Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,558,173 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

The pressure is on.


Customized care - it's a concept that's starting to take hold in the nursing home arena. More and more facilities are confronting the reality that, when it comes to resident care, one size does not fit all. Appropriate medical care means care suited to the case.

Two factors are precipitating this: 1) the increasing variety of elderly being cared for by nursing homes, ranging from the traditional population of chronically ill, to the subacutely ill, to the reasonably functional if somewhat disabled populations in assisted living as·sist·ed living
n.
A living arrangement in which people with special needs, especially older people with disabilities, reside in a facility that provides help with everyday tasks such as bathing, dressing, and taking medication.
, and 2) the growth of the managed care concept that health care should be cost-effectively tailored to the patient's real needs.

Nursing homes are in a particularly strong position to take advantage of the move to individualized in·di·vid·u·al·ize  
tr.v. in·di·vid·u·al·ized, in·di·vid·u·al·iz·ing, in·di·vid·u·al·iz·es
1. To give individuality to.

2. To consider or treat individually; particularize.

3.
 care because they are part of a "product-rich" industry. The sheer number of product categories and variation within categories available to facilities opens up opportunities to custom-select and purchase products according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 resident-specific needs. A product category in which this has become increasingly apparent is pressure relief support surfaces.

The "firm mattress" of yesteryear yes·ter·year  
n.
1. The year before the present year.

2. Time past; yore.



yes
 has given way to an array of mattress replacements, overlays and specialized beds accommodating various levels of skin risk and injury. The wise administrator recognizes that no one of these products will meet the needs of all residents; depending on the resident, some will fall short, others may provide very expensive overtreatment.

It's important to realize," says Thomas Stewart
''For other men with the name Thomas Stewart, see Thomas Stewart (disambiguation)
Thomas Stewart was an illegitimate son of King Robert II of Scotland. Thomas was one of dozens of Robert's children, and, as with his other bastards, the father earnestly sought a
, PhD, vice-president of sales, marketing and clinical affairs for Gaymar Industries, a Buffalo, NY manufacturer of such products, "that today's concept is to give the resident as much support as he or she needs without giving too much, because we all pay for that 'too much.'" To help nursing homes and other providers match the product with the patient effectively and without waste, Dr. Stewart has created a resident assessment tool he calls STOPSS, i.e., Selecting the Optimal Patient Support. Surface. Dr. Stewart recently authored a chapter on this approach for the forthcoming book Decubitus Ulcer decubitus ulcer
n.
See bedsore.


decubitus ulcer Pressure ulcer, see there
: Clinical Practice, soon to be released by Springer Verlag.

For the purposes of this article, he identified the three key resident factors that nursing home staff should assess in selecting the appropriate surface: "level of activity, level of mobility and sensory perception. There are other factors contributing to the development of pressure sores pressure sore
n.
See bedsore.
, but these three seem to be the key in selecting a support surface."

Such an assessment makes sense for two reasons, he notes. First, today's available products do fall within a continuum of patient need. According to Dr. Stewart, the "minimum" is the foam-constructed mattress replacement; its specially engineered design provides an advantage over the traditional mattress. Moving up the severity-of-risk scale, there is the air mattress overlay (with pump attached); the low air loss overlay; the low air loss bed ("although the superiority of this over the overlay has not been scientifically documented as yet"); the flotation therapy bed; and, finally, the air-fluidized bed. There is also the turning bed, which periodically repositions the patient from side-to-side to avoid fluid build-up build·up also build-up  
n.
1. The act or process of amassing or increasing: a military buildup; a buildup of tension during the strike.

2.
 in the lungs for patients whose respiratory systems have been compromised by immobility immobility

standing still and disinclined to move, as in an animal suddenly blinded; responds to other stimuli unless immobility is part of a dummy syndrome when all stimuli are ignored.
; some of these products also provide a percussive per·cus·sive  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characterized by percussion.



per·cussive·ly adv.
 element to help loosen lung secretions.

Also increasing the importance of selectivity in this category are the changing realities of Medicare reimbursement. Gaymar reimbursement specialist Colleen col·leen  
n.
An Irish girl.



[Irish Gaelic cailín, diminutive of caile, girl, from Old Irish.
 Kraatz explains, "As it stands now, pressure support surfaces are grouped into three reimbursement categories. Group 1, for patients at-risk, includes alternative pressure pads, foam replacements and air overlays; Group 2, for stage 2 pressure sores and higher, includes low air loss mattress replacements, low air loss overlays and beds, and alternating (or turning) mattresses; and Group 3, for the most severely disabled or contracted patients, includes air-fluidized beds. Groups 2 and 3 are considered ancillaries and are therefore fully reimbursable; Group 1 products are subject to routine cost limits.

"The problem," she notes, "is that if a prospective payment system (PPS (Packets Per Second) The measurement of activity in a local area network (LAN). In LANs such as Ethernet, Token Ring and FDDI, as well as the Internet, data is broken up and transmitted in packets (frames), each with a source and destination address. ) is enacted, as is anticipated this year, these distinctions may disappear. The facility may have to carry the cost of the surface it chooses within the single PPS payment." In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, the product selection will have to be genuinely needed and cost-justified or the facility may lose money.

The possible good news is that the documentation criteria governing that reimbursement may be more uniform and easily understood than today's hodge-podge of intermediary-specific policies and interpretations. Perhaps a more uniform set of assessment standards, like Dr. Stewart's STOPSS system, will enable facilities to make truly rational selections among the products available to fit the products to their particular resident populations.

Which means that the pressure relief support surface market may provide an excellent test case for whether PPS really does fulfill the goal that has been set for it: to facilitate customized care supported by justifiable reimbursement.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Medquest Communications, LLC
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:nursing home care
Publication:Nursing Homes
Date:Mar 1, 1997
Words:803
Previous Article:The second time around.
Next Article:Simple rules for hiring. (medical personnel)
Topics:



Related Articles
Nursing home-based skin care: where we are and where we're headed: an overview. (Special Section)
The financial markets: nursing home and assisted living stocks are 'looking good'. (long-term care stocks)
Long-term care financing.(Forecast '98)(Cover Story)
NURSING'S ROLE.(history of American gerontology)(Statistical Data Included)
Long-term care nurses speak out: Midwest nurses speak freely about their likes and dislikes in long-term care. (Feature Article).
Only you can prevent pressure ulcers. (Feature Article).
What's in a number? CMS quality-initiative data go live. (CMS Report Card).(Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services)
Defending the MDS--from regulators and litigators: poorly prepared MDSs are exposing facilities to major new risks.(Minimum Data Set)
Technology for independence: this multilevel seniors community has found telemedicine useful for home care, assisted living, and nursing home care.
Study: home hospice better than nursing homes in end-of-life care.(NH News Notes)(Brief Article)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles