Filtered by category: The CALTCM Wave 2023 Clear Filter

Prepare for “Roll-out” of Monovalent COVID-19 Vaccine this Fall

On June 15th, the FDA asked drugmakers to update the COVID Booster to target XBB 1.5 and no longer target the Wuhan strain. This monovalent mRNA vaccine has already been field tested by Pfizer and Moderna and should be available by early September. Novavax will also have their booster available this Fall. This monovalent booster vaccine will replace the current bivalent booster.

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Wherever You Go, There You Are

Mindfulness meditation has been popularized in mainstream culture as an opportunity to slow down and explore our experiences through natural wonder and curiosity. It has given us permission to pay attention to not only our inner workings of our own mind but also what surrounds us in a non-judgmental and non-reactive way. The following journal article discusses mindfulness as an introductory practice for psychotherapy clinicians and patients; however, the core concepts presented can be applied to other fields of practice.

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WHO Says “Parkinson Disease Is Increasing Faster Than Any Other Neurologic Disorder”

JAMA Network May 9 reported on a large study linking industrial solvent in drinking water to the development of Parkinson Disease (PD) in Camp Lejeune Veterans. The 1987 Safe Drinking Water Act uncovered polluted wells at Camp Lejeune. The main contaminant was a Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) called trichloroethylene (TCE), which came from on-base sources (leaking underground storage tanks, industrial spills, and waste disposal sites) and off-base sources (dry-cleaning businesses). The study compared the prevalence of PD in Marines who had lived on this base during the high-exposure years of 1975-1985, when monthly TCE levels were 70-fold the permissible amount. This cohort was compared to Marines living at Camp Pendleton in CA, where the water had not been contaminated. The study found a 70% higher risk of PD in Camp Lejeune Marines, which may be the tip of the iceberg, since this population is only in their mid-60s.

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CDPH Award Announcement: CALTCM LMG-IP Strike Team Project

CALTCM is proud to announce that it has received an award from CDPH's Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAI) Program. Our project, the Leadership and Management in Geriatrics Infection Prevention and Control Leadership Program (LMG-IPC Strike Team) combines the methodology from two established CALTCM programs, CALTCM SNF 2.0® and CALTCM’s Leadership and Management in Geriatrics course (LMG)®.

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Have You Considered the Locum Tenens Option for Provider Staffing?

I joined the boomer wave of “retirees” at the end of 2019, but for multiple reasons, have continued to work on a part time basis as a consultant and direct patient care provider. By the end of 2020, I concluded that carrying even part-time liability insurance was an excessive cost given the limited amount of direct patient care work I was doing. Subsequently, I’ve discovered Locum Tenens work minimizes my business costs while providing an opportunity to help colleagues in the PALTC space, who need coverage for vacations or acute illness. Locum Tenens is a model that allows a physician to temporarily assume the duties of a colleague’s practice during the agreed time of service. This means that when I work exclusively for a colleague on vacation, I’m covered by their medical liability insurance and use their billing system for the patients I see. At the main facility where I’ve provided this service, I’m familiar with their physician’s EHR and use that EHR for patient care documentation. At other facilities with a different physician EHR, I activate my old EHR and use that system for documenting patient care and for turning the documents into my colleague’s biller, for later reimbursement. Besides this reimbursement, I generally negotiate an incentive fee from the facility to cover the added work of picking up patients I don’t know, many of whom are medically complex. I have maintained my Medical Director Certification (CMD), so I also negotiate a fee for Medical Director services if I’m covering their Medical Director duties.

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CALTCM’S Summit of Excellence: Supporting the Various Pillars of Resident Health and Well-Being

At CALTCM, our mission is to “promote quality patient care across the long-term care continuum through medical leadership and education.”  And our vision includes providing “excellent and individualized medical care, a team approach, and the integration of medical science with personalized care.”

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2023 Call for Posters

You are invited to submit a poster abstract for the 2023 Poster Session at the 2023 CALTCM Summit for Excellence. This is a unique opportunity to showcase your research findings, innovative projects, or novel ideas to a diverse audience in post-acute and long-term care (PALTC).

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Research Project: Harvard School of Public Health

Dear CALTCM Medical Director Colleagues,

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Is Your Facility Ready for Post-Acute Patients with CGMs?

As a general internist, I appreciate the work of the ADA (American Diabetes Association) that identifies advances in diabetes care and adds these new developments to their comprehensive guidance called “Standards of Care''.  The SOC is published in Diabetes Care as a supplement every January.  The 2023 full version, abridged version, primary care, and other versions are all available online for free.  For providers, a free app is now available (ADA SOC) which allows real time access on your smartphone for quick guidance on specific patient care issues.  

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Get Happy!

Hooray ... Happiness is back on the horizon!

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Learn More About the MATE Act

In January 2023, the requirement for prescribers to have an “X” waiver to prescribe buprenorphine (Suboxone, Subutex, others) for Opioid Use Disorder was abolished, to improve access to this important treatment modality.  This means that any prescriber who can prescribe Schedule III medications is able to prescribe it now for that indication.

