TMF QIN Webinar on Antipsychotic Medication Reduction

April 16, 2019: Antipsychotic Medication Reduction: A Psychiatrist’s Pearls for Progress, Challenges and Continued Improvement
Presenter: Ellen Fan, MD, Geriatric psychiatrist

Join this physician-directed webinar to learn more about assessing and evaluating appropriate anti psychotic medication use in nursing home residents, as well as applying strategies toward behavior management and anti psychotic medication reduction.  *Attendees will have the opportunity to earn 1.0 continuing education credit.*

Multiport USB Chargers

We are starting to see more wall-plugged multiport USB chargers. These chargers meet the 2012 edition of NFPA 99’s definition of a Multiple Outlet Connection, under the 10.2.3.6 requirements.

10.2.3.6 Multiple Outlet Connection. Two or more power receptacles supplied by a flexible cord shall be permitted to be used to supply power to plug-connected components of a movable equipment assembly that is rack-, table-, pedestal-, or cart-mounted, provided that all of the following conditions are met:

  • The receptacles are permanently attached to the equipment assembly.
  • The sum of the ampacity of all appliances connected to the outlets does not exceed 75 percent of the ampacity of the flexible cord supplying the outlets.
  • The ampacity of the flexible cord is in accordance with NFPA 70, National Electrical Code.
  • The electrical and mechanical integrity of the assembly is regularly verified and documented.
  • Means are employed to ensure that additional devices or non medical equipment cannot be connected to the multiple outlet extension cord after leakage currents have been verified as safe.

NFPA 70, 2011 edition; Definitions: Receptacle. A receptacle is a contact device installed at the outlet for the connection of an attachment plug. A single receptacle is a single contact device with no other contact device on the same yoke. A multiple receptacle is two or more contact devices on the same yoke.

NFPA 70, 2011 edition; Definitions: Plug (Listed as attachment plug and called a plug cap). A device that, by insertion in a receptacle, establishes connection between the conductors of the attached flexible cord and the conductors connected permanently to the receptacle.

*This means multiport USB charges should be treated the same as a power tap/power strip. They must be mounted and/or secured and plugged directly into an outlet. Multiport USB chargers should not be plugged into a power strip or surge protector in a long-term care facility.

Administrator License Renewal

Missouri licensed administrators (NHA or RCAL) expiring June 30, 2019, are due for license renewal. If you plan to renew, visit our website at www.health.mo.gov/bnha and follow the instructions provided in the Renewal Checklist. Once your renewal has been successfully processed, you will be issued a current license via email. Please note if you fail to renew by June 30, 2019, you cannot practice as a licensed administrator after that date. Visit our website for additional information regarding completing a late renewal.

Conversations with Carmen

April 19, 2019: Sparking a new Culture of Self-Directed Learning at Work
Guest: LaVrene Norton, Founder Action Pact

Really – who in their work wants to be told what to do? To be handed an ‘assignment sheet’ with your tasks lifelessly written out for you? No time for thought. No time for talk about your own creative insights. There’s a better way, and it’s all about new opportunities for learning. Everyone likes to learn, and the internet has made learning more accessible now than ever before. Discovery excites us and we reach for more – through inquiry we initiate learning. We make friends with online dictionaries, Wikipedia, and Google. And who among us hasn’t used YouTube to learn how to change the oil in our car, measure for kitchen cabinets, bake yeast bread, or coach our child how to calculate the area of a trapezoid?

We relax by playing online games and puzzles that teach us to look in all the corners, watch for opportunities, and calculate dangers. As we become increasingly knowledgeable and competent, we relish working in a warm, open environment that offers online learning, nurtures self-direction and critical thinking, and rewards new skills.

RN License Renewal

RN licenses are required to be renewed by April 26, 2019 and there is NO grace period to renew. If a license expires, the nurse will have to apply for reinstatement which includes submitting to fingerprint background checks and paying a higher fee ($110) in addition the fingerprint fees. The reinstatement process takes about two weeks.

RN’s are encouraged to renew prior to April 26, 2019.

NCSBN hosts webinars regarding the nurse licensure compact (NLC). The next two are April 9 and May 10. See this link for more details: www.ncsbn.org/nlc-meetings.htm.

