the home care aide specialty a phase iv (advanced) phcast curriculum september 26, 2013 kathie...
TRANSCRIPT
The Home Care Aide Specialty A Phase IV (Advanced)
PHCAST Curriculum
September 26, 2013
Kathie Smith, Associate VP of State Relations, Home and Community Based Care Association for Home and Hospice of North Carolina
Kathy Turner, Assistant Chief, Health Care Personnel Registry, NC Division of Health Service Regulation
Home Care AideProgram Approval Process
• All Nurse Aide I training programs must obtain DHSR approval to offer the Home Care Aide training course. (available via web or by emailing Brenda Sanders)
• The 2-page application must be completed and faxed to Brenda Sanders, Center for Aide Regulation and Education
• Instructor should be a registered nurse with an unencumbered license with a minimum of one year of home care/home health experience.
Major Program Requirements
• Use the state-approved Home Care Aide Specialty curriculum and teach, at a minimum, 100 hours of content - to include all modules.
• Students must be listed on the Nurse Aide I Registry prior to attending the course.
• Programs must require a minimum numerical grade of 75 as the final theory grade and a lab/activity grade as pass/fail.
Program Approval Process
Once the program application is received:• Application will be processed
• Faculty will be reviewed for minimum requirements
• Program number will be assigned
• Program coordinator will be notified via email
• Certificate of Completion template will be sent with approval email
Program Review/Renewal
Home Care Aide programs will be reviewed by the Education Consultant at the time of
the Nurse Aide I Training program renewals
Home Care Aide Listing Process
Upon completion of the HCA course, the program coordinator/instructor will:• Complete Certificate of Completion for successful
students• Fax Certificate of Completion to Kathy Turner at 919-
733-9764• Retain copy of certificate in records• Give original certificate to student• Regardless of certificate type presented to student,
this specific Certificate of Completion must be faxed to DHSR. Incomplete certificates will be returned.
This is to certify that
______________________________
has successfully completed a North Carolina State-approved Home Care Aide Specialty Training Program at
____________________________________ Name of Program
_________________ Program Number
on the _____________ day of ___________________, 20____.
Certified by:
_____________________ _____________________ Signature of Approved Coordinator or Faculty Print Name of Approved Coordinator or Faculty
Note: Only those students who are already listed on the NC Nurse Aide I Registry and successfully complete the State-approved Home Care Aide Specialty training
may be listed as having this specialty listing on the Registry.
Information in this box MUST be complete in order for information to be added to the Registry Listings. Incomplete forms will be returned to the Program Instructor of
record.
Nurse Aide Listing Information
____________________________________________________________________ Name as listed on the NC Nurse Aide Registry
____________________________________________________________________
Nurse Aide I Listing Number (available on Registry Listing Verification)
Listing Process
• Upon receiving faxed certificate, staff at the Center for Aide Regulation and Education will:• Ensure student completer is currently listed on the
Nurse Aide I Registry• Add the aide to “Home Care Aide Specialty
Training” listing document, found on https://www.ncnar.org/verify_listings1.jsp
Sample Listing Page
NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES DIVISION OF HEALTH SERVICE REGULATION
CENTER FOR AIDE REGULATION AND EDUCATION State-Approved Home Care Aide Specialty Training
5/17/13
The individuals below have completed state-approved Home Care Aide specialty training and are listed in alphabetical order by last name. For questions regarding this listing, please
contact: Center for Aide Regulation and Education Branch - Registry Staff
8 a.m. - 12 noon, and 1 p.m. - 3 p.m., Monday-Friday Phone: 919-855-3969
Fax: 919-733-9764
Name (last, first) Date of Birth
Program Date of Completion
Amelia D Saul 08/02/1994 Career Academy & Technical School, Troutman, NC
01/11/2012
Autumn E Brooks 10/06/1994 Career Academy & Technical School, Troutman, NC
01/11/12
Morgan Dale Worley 07/07/1994 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12 Kristin Leigh Wilson 01/02/1994 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12 Sarah Pearl Watson 03/25/1994 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12
Kaylee Nichole Stikeleather
08/12/1994 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12
Shawna Elaine Matthews
02/16/1994 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12
Brittany Ann Ledford 11/17/1993 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12 Morgan Taylor Brown 08/24/1994 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12 Brittany Ann Owenby 07/26/1993 Charles D Owen High School 06/01/12 Melissa Gail Johnson 07/01/1981 Roanoke Chowan Community
College 05/10/12
Tanya Edwards Lee 11/10/1975 Roanoke Chowan Community College
05/10/12
Geania Fay Coggins 12/24/1962 Roanoke Chowan Community College
05/10/12
Betty Love Myrick 07/05/1948 Roanoke Chowan Community College
05/10/12
Robin Archer Whitehead
03/19/1958 Roanoke Chowan Community College
05/10/12
Paula Williams Wobbleton
03/26/1979 Roanoke Chowan Community College
05/10/12
Anne Carolina Nixon 04/29/82 Roanoke Chowan Community College
05/10/12
Listing Verifications
Once the DHSR’s web technology project is completed, the listing will be found on the
Nurse Aide Verification page as do the other registry listings. It will be modeled after the
Geriatric Aide listing.
Resources
• To obtain copy of the HCA program application send email to [email protected]. (applications will soon be available on agency web site)
• To inquire about HCA curriculum and/or site reviews, contact your NAI Education Consultant (see web site for contact information) or Kathy Turner ([email protected]).
