Health Care - Montana Hospital Association
Transcription
Health Care - Montana Hospital Association
RE Health Care 2015 MHA Fall Convention & Trade Show September 23-25, 2015 Billings M o n t a n a PARTICIPANT PROGRAM RE MHA An Association of Montana Health Care Providers EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW Health Care Montana's Largest Health Care Convention & Trade Show! 2015 MHA Fall Convention & Trade Show September 23-25, 2015 Billings M o n t a n a MHA An Association of Montana Health Care Providers Holiday Inn Grand Montana 2273 2271 1173 1171 1154 2254 2275 1175 1156 2256 2277 1177 1158 2258 2279 1179 1160 2260 2281 1181 1162 2262 2283 1183 1164 2264 2285 1166 2266 1185 MISSOURI STAIRS 1168 2268 HEALTH CLUB KITCHENS POOL & SPA SPRUCE 22 22 22 2220 1105 1107 1109 1111 1113 1115 1117 1118 1121 2207 2209 2211 2213 2215 2217 2218 2221 A 22 2205 To Convention Center a a a 22 1120 2218 1118 2216 1116 2214 1114 2212 1112 2210 22 1110 2208 1108 2206 F&B 2204 2202 MENS 2203 WOMENS PLAZA SQUARE WOMENS ASPEN ATRIUM TOWER 22 COURTYARD Desk COTTON 22 COURTYARD LEWIS & BIG HORN CLARK YELLOWSTONE MADISON 2201 CATERING & SALES LL 22 22 STAIRS MH strat A ion Regi 22 22 LOUNGE GRAND CASINO 22 WOMENS BIG HORN CENTER ERFA 22 COURTYARD JEFFERSON MENS POOLSIDE TERRACE RESTAURANT WAT 22 22 GALLATIN BALLROOM LOBBY BITTEROOT STILLWATER MENS WOMENS GRAND MONTANA BALLROOM G MENS ELEVATOR PONDEROSA ROOMS 2201 THRU 2285 AND ROOMS 2401 THRU 2247 ARE ON T MEADOWLARK BIRCH ROOMS 2000 THRU 7715 ARE IN T FRONT DESK CANOPY A Fronti 5500 Midland Road, Billings, Montana 59101 • 4 toll free reservations 1.800.HOLID Hotel • Tower • Mo RE Health Care 2015 MHA Fall Convention & Trade Show Welcome September 23-25, 2015 Billings ...to the 2015 MHA Annual Convention & Trade Show! M o n t a n a Table of Contents 3-4 5-6 Grand Prize MHA A n A s Form sociation 7-8 Passport to Prizes Form 11-16 o f M o n t a n a H e a l t h Download C a r e P r o vsession iders handouts at www.mtha.org CE Credits Form Schedule of Events 18-35 Session Descriptions 37 Networking Opportunities Sponsors 38 41-45 Trade Show Map & Vendors 48 Lifetime Achievement Award 50-51 Innovation in Health Care Award 52 Trustee of the Year Award 54 PIN Quality Awards 56 58 Paul Taylor Award 60 61 Save the Date Convention Planning Committee 62 2015 MHA Staff Directory QI & Stroke and Cardiac Awards 1 We are conserving our resources with electronic handouts All speaker materials have been posted in PDF format on the MHA website. They will remain on the website for 45 days after the Convention. We hope you were able to download handouts before you arrived at the Convention. However, if you were not able to print your handouts prior and would like to have them at your workshops, please visit the Handout Printing Kiosk next to the MHA Registration Desk. A computer and printer will be available for Convention handout printing only. Printing Kiosk Hours Wednesday 7:30 am - 6:00 pm Thursday 7:30 am - 9:30 am As your life unfolds, change is waiting around every corner. That’s why it’s comforting to know, for nearly 75 years, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Montana has been with you every step of the way. So when life calls, and you need us most, we’re here for you…through it all. Through A division of Health Care Service Corporation, a Mutual Legal Reserve Company, an Independent Licensee of Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. it All Learn more or Enroll Today at bcbsmt.com I 855.765.1222 2 Grand Prize Entry/ Overall Evaluation Name:_________________________________________________________________ Facility:________________________________________________________________ To be eligible for the Grand Prize Drawing of $500, you must complete BOTH SIDES of this evaluation in full and put it in the appropriate bin on the Trade Show Stage by 6:30 pm on Thursday. The winner will be drawn at random from all complete entries during the Thursday evening Gala. The Grand Prize Winner must be an employee, trustee, or volunteer/auxilian of a registered health care facility or those who have paid a registration fee to attend the convention. Guests, spouses, complimentary registrants, exhibitors and speakers (or others who have not paid a registration fee) are not eligible to win the grand prize. You must be present at the drawing when your name is called to win! 2015 Overall Convention Evaluation Please circle - ONE - membership category which BEST describes your organization: Hospital Home Health Nursing Home Senior Housing Combined Hospital/Nursing Home Assisted Living Hospice Other:__________________ (Please circle the best response for each statement) 1. Overall, the Convention was educational, interesting, and worth my time........Agree.................Neutral..........................Disagree 2. How would you rate the scheduled