National Quality Awards Ceremony
Don’t miss the Live
National Quality Awards Ceremony, which begins at 2:00 p.m. ET Thursday,
Oct. 22, in the General Session and Special Events Theater in
conjunction with AHCA/NCAL’s 70th Virtual Convention & Expo.
All
719 Bronze, 147 Silver, and 4 Gold recipients will be honored.
Attendees are invited to join in the chat function to share
congratulatory messages and shout out to other 2020 recipients.
Registration for the convention closes Friday, Oct. 23. Not signed up? Register now.
A
quartet of providers has received the preeminent Gold National Quality Award
designation from the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted
Living (AHCA/NCAL) for 2020 and is being honored for their achievement during
the association’s annual convention that runs on a virtual basis through the
month of October.
Jane
Martin, RN, director of nursing, Treutlen Health and Rehabilitation, Soperton,
Ga., says for her 50-bed facility in rural Georgia the latest attempt to
achieve Gold started five years back when the organization earned Bronze from
AHCA/NCAL, then Silver in 2017.
“That
is when we decided to go for the Gold,” she says. “We [earned] a site visit
last year and then this year got the Gold award.”
Going
for the top honor and going for the Bronze or Silver are worlds apart, Martin
notes. “The Gold is so much different, and you really need to dedicate time to
it.” This work includes copious writing down to report quality-based outcomes
for residents, since getting positive results is what the award process is all
about, she says.
“Probably
the most difficult things is collecting the data. Everything has a different
measurement time frame, so I really rely on LTC Trend Tracker [from AHCA/NCAL],
NursingHome Compare…You need to know all of these data today on a regular
basis.”
Once
all the hard work resulted in the Gold, Martin says sharing the good news, in a
COVID-sensitive manner, was a great feeling for staff and residents alike.
“We
were in a huge open area when we told them, and it was a lot of yelling through
masks,” she says. “It was kind of sad that we could not hug or have family
there, but we did our best.”
As
for what she would tell fellow providers about the award program, Martin says
facilities should do it; even though it is not easy, it is well worth it. “We
all learned so much through the process, and there were so many little things
along the way, it has changed the way we live and work here.”
Kristin
Thrun, administrator, Burgess Square Healthcare and Rehab Centre, Westmont,
Ill., says her nursing home got into the quality award world because back in
2012 when accountable care organizations and other value-based care entities
emerged in her area, it became imperative for her facility to set itself apart.
“The
focus became even more pronounced on overall performance outcomes and quality
measures, and becoming part of the AHCA award process helped us to do this in a
systematic way,” she says.
After
receiving some local awards for their work with residents, the facility earned
Bronze from AHCA/NCAL in 2017 and then eyed going for Gold after that.
“I
think the biggest challenge is continuing to push forward in terms of meeting
the criteria and putting our programs in place and sustaining them despite the
external challenges brought on by things like changes in payment models [person-directed
payment model] and keeping pace with those,” Thrun says.
An
example she gives is the challenge it was to make the systemic change on
medication reconciliation when a resident moved from the hospital to the
nursing home. “We worked with the hospital to change the process and reduce
errors tied to these transitions of care and created a pharmacy position that
just does admission reviews for new patients coming in,” she says.
The
third achieving group says its journey to Gold began 18 years ago, according to
Gail Cushing, RN, executive director, Applewood Center, Winchester, N.H.
“It
has been a long journey for sure, but we continued to forge on throughout the time,
but it did not prevent us from getting to where we wanted to go,” she says.
The
greatest thing about the Gold process, Cushing says, is that it gave Applewood
Center and its staff new skill sets to be able to adapt to new demands. “We can
take new problems and adapt very quickly. An example is with COVID-19; I have
said handling the pandemic was made more manageable because we went through a
dress rehearsal with the Gold awards.”
For
her, the award application has taught her and her people to communicate better,
get feedback, educate, teach, and fix pitfalls. One example is that during the
pandemic, her staff came up with a way to clean their goggles when there was no
water source in an area where people were working.
“The
whole Gold process is a concept really that provides a facility with new
means to achieve success, and the more you practice, the better you become and
the more ingrained it all becomes,” Cushing says.
Katie
Frederick, administrator, Heritage of Bel-Air, Norfolk, Neb., started out talking
about the end game of achieving Gold, which was the joy she, her 160-strong
staff, and residents felt at accomplishing so much. Even though the pandemic
has made a true celebration difficult, she says the pride all in the community
feel about making Gold is real.
For
her, making changes to be more efficient and better at evaluating results and
outcomes is the lasting impact going through the award process will have.
“Evaluating
and learning is what this has all been about. And, really getting better at
communicating, listening to each other, and putting ideas into practice. That
has all worked for us,” Frederick says.
Looking
ahead to 2021, AHCA/NCAL said the deadline to submit an Intent to Apply for a
2021 National Quality Award is Nov. 12 by 8 p.m. (ET). For more information,
visit the Quality Award website.