• To inquire about listings, contact Kathy Turner
PHCAST Phase IV – NUR 3218Home Care Nurse Aide
• Home Care Nurse Aide• Recommended Hrs: 100• Max. Hrs: 120• Tier 2
• Description• Provides advanced training for the Nurse Aide I• Focuses on enhancing specific skills needed when
working in the home care setting• Includes: person-centered care, nutrition/hydration,
patient and personal safety, mental health, dementia, behavioral challenges, pain management, palliative care and stress management
Where are the enrollees?
• Community employers
• Employment agencies
• Division of Workforce Solutions
• CE Healthcare classes (NA I & ll)
• Back-to-Work intake sessions
Student Recruitment
Turn Key Curriculum
Integration of Adult Learning Principles
Reality-Based Education
Application of learned knowledge
“Real world” experiences
A meaningful learning experience
Curriculum Content
Topics with Time Guidance
Scripts, PowerPoints
Activities, Handouts, PDFs, Resources
Instructor Tutorial/How to Use
Laboratory Element
• Setting up a home simulated laboratory
Phase IV- Sample Comments (student)
• This course has started me on the path to reaching my career goals. (100% agree)
• I know about career options that I did not know about before the completing this course. (93% agree)
• This course has put me further along in reaching my education goals. (89% agree)
• I am considering career options that I was not considering before the course. (72% agree)
• This course has made me more satisfied with my direct care job than I was before. (92% agree)
• This course has made me a better direct care worker.(100% agree)
• I would recommend this course to my coworkers.(96% agree)
The Industry Connection -Relevance-
Kathie Smith, RN
Emerging programs and payment delivery methods
• Care transitions• Bundled payments• ACOs• Focus on non clinical type
services to keep people at home
Persons 65 years or older• 41.4 million in 2011• Represented 13.3% of the U.S. population,• 1+ of 8 Americans• Number of older Americans increased by
18% since 2000, compared to an increase of 9.4% for the < 65 population
• Number of Americans 45-64 who will reach 65 over the next two decades – increased by 33% during this period. (DHHS AOA)
A look at Older Americans
Number of people with chronic conditions is rapidly rising. Between 2000 and 2030, the number of Americans with one or more chronic conditions will increase 37%, an increase of 46 million people.
About 28% of Americans have two or more chronic conditions and they are responsible for two-thirds of health care spending.
In the Medicare program over two-thirds of the expenditures are for beneficiaries with five or more chronic conditions. ( Chronic care -making the case for ongoing care- Robert Wood Johnson)
Chronic Condition Management
Reducing Hospital Readmissions• October 2012 CMS began ranking hospitals
based on 30 day readmission rate for heart attacks, pneumonia, heart failure
• In 2015 the program will expand to include COPD and other conditions
• Poor performing hospitals will have all Medicare payments reduced by an amount equal to value of payments for excess readmission. (MedPac 2012)
Hospitals Are Being Penalized for Certain Readmissions
PHCAST and Home Care Aide Courses: An Industry Perspective
• Growing need for continuum of care
• Rising cost of care & shortage of trained workers
• Greater efficiency in healthcare delivery (lowering cost while improving delivery)
• Promote quality care for increasing numbers of older adults and persons with disabilities
( Division of Aging and Adult Services)
Home Care Aide TrainingHow It Can Be Used
• Assisting agencies in the professional development of current staff
• Give agencies a “raise the bar” level of staff when partnering with care transition entities by having aides that have more than minimum training requirements
• Prepare a potential employee to enhance their resume by having increased knowledge specific to Home Care
Employer Feedback from Pilots: Home Care Nurse Aide
• Increased overall skills, helped build confidence
• Dementia portion most interesting and helpful
• Format was pleasing and open discussions encouraged
• Learned more from the instructor than the PowerPoint presentation (by design)
• Sparked interest in education
• Disease processes most applicable
Employer Feedback from Pilots: Home Care Nurse Aide
• Overall very pleased with the class• Received more compliments from workers who were
PHCAST trained
• Reports to nurse/supervisor were more pertinent
• Emphasis on critical thinking and communication with office staff, therapists, and family members to enable them to give the best care possible with confidence
• Knowing how to prioritize the care plan
• Great tips on recognizing, avoiding and dealing with caregiver burnout
Outreach – Make it Real!
• Work with your local home care, home health and hospice agencies
• Agency listings by county (DHSR)http://www.ncdhhs.gov/dhsr/reports.htm• Agency listings at Association website at:www.homeandhospicecare.org (go to locate
a provider and click on home care or hospice and can search by county
• Ask to speak with agency owner, director or supervisor
Suggestions for Utilizing Community Agencies
• Aide supervisor may visit the class to discuss supervisory visits to the home
• Request agencies to share different types of aide logs and notes to use when teaching documentation
• Ask agencies to share orientation topics and hiring requirements and include the information in various lessons
• Owner or directors can serve as guest speakers to talk about home care in general and how it fits into the care continuum
• Ask the agencies for a list of the types of ongoing in- services they provide for their aide staff, such as continuing education and training
Suggestions for Utilizing Community Agencies
• Enlist their assistance in setting up home care lab (ideas, type of supplies/equipment)
• Ask them to write real-life scenarios to use for role-playing and additional activities
• Bring them in to assist with mock interviews
Questions/Sharing
Questions and Sharing