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Optimal Postoperative Pain Management

This year, a good friend underwent a revision hip arthroplasty for aseptic necrosis of the femoral head after a fracture fixation several years prior.  Being 80 years old and frail, she was offered rehab in an SNF postoperatively, but instead was confident her adult children and grandchildren could properly support her in the home setting.   Both this friend and her family assumed the oxycodone would take away most of the hip pain at rest and pain triggered by movement, but they were not aware of its common side effects or how they would know if the pain was adequately managed.  

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CALTCM Policy Update: April 2023

The Public Policy Committee for CALTCM continues its efforts to “make a difference.” With nursing homes continuing to be in the news in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, we are committed to assuring that our clinical voice is heard.  CALTCM’s Board recently approved letters to Secretary Becerra and Administrator Brooks-LaSure related to appropriate staffing and transparency. There would “appear” to be a lot of controversy related to staffing issues, but CALTCM’s position is based on the clinical experience and evidence that inadequate staffing is associated with poor care.  To minimize this in the face of staffing shortages does a disservice to the residents and the staff who care for them under less than ideal conditions.  CMS recently requested comments on a New Proposed Rule on Nursing Home Ownership Transparency, we submitted our comments, please click here to view.  These efforts continue what we started over two years ago in California that helped lead to the passage of SB 650.

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Does Your Facility have an Ageist Approach to BPSD Management?

I looked at my geriatric clinic schedule recently and saw the reason for the visit, “Angry Outburst.”  The clinic nurse explained that this hard-of-hearing resident in his 90s doesn’t hear our medical assistants when they knock on the door to announce their visit for medication administration, so they use their pass card to enter.  In recent times he has become very angry when he discovers them in their apartment.  The prior day, the MA was so frightened that she left and didn’t pass his medicines.  I asked the clinic nurse what she thought should happen next.  She wondered if I could prescribe a medicine that might reduce his anger so they could pass the meds and he could stay in his apartment.  In response, I asked her: if your eight-year-old child had a problem with anger management, would you ask his physician for a medicine to reduce the severity of the problem?  Of course, she said “no.”  

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Lowered Mortality Risk When Treating Parkinson’s Disease Psychosis

In the past few years, our attention has been necessarily focused on the COVID-19 pandemic. Although COVID-19 is still with us, it is time to catch up with progress in other aspects of managing our patients that impacts our long-term care population.

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Learning To Live With COVID

Last Fall, we were anticipating the triple threat and another significant surge of COVID complications, but fortunately, both threats proved much less than anticipated.  In my county, we have improved from highly prevalent status to low prevalence of COVID.  Our hospital and ICU cases with COVID have also significantly improved.  This good news is tempered by the reality that in the USA we still have about 7,000-8,000 deaths each month attributed to COVID.  Nine out of 10 of those dying are > 60 y/o and some of these are up to date on their COVID vaccine.  

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To Mask or Not to Mask, is that the Question?

We are now 3 years into the COVID-19 Pandemic. We have lived through unprecedented times where millions of people have become infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus and, sadly, over 1.1 million people in the USA, and 6.86 million in the world, have died from this infection.  We have found that some of the initial recommendations for prevention of COVID-19 acquisition and transmission have changed. This has fostered some distrust and skepticism in the general public. In my opinion, Public Health experts have been building this COVID-19 prevention plane as they were flying it. In other words, we all have been learning as we go.

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Are You Ready To Defend Your Diagnosis of Schizophrenia?

On November 11, 2022, the OIG (Office of Inspector General) released a report on the Long-Term Trends of Psychotropic Drug Use in NH.  From the years 2011-2019, the use of antipsychotic medications declined from 31% to 22%, while the use of anticonvulsants increased from 28% to 40%.  In 2015, CMS began using the long-stay quality measure that tracks MDS reported antipsychotic use in the NH in its Nursing Home Five-Star Quality Rating System calculations.  Between 2015-2019, the number of NH residents reported as having schizophrenia increased 35%.  Additionally over this time, the number of residents reported as having schizophrenia but lacking a corresponding diagnosis in the Medicare claims and encounter data increased by 194%.  A small fraction of US nursing homes (99) had particularly high levels of MDS reporting of Schizophrenia (> 20% of their residents) w/o corresponding preceding diagnosis in Medicare’s database.

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Promote COVID-19 and Flu Vaccination and Treatment for Staff and Residents

Residents and staff continue to be vulnerable to COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses, such as influenza. Rates of COVID-19 vaccination in adults at least 65 years of age, at highest risk for hospitalization or death from COVID-19, are lower than last winter. Flu and other respiratory diseases will continue to spread this winter after an early start at high levels. 

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CALTCM COVID Mitigation Webinars, a Helpful Forum

On January 20, 2020, CDC confirmed the first US COVID-19 case in Washington State. Over a month later, a nursing home in King County, Washington, had a COVID-19 outbreak with a devastating outcome and 34 deaths. Which nursing home in California would be next? How can we protect ourselves, our families, colleagues, and most importantly our vulnerable nursing home residents? Without enough knowledge about the virus, lack of testing supplies, and shortage of protective equipment such as masks, gowns, face shields, and even gloves, nursing homes had real challenges to face in months to come. Those questions were frightening for many of us in long-term care, especially when we did not know where to find the answers. 

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