CMS – Skilled Nurse Facility Quality Reporting Program Provider Training

May 7-8, 2019: Skilled Nursing Facility Quality Reporting Program Provider Training
Location: Sheraton Kansas City Hotel at Crown Center, Kansas City

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will be hosting a 2-day Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Quality Reporting Program (QRP) in-person ‘Train the Trainer’ event for providers on May 7 and 8, 2019, at the Sheraton Kansas City Hotel at Crown Center, 2345 McGee Street, Kansas City, MO 64108. This event will be open to all SNF providers, associations, and organizations.

The primary focus of this ‘Train-the-Trainer’ event will be to provide those responsible for training staff at SNFs with information about:

  • The transition to the Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM) which becomes effective on October 1, 2019.
  • A review of SNF QRP changes and updates to the Minimum Data Set (MDS) 3.0 Version 1.17.0, which became effective October 1, 2019.
  • An overview of the eleven SNF QRP Quality Measures.
  • An interactive session on the use of reports to identify opportunities for process improvement and utilize information contained in reports available via the Certification And Survey Provider Enhanced Reports (CASPER) system to develop quality improvement plans.

Click here to access the full agenda.

Registration for the in-person training is limited to 250 people on a first-come, first-serve basis.

For those not able to attend in person, the session will be available via webcast. A URL to access the webcast will be provided to participants closer to the training event.

QIPMO – Administrator and DON Support Group – CASPER Reports

March 26, 2019: CASPER/Reports, DON Support Group, NHA Support Group
Location: First Christian Church, Shelbina

Stacey Bryan BSN, RN, RAC-CT, State RAI Coordinator, Section for Long Term Care Regulation, Division of Regulation and Licensure is going to go over CASPER Reports and how to use them as a tool in your home. Administrators and DONs both will benefit by learning what to do with these valuable reports.

Legionella Update

There are numerous cases of Legionnaire’s disease reported in Missouri each year, and the frequency of those reports is increasing. The Section for Long-Term Care Regulation (SLCR) has had several resident cases of possible and confirmed legionella infections in long-term care facilities over the past couple of months. As a partner in protecting the health of the public, please read the letter from DHSS Director, Dr. Randall Williams.

CMS guidance
On June 02, 2017, CMS issued a memo titled Requirement to Reduce Legionella Risk in Healthcare Facility Water Systems to Prevent Cases and Outbreaks of Legionnaires’ Disease. www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertificationGenInfo/Downloads/Survey-and-Cert-Letter-17-30.pdf

As part of the recertification survey process, SLCR surveyors are required to review and ask homes about their legionella risk assessment, water management programs, and testing. Specifically, surveyors will review policies, procedures, and reports documenting water management implementation results to verify that facilities:

  • Conduct a facility risk assessment to identify where Legionella and other opportunistic waterborne pathogens could grow and spread in the facility water system.
  • Implement a water management program that considers the ASHRAE industry standard and the CDC toolkit, and includes control measures such as physical controls, temperature management, disinfectant level control, visual inspections, and environmental testing for pathogens.
  • Specify testing protocols and acceptable ranges for control measures, and document the results of testing and corrective actions taken when control limits are not maintained.
  • Maintain compliance with other applicable Federal, State and local requirements.

Did you know?

  • Although most people exposed do not develop illness, approximately 25 percent of Legionnaires’ disease reported healthcare-associate cases are fatal.
  • The optimal growth temperature for Legionella bacteria is between 77 degrees and 108 degrees.  Facilities should make efforts to keep water storage and delivery vessels temperatures out of the optimal Legionella bacteria growth range.
  • Examples of building water systems that might grow and spread Legionella include: hot tubs, hot water tanks and heaters, large plumbing systems, cooling towers, and decorative fountains.

Water Management Programs
Adhering to an appropriate water management plan is critical for the successful control of Legionella bacteria in a health care setting. Developing and maintaining a water management program is a multi-step process that must be tailored specific to the facility and should be reflective of what the facility is actively doing. Below are seven steps to building an effective Legionella water management program.

  • Establish a water management program team
  • Describe the building water systems using flow diagrams and a written description
  • Identify areas where Legionella could grow and spread
  • Decide where you need to apply control measures and how to monitor them
  • Establish ways to intervene when control limits are not met
  • Make sure the program is running as designed and is effective
  • Document and communicate all activities

Source: www.cdc.gov/legionella/wmp/overview/wmp-fact-sheet.html.