workshops?.................................................Excellent...........Satisfactory.....................Poor 3. I acquired knowledge by attending this convention....................................Agree.................Neutral...........................Disagree 4. I received useful information.............................................................................Agree.................Neutral..........................Disagree How would you rate the following aspects of the Convention & Trade Show (please circle the best response) 5. Overall quality & effectiveness of speakers ...............................Excellent...............Satisfactory..............Poor 6. Meeting rooms at the Holiday Inn were acceptable....................Yes..........................No..........................Don’t Know 7. Sleeping rooms at the Holiday Inn were comfortable..................Yes.........................No...........................Don’t Know 8. Sleeping rooms at the Billings Hotel were comfortable................Yes.........................No...........................Don’t Know 9. If you did not stay at the host hotels, where did you stay?_______________________________________________ 10. Meals and breaks were acceptable..................................................Yes........................No 11. Advance registration materials were clear.......................................Yes.......................No 12. On-site registration (MHA) was smooth and courteous................Yes........................No 13. I attended and visited with vendors at the Trade Show.................Yes........................No 14. If “yes” to 13, at what times did you attend the Trade Show?........Lunch..................Gala................Both If you answered “No” to Questions 5-13, please help us to improve: Additional Comments: (please print) Continued on Back 3 Educational Needs Assessment Employing Organization/Affiliation:_____________________________________________________________________ Name: ______________________________________________ Title/Dept. or Service ___________________________ Email (optional - for follow-up purposes only):____________________________________________________________ MHA...An Association of Montana Health Care Providers would like your input to improve our educational products and programs. Please take a few moments to share your thoughts with us. **Please note that all responses will be kept confidential** 1. MHA would meet members’ education needs more thoroughly if they developed educational programs/products related to: Check all that apply. Then please RANK YOUR TOP THREE choices Rank Rank Check all that apply: Check all that apply: Medicare/Medicaid Reimbursement Managed Care Issues Coding Procedures Corporate Finance Workforce Issues Nursing Issues Recruitment and Retention Issues Patient Satisfaction Management and Supervisory Training Quality Process Trustee Education Information Management ACHE Compliance Programs Other (please specify): Joint Commission Topics Legal Issues/Regulatory Changes 2. Please rank (1=first, 3=last) the top 3 choices as to why you take professional development courses. ___Keep current in my skill/profession ___ Learn new skills ___Increase my efficiency ___ Obtain CEUs/CMEs ___Solve a specific business challenge ___ Remain current on regulations ___Increase my productivity ___ Networking with peers ___Enhance my professional credibility ___ Other:______________________________ ___Remain competitive 3. Which communication method do you prefer for educational program announcements? Please rank 1-4 (1=first, 4=last). ___Brochure ___Newsletter ___Website ___Email 4. Which method of educational programming do you prefer? Please rank 1-3 (1=first, 3=last). ___Live, on-site seminars or conferences ___Webinars ___Video conferences/Audio Conferences 5. Which of the following cities would afford you the best opportunity to attend a conference? Please rank order of preference, 1=first preference, 8=last preference. ___Billings___Bozeman ___Butte ___Great Falls ___Helena ___Kalispell ___Missoula ___Other:____________________________________________________ 6. What type of continuing education is/are required by your professional group? ___RN (MT BON License) ___RN (specialty certification) ___Attorneys (CLE) ___Health Care Executives (ACHE) ___Nursing Home Administrators ___CPA (CPE) ___Other (please specify)_____________________________________ 7. Please check your age range (for demographical purposes only). ___18-22___23-30___31-40___41-50____51- 60 ____61+ 8. Additional Comments/Recommendations: please print. 