These are uncertain times for health care leaders. As hospitals continue to cope with the lingering effects of the recession, they now face a host of new regulations in the wake of health reform. Staying abreast of the latest trends and requirements is imperative for today's boards as they make decisions that will chart their organizations' futures.
This series, "Health Care in Transition: Topics for Trustees," brings to bear the policy expertise of the AHA and the educational expertise of its Center for Healthcare Governance to create dynamic "in-the-boardroom education" on policy and regulatory issues of critical importance. Each 20- to 30-minute program consists of an audio recording with synched slides on one topic, discussion questions for use by the board after viewing the program, and supplemental resources. They can be accessed via an Internet connection for immediate play or downloaded to your computer.
Speakers:
John Combes, M.D., President and COO, Center for Healthcare Governance and Beth Feldpush, PhD, AHA Senior Associate Director of Policy
This session provides an overview of the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services' new Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program. Required by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the program will reduce Medicare payments to hospitals with higher than expected readmission rates beginning in fiscal year 2013.
Speakers:
John Combes, M.D., President and COO, Center for Healthcare Governance and Joanna Kim, AHA Senior Associate Director of Policy
This session provides an overview of the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services new hospital value-based purchasing program. Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the program will pay hospitals based on their actual performance on quality measures, rather than just the reporting of those measures, beginning in fiscal year 2013.
Speakers:
John Combes, M.D., President and COO, Center for Healthcare Governance and Lisa Grabert, AHA Senior Associate Director of Policy
This session provides an overview of provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that allow the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to experiment broadly with new models of payment to encourage hospitals and other providers to improve the continuity of the care for patients across an entire episode of care.