finding balance between mission and
    real world business practice was one of the
    greatest challenges faced by Reading Rehab.

11
Pressures from Managed Care
  • 1980s and 1990s healthcare costs were
    escalating out of control with adverse
    consequences for both the federal budget and U.S.
    corporations.
  • The government responded with changes to Medicare
    and Medicaid.
  • In 1983, Medicare introduced a Prospective
    Payment System (PPS) under which standard
    payments were made based on a patients
    diagnosis, regardless of the institutions actual
    cost.
  • Medicaid, funded through state budgets, declined
    in funding over the 1980s and 1990s, reducing
    the level of reimbursements.
  • One of the most significant innovations affecting
    the U.S. healthcare industry was the rapid
    emergence of managed care.

12
What is Managed Care?
  • The term managed care is used to describe a
    variety of techniques intended to reduce the cost
    of providing health benefits and improve the
    quality of care.
  • According to the National Library of Medicine,
    managed care encompasses programs.

13
Main Purpose
  • To reduce unnecessary health care costs through a
    variety
  • of mechanisms such as



14
Fee-for-Service (FFS)
15
Change
  • This all changed in 1980s with new state laws
    that allowed insurance companies to negotiate
    prices directly with health care providers.
  • In attempt to reduce costs

16
What would happen
  • Patients would choose from a predetermined list
    of participating doctors, a primary care
    physician (PCP) who served as the gatekeeper
    for the patient.
  • These changes meant that hospitals had to perform
    tasks more efficiently so costs did not exceed
    payments received from MCOs.

17
Reading Rehabilitation Hospital
  • Acute Rehabilitation hospitals like RRH were
    cushioned from some of these changes in the
    healthcare systemat least for the time being!
  • Most RRH patients were on Medicare, and the more
    generous the Medicare rate was, the more
    advantage it was for the Reading Rehabilitation
    Hospital.
  • Kreitner noted, At times, we would keep
    patients twice as long as we do, and get
    reimbursed for it.
  • But we cant afford to get lazy. So we strive to
    keep costs down and maximize incentive pay,
    rather than maximizing the reimbursement.

18
Main Goal
TO MAXIMIZE INCENTIVE PAY
19
Competition
  • Reading Rehabilitation Hospital
  • Only acute rehab in Pennsylvania market
  • Accounted for about 6 of market share
  • Shared the market with 3 acute care hospitals
  • Reading Hospital Medical Center (RHMC) 57
  • St. Josephs Medical Center 24
  • Community General Hospital 13

20
Patient Flow
21
Continuum of Care
  • Acute care hospitals kept patients longer
  • Create new efficiencies and fill empty beds
  • Traditional nursing homes began offering many
    rehab services
  • Rehab expansion of other industry participation
    would have a negative effect on RRH

22
Market Conditions
  • RRH only licensed provider of acute rehab
    services in Berks County
  • RHMC tried to buy RRHs license
  • Clint Kreitner valued it at 6-8 Million
  • Pennsylvania Regulations required Certification
    of need (CON) before granting license for new
    acute rehab service
  • CON limited rehabs services others could provide

23
Market Conditions
  • Increasing competition in product market
  • Highly competitive labor market
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Physical Therapists
  • Unfavorable Supply/Demand
  • Kreitner We constantly live in fear that our
    therapists will bail out en masse and as a
    result, the organization will be brought to its
    knees.

24
The Rehabilitation Process
  • Admission from upstream providers
  • Care providers from multiple discipline evaluate
    patients
  • Weekly conference involving interaction between
    the patient and care providers
  • Integrated plan care
  • Discharge

25
The Rehabilitation Process












26
Process Improvement
  • Kreitner assumed Leadership
  • Patient care across disciplines ineffective
  • Delay in treatment and inconsistency among
    treatments
  • Kreitner Implemented Continuous Improvement
    Initiative
  • Kaizen Effect Process

27
Process Improvement
28
Process Improvement (Barriers)
  • Issues impacting the process improvement
  • Staff disciplines cannot cross train
  • Staff could not be in ready status
  • Patient severity was not known in advance
  • Shorter length of stay, immediate need to the
    discipline

29
Performance Improvement (Barriers)
  • Variance in patient acuity leads to scheduling
    problems
  • Service lines are not flexible for the short
    length of stay
  • Medicare reimbursement is driven to the therapy
    target loss of revenue

30
Staffing Barrier Specifics
  • COP for CMS Requirements for IRF
  • Daily access to Physician
  • 24 hour nursing
  • Minimum 3 hours per day/5 days
  • Two forms of therapy available

31
Reading Rehabilitation Hospital Where are they
now?
  • Acquired by HealthSouth Corp in 1998
  • One of multiple purchases in the 1990s
  • Others included NovaCare, Columbia/HCA
  • Mix of facilities, including acute care rehab
  • Not unlike RRH, faced challenges due to changing
    reimbursement landscape
  • Medicare Balance Budget Act
  • Managed Care Organizations
  • Succeeded in maintaining, then increasing revenue
    projections
  • Diversification
  • Capturing market share (simultaneously solving
    RRH volume problem)

32
Changes in Organization Model
  • Prior to sale, RRH returned to the departmental
    structure
  • Staffing efficiencies returned
  • Issues relation to patient care addressed via
    better process coordination
  • As HealthSouth, RRH continues to use this model,
    now lead by a primary nurse
  • 24-hour team of registered nurses and personal
    care assistants assess and attend to each
    patient's needs. They work in partnership under
    the primary nurse-model, which assures continuity
    of care.
  • Although time-limited twice weekly conferences
    were piloted, weekly interdisciplinary team
    meetings have been adopted under HealthSouth
  • Each week your treatment team will meet to
    discuss your progress, goals and discharge plan.

33
Continued Growth and Success
  • The HealthSouth Reading Rehabilitation Hospital
    has expanded to offer
  • Inpatient Rehabilitation
  • Outpatient Rehabilitation
  • Home Heath Care Service
  • Continues to demonstrate high levels of patient
    satisfaction, as evidenced by higher than average
    ratings in two important measures
  • Would You Recommend
  • Overall Quality of Care.
  • Utilizes an Outcomes Measurement tool to track
    each patients functioning both upon admission
    and after treatment
  • Uses such data to benchmark outcomes and ensure
    programs are meeting patient rehabilitation needs

34
Reading Rehab Group
  • Jimmie Olazaba
  • Stacey Benson
  • Anemone Basabakwinshi
  • Tahira Raza
  • Ailiya Raza
  • Quynh Smith
  • Charles Workman
  • Kenith Causey
  • Grace Cruz

35
References
  • Commitment Quality. Retrieved November 7, 2008,
    from HeathSouth Reading Rehabilitation Web
    sitehttp//www.healthsouthreading.com/quality_co
    mmit.asp
  • Frequently Asked Questions. Retrieved November 7,
    2008, from HeathSouth Reading Rehabilitation Web
    sitehttp//www.healthsouthreading.com/quality_co
    mmit.asp
  • Gittell, J.H (1999). Reading Rehabilitation
    Hospital Implementation Patient-Focused Care,
    Teaching Note. Harvard Business Review,
    5(899-139), 1-16.
  • Managed Care. Medline Plus. Retrieved November 4,
    2008, from http//www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/mana
    gedcare.html
  • Managed Care. Retrieved November 4, 2008, from
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Managed_care
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