For over 20 years, the Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care has offered internationally acclaimed, in-depth seminars to advance the understanding and practice of patient- and family-centered care by modeling effective partnerships in teaching and in the learning experience for seminar attendees.
The momentum for transformation of primary care into a patient-centered medical home continues to show promise for achieving improved quality and reduced costs! Register for a 1-hour webinar hosted by the Institute for Practice- and Family-Centered Careto explore how working with patient and family advisors to implement a PCMH has been a powerful catalyst for change in the patient and provider experience. Hear about practical examples and the tools used to identify solutions and new ways of working together.
Don't miss the opportunity to inform and network with ACO leaders from across the country at the NAACOS Spring Conference on March 28-30 in Baltimore. NAACOS conferences are the only ACO events exclusively organized by ACOs. More than 500 ACO leaders are expected to attend the spring conference, which will address the needs of both new and established ACOs through plenaries, breakouts, exhibits, and pre-conference workshops.
Join Community Catalyst and health plan leaders for breakfast and a panel discussion about how to engage consumers in efforts to shape the health system of the future.
Attend this webinar to learn how to engage patients in alternative payment models (APMs). Guiding Committee co-chair Mark Smith will share key progress updates from the Guiding Committee and the three LAN work groups. During the webinar panel, presenters will outline strategies to engage patients and family caregivers in APMs.
The nation’s ancient fee-for-service system is undergoing dramatic transformation everywhere you look, with health systems launching managed care plans and payers developing value-based care programs with providers. Some plans and providers are launching joint ventures that incorporate the strongest elements of both sectors to create powerful entities for delivering and paying for health services. These alliances are transforming local markets and creating tremendous opportunities, and many new challenges, for plans and providers alike.
States are increasingly exploring Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment (DSRIP) and DSRIP-like programs as a mechanism to incentivize system transformation and quality improvements in hospitals and other providers that serve high volumes of low-income patients. Operating under the authority of Section 1115 demonstration waivers, DSRIP programs provide states with a unique opportunity to redesign delivery systems and increase capacity for population health management within the context of state needs and goals.