Skiff Home Care chosen as elite agency

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Skiff Home Care has been selected by OCS HomeCare, a product of National Research Corporation that recognizes the top 25 percent of home care agencies in the nation, as a HomeCare Elite winner.

The selection is based on five domains of performance: quality of care, quality improvement, patient experience (HHCAHPS), process measure implementation and financial performance.

“This is great to receive acknowledgment from our home health industry as a top performing agency,” said Bonnie Vos, Home Care. “Our staff work every day to meet the needs of our patients and community and they deserve this award.”

This is the seventh year OCS has recognized HomeCare Elite agencies and the first time Skiff has won and indicates that Skiff Home Care is the agency of choice in Jasper County, as their competitors were not identified as winners.

“We are so proud of this great work,” said Brett Altman, clinical operations officer. “This fabulous news will help amplify awareness of what an elite agency we have for our community members and referring providers.”

The quality of care and process measure data is derived from the home health assessment tool known as the OASIS. This data is also publicly reported on CMS website Home Health Compare. The quality improvement results are obtained based on changes in the eight outcomes between data released in July 2011 and July 2012. Patient experience domain is the outcomes from Press Ganey satisfaction surveys. Financial performance represents the indexed Medicare profit margin form the 2011 CMS Cost Report.

Skiff’s notification of Home Care’s elite status comes at an appropriate time, as November is National Home Care and Hospice Month, with the theme for the former service being “Home Health Care: Celebrating Freedom — Quality Care at Home.”

Home care is often the best answer to the 5 percent of Americans who suffer from multiple, chronic conditions that account for 50 percent of rising health-care costs. By keeping them out of hospitals and in their homes, home care saves money — and supports an even greater cause.

Many of our country’s seniors and disabled oppose the idea of being placed in a nursing home or assisted living. And they shouldn’t have to be there, under the Americans with Disabilities Act, a 22-year-old law that bans discrimination on the basis of disability. In 1999, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that people who live in institutions like state hospitals and nursing homes, but could live successfully on their own, have a civil right under the ADA to get their care at home.

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