The CDC’s website also provides a list of factors to consider when looking to hire a Legionella consultant: www.cdc.gov/legionella/wmp/consultant-considerations.html.

FREE Online Training
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently launched a free online training program on Legionella water management programs called PreventLD. This training would be helpful for any staff member at a Long Term Care Facility who would be responsible for implementing a Water Management Plan. Details and the link to register are available here: www.cdc.gov/nceh/ehs/elearn/prevent-LD-training.html.

CMS Memo: QSO-19-08-NH

April 2019 Improvements to Nursing Home Compare include:

  • Ending the Freeze on Health Inspection Star Ratings – In April 2019, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will end the freeze on the health inspection domain of the Five Star Quality Rating System. We will resume the traditional method of calculating health inspection scores by using three cycles of inspections. Inspections occurring on or after November 28, 2017, will be included in each facility’s star rating.
  • Quality Measure (QM) Domain Improvements – CMS is introducing separate ratings for short- and long-stay measures to reflect the level of quality provided for these two subpopulations in nursing homes. We are also revising the thresholds for ratings, adding a system for regular updates to thresholds every six months, and weighting and scoring individual QMs differently. Additionally, we are adding the long-stay hospitalization measure and a measure of long-stay emergency department (ED) transfers to the rating system. Two measures from the Skilled Nursing Facility Quality Reporting Program (QRP) will be adopted to replace duplicative existing measures.
  • Staffing Domain Improvements – CMS is adjusting the thresholds for staffing ratings. Also, the threshold for the ‘number of days without a registered nurse (RN) onsite’ that triggers an automatic downgrade to one star will be reduced from seven to four days.

Please see the memo for further details.

Conversations with Carmen

March 15, 2019: REAL ANIMALS – How to Make it Work
Guest: Elizabeth Dowden, DON, Many Healthcare and Rehab

Formed and run by residents, The Animal House Club works with the local humane society to shelter orphaned kittens and puppies. Residents serve as foster moms and dads, make mats, promote adoption in the community, raise money and also “sit” for animals in need. The team at Many supports residents who bring their cats and dogs to live with them, even providing a dog park in one courtyard. Demonstrating another way of promoting real life instead of fake, Director of Nursing and animal lover Elizabeth Dowden will share the many ways they make it work.

Updated MDS 3.0 RAI Manual Errata

The PDF file labeled “MDS-3.0-RAI-Manual-v1.16R-Errata-v1.1-February-13-2019”, available in the Downloads section of the MDS 3.0 RAI Manual page, contains revisions to pages in Chapter 3, Section J, of the MDS 3.0 RAI Manual v1.16R, that (1) address coding item J0200 when the resident interview should have been conducted but was not conducted within the look-back period of the ARD and (2) amend the criteria for major surgery and correct the associated examples.

Changed manual pages are marked with the footer “October 2018 (R).”

The errata document begins with a table that lists all identified revisions and the pages to which they have been applied. Following the table are the actual corrected replacement pages for insertion into the printed manual.

MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual Version 12.0 Now Available

The MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual Version 12.0 has been posted. The MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual V12.0 contains detailed specifications for the MDS 3.0 quality measures. The MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual V12.0 can be found in the Downloads section of this page and the MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual V11.0 has been moved to the Quality Measures Archive page.

Two files related to the MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual have been posted:

  1. MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual V12.0 contains detailed specification for the MDS 3.0 quality measures. MDS 3.0 QM User’s Manual V12.0 is available under the Downloads section of this page.
  2. Quality Measure Identification Number by CMS Reporting Module Table V1.7 documents CMS quality measures calculated using MDS 3.0 data and reported in a CMS reporting module.  A unique CMS identification number is specified for each QM. The table is available under the Downloads section of this page.

MHCA Federal Review Course for the Nursing Home Administrators Exam

April 1-2, 2019: Ameristar Casino & Resort, St. Charles
July 15-16, 2019: Oasis Hotel & Convention Center, Springfield
November 18-19, 2019: Embassy Suites International Airport Hotel, Kansas City

The purpose of the Review Course is to help attendees prepare for the nursing home administrator federal licensure exam. Review Course materials have been revised and updated to reflect the structure of the current examination.

New QIPMO Newsletter – February 2019

The Quality Improvement Program for Missouri (QIPMO) has published MDS Tips and Clinical Pearls – Volume 6, Issue 2.

