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It basically changed home health from a fee-for-service per-diem model into a bundled or capitated model, similar to a hospital DRG episode. I think that was a big change for home health agencies. When I look at homecare, or personal care, that largely hasn’t changed. It’s completely flipped.
It wants to leverage its home-based primarycare capabilities to serve its patients in value-based models. BrightSpring’s home medication program, along with homecare, has driven a 73% reduction in hospitalizations, it says.
We all know that there are a lot of problems in health care related to the fragmentation of homecare services. They’re one of the leading providers of homecare services. ” You’re also doing in-home palliative care and SNF-level care in the home.
At Medicity, we were serving 1,300 hospitals, facilitating lots of data exchange across hospitals, primarycare and labs, but nothing we were doing was ever going to touch the home and community. There's no one-size-fits-all solution for establishing care-at-home models. Healthcare is hard.
So that’s a case in point, and I’ll share a little story about this, but I would say that before we end up in your ERs, our primarycare providers have an opportunity that needs to be formally presented. The manner in which I have to communicate with my mom’s primarycare provider is woefully behind.
This article is a part of your HHCN+ Membership In the broader at-homecare space, Dr. Michael Le is considered an innovator. His impressive resume — which also includes time at Optum Home & Community Care and CareMore Health Plan — places him at the forefront of the movement bringing more care to the home and the community.
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