The NCQA’s Patient-Centered Medical Home Recognition (PCMH) program plays an integral role in practice transformation and the improvement of quality health care. This advanced seminar further examines the criteria of the PCMH 2014 Standards. With the newly updated standards, released in the spring of 2014, we are setting the bar higher for practices to strive for excellence. We will take a deeper dive into the standards by helping to identify the challenges one may face based on historical data and advisory panel feedback.
This program was formerly named Facilitating PCMH 2014 Recognition. More than 8,000 NCQA-Recognized Patient-Centered Medical Homes practices and almost 50,000 recognized clinicians have proved the strong relevance of the NCQA PCMH Standards to the Triple Aim. The 2014 standards emphasizes team-based care with a significant focus on the care management of high-risk populations along with the integration of behavioral health. We have aligned the Quality Improvement (QI) activities with the Triple Aim and positioned the NCQA requirements to qualify for Meaningful Use Stage 2.
The NCQA’s Patient-Centered Medical Home Recognition (PCMH) program plays an integral role in practice transformation and the improvement of quality health care. This advanced seminar further examines the criteria of the PCMH 2014 Standards. With the newly updated standards, released in the spring of 2014, we are setting the bar higher for practices to strive for excellence. We will take a deeper dive into the standards by helping to identify the challenges one may face based on historical data and advisory panel feedback.
This program was formerly named Facilitating PCMH 2014 Recognition. More than 8,000 NCQA-Recognized Patient-Centered Medical Homes practices and almost 50,000 recognized clinicians have proved the strong relevance of the NCQA PCMH Standards to the Triple Aim. The 2014 standards emphasizes team-based care with a significant focus on the care management of high-risk populations along with the integration of behavioral health. We have aligned the Quality Improvement (QI) activities with the Triple Aim and positioned the NCQA requirements to qualify for Meaningful Use Stage 2.
The Medical Team Summit at the 2015 National Council Conference, in Orlando, April 20-22, 2015, is a special event uniquely designed for psychiatrists, primary care providers, psychiatric nurse practitioners, physician’s assistants, registered nurses and others providing medical care in community mental health settings.
The 16th Annual International Summit on Improving Patient Care in the Office Practice and the Community will bring together more than 1,000 thought leaders from around the globe, in an intimate and dynamic conference setting, to examine new ways to improve care delivery and coordination across the continuum. Together with our expert faculty, explore how individuals and communities can have an impact on improving care, promoting health, and lowering costs within our changing health care system.
NCQA's 9th Annual Conference will explore “Innovation Driving Value” in healthcare this November 7 in Washington, DC. Join us and some of the nation’s top thought leaders and policy makers to explore new approaches to more patient-centered, affordable, high-quality care. Keynote speakers include muscular dystrophy patient Vance Taylor with his inspirational perspective on overcoming adversity and CMS’ Sean Cavanaugh on efforts to move Medicare to paying for value instead of volume.
Join us on October 30 to examine the use of quality measures to balance financial incentives in accountable care systems, gaps in accountable care measure sets, and possible solutions for addressing these gaps.
Who should attend? The conference is designed for health care leaders and other professionals working to advance the use of quality measurement in accountable care systems, including:
Assembly is the family medicine event of the year. Renew your passion for patient care with solutions-focused CME and expert faculty. Connect with 4,000-plus of your family physician colleagues. Remember why you became a family physician.
You may not come for fun, but it’s a lot of fun. Enjoy the mental stimulation and camaraderie. Discuss practice and clinical issues with your colleagues. Find answers together. Return home a better family physician.