In this issue:

  • Fond Farewell
  • Section M: Skin Conditions
  • CMS Phase 3
  • Antipsychotics
  • Drug and Food Interactions
  • ABN, SNFABN, NOMNC, DENC

Please visit QIPMO’s website here for this and other previous newsletters.

TMF-Nursing Home Quality Improvement

Quality Measures and Coding: Flu and Pneumonia Vaccinations

Quality measures (QM) review and proper documentation for flu and pneumonia vaccinations can assist in improving quality of care for your residents. Click on the following links to learn more about these QMs and coding.

QM: Percent of Residents Accessed and Appropriately Given the Pneumococcal Vaccine (video)
QM Tip Sheet: Pneumonia Vaccine – Long Stay (PDF)
QM: Percent of Residents Assessed and Appropriately Given the Seasonal Influenza Vaccine (video)
QM Tip Sheet: Influenza Vaccine – Long Stay (PDF)

MC5 2019 Spring Roadshow

April 30, 2019: A Blueprint to Achieve Continuous Quality Improvement in Long-Term Care
Location: St. Charles Community Center, Cottleville

May 1, 2019: A Blueprint to Achieve Continuous Quality Improvement in Long-Term Care
Location: St. Joseph Medical Center, Kansas City

David Farrell’s practical advice will give you the tools to implement leadership “bundles” – coordinated and interconnected systems of key practices that meet federal guidelines for individualized care, and provide the right care for every resident, every day.

Please see the brochure for more details.

2019 Pioneer Network Conference

August 4-7, 2019: Making it Happen
Location: The Galt House, Louisville, Kentucky

What better place to come together to advocate for and facilitate deep system change in the culture of aging than at the 2019 Pioneering a New Culture of Aging Conference in Louisville, Kentucky on August 4-7, 2019.

The theme this year is “Making it Happen” – and that’s just what we plan to do. We have lots of great guides lined up to explore with you what is happening today – and share ideas for making even better things happen in the future. YOU are Pioneer Network; we can’t do it without you!

Networking makes the Pioneer Network conference a go-to event for so many. We promise there will be lots of opportunities for networking – reconnecting with old friends and making new ones.

**PIONEER CONNECTION**
Do you live within 6 hours of Louisville? Would you be interested in traveling to the Pioneer Network conference in a luxury Motor Coach? Please help us by completing a short survey.

SNF QRP Deadline

The submission deadline for the SNF Quality Reporting Programs (QRP) is approaching. MDS data for July 1 – September 30 (Q3) of calendar year (CY) 2018 are due with this submission deadline. All data must be submitted no later than 11:59 p.m. Pacific Standard Time on February 15, 2019.

As a reminder, it is recommended that providers run applicable validation/analysis reports prior to each quarterly reporting deadline, in order to ensure that all required data has been submitted.

CORMAC sends informational messages to IRFs, LTCHs, and SNFs that are not meeting APU thresholds on a quarterly basis ahead of each submission deadlines. If you need to add or change the email addresses to which these messages are sent, please email QRPHelp@cormac-corp.com and be sure to include your facility name and CMS Certification Number (CCN) along with any requested email updates.

Payroll-Based Journal (PBJ) Deadline

The submission deadline for PBJ is approaching. PBJ data for 10/1/18 through 12/31/18 is due on February 14, 2019. CMS uses PBJ data to determine each facility’s staffing measure on the Nursing Home Compare tool on Medicare.gov website, and calculate the staffing rating used in the Nursing Home Five Star Quality Rating System.

More information about PBJ can be found on the CMS webpage www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/NursingHomeQualityInits/Staffing-Data-Submission-PBJ.html.

CEU Processing Fee for MC5 Meetings

Starting June 1, 2019, there will be a $7.50 per CEU hour fee for those wanting CEUs for an MC5 regional meeting – which means a CEU certificate for most meetings, will be available for $15. Admission to regional meetings will continue to be FREE to everyone, but those wanting CEUs will need to pay this processing fee. These fees will ensure that MC5, an all-volunteer organization, can continue to bring great programs across Missouri… and will go directly back into providing CEUs to you, in your own region, at a very low cost.

In order to receive CEUs at an MC5 event, you must register for the meeting through Eventbrite and pay directly online.

If you need help, feel free to contact MC5 at missourimc5@gmail.com.

MC5 appreciates your participation and interest and looks forward to continuing to bring great speakers to your area!