Facts & Figures
FAKE NEWS
Types & Trends
Define/ition
Food for Thought
100
This profession makes up the largest portion of the healthcare workforce.
What is registered nurses
100
We have a shortage of providers.
What is FAKE NEWS - we have a maldistribution
100
Three major types of hospital ownership
What is nonprofit, for-profit, government
100
NPs can evaluate patients, diagnose, order, and interpret diagnostic tests, initiate and manage treatment, prescribe meds.
What is full practice
100
Should we be measuring and paying based on quality? Why or why not?
What is *opinion based*
200
Number of hospitals in the US
What is 5,564
200
Not-for-profits can make a profit
What is REAL NEWS-- but they have rules about how they can spend it
200
This is expected to happen to the national RN supply between 2012 and 2025.
What is outpace demand
200
Vertical integration & Horizontal integration
What is variety of organizations addressing different dimensions of population health, such as primary care, outpatient specialty care, diagnostic/therapeutic services, inpatient, rehab, long-term care, home care, end of life care and aggregation of organizations that produce the same type of services, e.g. hospital chains
200
How we get workforce planning from old school to new school model
What is effectively and efficiently use current workforce instead of adjusting numbers, focus on roles and skills instead of profession, retool current employees instead or redesigning curriculum, and plan for a workforce for health instead of a health workforce
300
Greatest factors (2) impacting health
What is social and economic
300
Only Home Health Agencies and Nursing Homes are Medicaid certified
What is FAKE NEWS – these are the only one’s Medicare certified. Adult day service centers and residential care communities are also Medicaid certified
300
Types of quality measures
What are Structure, Process, Intermediary outcomes, outcomes, patient satisfaction, efficiency
300
Characteristics of Critical Access Hospitals
What is limited to 25 beds, not in PPS, receive 101% of outpatient, inpatient, lab, and therapy services, allowed to have SNF and home health agencies, 10-bed psychiatric unites, 10-bed rehab, average 4 day LOS, not eligible for cost-based reimbursement, limited inpatient facilities
300
Greatest challenges in drug development
What is high risk, potential high reward, R&D dollars do not translate to price of product
400
Amount of long-term care cost covered by private insurance
What is 8%
400
Medicare does not have out of pocket limits for perspective drugs
What is REAL NEWS
400
Core Function of Public Health
What is assessment, policy development, assurance
400
Olmstead Decision
What is people need to be served in the community if they want and if possible; lead to significant decrease in the number of residents in state psychiatric hospitals
400
System-level barriers to Dental health care
What is dental health professional shortage areas, dentists do not take public insurance, safety net clinics underfunded, variations in licensing
500
Factors driving healthcare prices (at least 3)
What is higher salaries, drugs/devices more expensive, administrative costs of mixed coverage model, cost of malpractice, more expensive delivery system models, consolidation of health care providers, “Business” not social service
500
Mental Health services have lower price elasticity
What is FAKE NEWS - they have higher price elasticity
500
Global types of hospital payment models
What is global budgets, case-based, include physician costs or physician costs billed separately, DRGs
500
The Dutch Experiment
What is Dutch government raised cost-sharing on mental health services in response to increased demand, overall use fell, acute mental healthcare services increased, and involuntary commitment doubled, saved money on less severe illnesses but spent more on severe illness
500
How can US learn from other countries health care systems? How can other countries learn from us?
What is *opinion based*
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