Critical Access Hospital (CAH) CoP COVID-19- 2020: Ensuring Compliance: 4 Part Webinar Series
Recorded Webinar | Sue Dill Calloway | From: Apr 07, 2020 - To: Dec 31, 2020
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Did you know there are over 700 pages of new regulations for CAHs? Did you know that CMS has changed all the tag numbers and has issued a new CAH manual in 2020? This is a must-attend webinar for every CAH. There are several important memos about COVID-19 that will be discussed.
Every hospital should be prepared in case a surveyor showed up at your door tomorrow. This four-part webinar will cover the entire CAH CoP manual. It is a great way to educate everyone in your hospital on all the sections in the CMS hospital manual especially ones that applies to their department. Hospitals have seen a significant increase in survey activity by CMS along with an increasing number of deficiencies. Common deficiencies and how to avoid them will be discussed. Hospitals will learn how to do a gap analysis to increase compliance. CMS has changed the website to get the CAH manual and also the email address to ask questions and this information will be provided.
There are many changes in 2020 from the 600 pages of CMS new discharge planning and Hospital Improvement Rules. These address requirements for the antibiotic stewardship program, access to medical records, QAPI, infection control, policy review every two years, emergency preparedness, credentialing of the dietician, quality and appropriateness of the diagnosis, four changes to the swing bed requirements, and more. CMS also changed all the CAH tag numbers. There are new changes regarding life safety code and facility services. There are 25 new tag numbers in infection control and antibiotic stewardship and 10 new tag numbers in QAPI. It also added the revised emergency preparedness requirements.
The October 2018 changes rewrote all of the swing bed regulations along with the four 2020 changes. They also now contain the swing bed interpretive guidelines and survey procedures which are under Appendix PP. Changes were made to the survey process and procedures.
This program will also discuss in detail the changes to the new discharge planning standards. CMS will issue interpretive guidelines and survey procedures on these.
CAHs hospitals must comply with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ CoP manual for Critical Access Hospitals. The CMS regulations and interpretive guidelines serve as the basis for determining compliance and this manual will be discussed in detail as well as the revised changes. Attendees will learn details about the CoPs and what to do when a surveyor arrives at your facility.
CMS has issued many important hospital memos including privacy and confidential which is especially important in light of the HIPAA and the substantial penalties seen recently. Other memos include texting of orders, humidity in the OR and the effects of humidity, CRE and scopes, insulin pens, safe injection practices, reporting to the QAPI program, prevention of Legionella, complaint manual update, OPO contracts, EBOLA, telemedicine and EMTALA, equipment and maintenance, disaster preparedness, and ligature risks.
Did you know that about a third of the CMS critical access manual was rewritten effective April 7, 2015, and three changes in 2016? This includes rewriting the section on nursing, drugs and biologicals, pharmacy, dietary, infection control, lab, radiology, contracted services, rehab section, IV medication, safe opioid use and blood, eligibility to be a CAH, and the availability for on-call providers to respond to the emergency department.
While CMS is not using the infection control worksheet at CAHs at this time, the webinar will discuss why it is important to be aware of what is in this worksheet and to use this as a self-assessment tool. There is also a final and revised worksheet on discharge planning and QAPI. There are ten new tag numbers for QAPI.
This seminar will help CAHs comply with specific CoP problem areas, including nursing care plans, legibility requirements, necessary policies and procedures, nursing medication carts, drug storage, informed consent, history and physicals, verbal orders, medication administration, the security of medications, protocols, standing orders and emergency preparedness. There are many pharmacy standards and medication-related sections that will be covered in detail. Every tag section in the regulations and interpretive guidelines also will be covered. Attendees will learn details about the CoPs and what to do when a surveyor arrives at your facility.
Tuesday, Apr 07, 2020, 1:00 PM EST - 3:00 PM EST, 120 Minutes
Objectives:-
At the conclusion of part one, participants should be able to:
Break: 3:00 PM EST - 3:30 PM EST, 30 Minutes
PART TWO OF FOUR Pharmacy, Dietary, Maintenance, Board, ED, and Policies
Tuesday, Apr 07, 2020, 3:30 PM EST - 5:30 PM EST, 120 Minutes
Objectives:-
At the conclusion of part two, participants should be able to:
Wednesday, Apr 08, 2020, 1:00 PM EST - 3:00 PM EST, 120 Minutes
Objectives:-
Break: 3:00 PM EST - 3:30 PM EST, 30 Minutes
Wednesday, Apr 08, 2020, 3:30 PM EST - 5:30 PM EST, 120 Minutes
Objectives:-
At the conclusion of part three, participants should be able to:
Who Should Attend?
CEOs, COOs, CFOs, nurse executives, accreditation and regulation director, nurse managers, pharmacists, quality managers, risk managers, healthcare attorneys, health information management personnel, social workers, dieticians, health information management, nurses, nurse educators, nursing supervisors, patient safety officer, infection preventionist, radiology director, emergency department directors, outpatient director, medication team, ethicist, director of Rehab (OT, PT, speech pathology, and audiology), OR supervisor, OR staff, CRNA, anesthesia providers, dietician, radiology staff, director of health information management, infection preventionist, dietician, activities director of swing bed patients, infection control committee members, pharmacists, and compliance officers.