4 Continuing Education Nursing MHA is an Approved Provider of Continuing Nursing Education by the Montana Board of Nursing. Keep the CE form on page 6 for your records. Requirements for credit: • Attend/participate in the educational activity and review all course materials. • Mark your attendance in the space next to each session you attend on the CE/Attendance verification form provided in this booklet. (page 6) • Retain the CE form for your records; MHA does not track CE credits for licensees. All eligible sessions are marked with CNE. Nursing Home Administrator MHA has been pre-approved for continuing education credits by the Montana Board of Nursing Home Administrators. All sessions appropriate for Nursing Home Administrator credits are marked with NHA. Other Continuing Education MHA does not apply for any other continuing education credits. However, an Attendance Verification Form is provided in this program on page 6. Blank forms will not be available after the convention. It is your responsibility to keep the form for your records. Keep a copy of your Attendance Verification form for your files; MHA does not retain these records. Although MHA does not apply for other continuing education credits, we encourage participants to apply on an individual basis with the appropriate accreditation organization. Although we cannot guarantee other accreditation, those sessions approved by the above organizations usually qualify for other educational credits. Need Handouts? Access them with your smart Phone or tablet by scanning This QR Code! Continued on Back 5 CE Attendance2015Verification/Certificate of Participation MHA Annual Convention & Trade Show September 23-25,2015 - Billings, MT Please check the programs you attended on this form. Keep this form --- no other attendance verification will be provided. Wednesday Other Meetings/Events (x) all you wish to attend Session D Thursday 2:00 - 3:30 pm (x) only 1 workshop in each session BONUS: The Credibility Calculation….Meaningful Results, Influence.. CNE NHA D1 Facility Design for the Future: Adapting Your Health... CNE NHA X1 MSHE Board Meeting D2 When EHRs Cause Patient Harm: Emerging Risks CNE NHA X2 CAH Administrators’ and Flex Program Meeting D3 Emerging Roles: Leading Transformation in a Changing... CNE NHA X3 LTC Committee Meeting D4 My Story - Learning and Leading From My Patient Exp... CNE NHA X4 MHA House of Delegates & Member CEO Meeting D5 15 Challenges Facing Hospital Auxiliaries and Volunteer.....Part 1 X5 ACHE Business Meeting D6 Perinatal Loss and Family Support CNE Session A Wednesday 1:30 - 3:00 pm (x) only 1 workshop in each session D7 Communication Strategies for Engagement CNE NHA A1 Spiritual Care Roundtable D8 Hospital Preparedness 101 CNE NHA A2 Advance Care Planning and POLST - Moving Forward Part I CNE NHA D9 Peace at Last; Stories of Hope and Healing for Veterans.. CNE NHA A3 Customer Service Niche CNE NHA D10 Telehealth Policy – The Present & Future Trends CNE NHA A4 Hospice Roundtable Discussion D11 Patient and Community Engagement CNE NHA A5 Changes in Medical Licensing in Montana CNE NHA Session E Thursday 3:45 - 5:15 pm (x) only 1 workshop in each session A6 Certification Bureau Life Safety Code Update CNE NHA E1 Leveraging EHR Functionality for QI Projects CNE NHA Session B Wednesday 3:30 - 5:00 pm (x) only 1 workshop in each session E2 Wipe Out Readmissions to the Hospital CNE NHA B1 Find the Money Hidden in Your Facilities CNE E3 Long-Term Care Documentation: The Good, The Bad... CNE NHA B2 What Does the New Nurse License Compact Mean for... CNE NHA E4 15 Challenges Facing Hospital Auxiliaries and Volunteer.... Part 2 B3 Always On: HIPAA Compliance in an Always Connected... CNE NHA E5 Integrating Brain Health Concepts into the Activity... CNE NHA B4 Stopping the Downward Spiral of Unplanned Absence... CNE NHA E6 Developing a Sustainable Training and Exercise Program CNE NHA B5 Clinical Ethics and Chaplaincy E7 Dying Healed: A Shared Quest for Wholeness CNE NHA B6 ACHE: Risk Issues We Face in Our Daily Roles CNE NHA E8 Patient Centered Medical Home: What is All the Hype? CNE NHA ACHE CATEGORY 1 B7 Advance Care Planning and POLST - Moving Forward Part II E9 Creating a Culture of Learning, HealthCARE MT Update CNE NHA B8 Home Health Roundtable Discussion Friday Other Meetings (x) all you wish to attend Wednesday Other Meeting/Events (x) all you wish to attend X14 CEO Exchange - Conversation Over Breakfast X6 MSHE Business Meeting X15 MSHHRA Business Meeting X7 Chairman’s Welcome Reception X16 MHREF - PIN Advisory Board Meeting X8 ACHE: Bending the Execution Curve CNE NHA X17 MSOV Business Meeting ACHE CATEGORY 1 X9 MSHE Social X18 MSCA Business Meeting Thursday Other Events (x) all you wish to attend X19 MHIMSS Board Meeting X10 Mountain-Pacific Quality Health QI Breakfast Session F Friday 8:30 - 10:00 am (x) only 1 workshop in each session X11 The Future of the Healthcare Marketplace: Playing the... CNE NHA F1 HEN Roundtable Discussion X12 Strolling Lunch with Vendors F2 Home Health Benchmarks: Montana’s Vital Signs CNE X13 Gala Reception & Trade Show F3 Patient-Centered Care: Straightforward Methods for... CNE NHA Session C Thursday 8:00 - 9:30 am (x) only 1 workshop in each session F4 How to Develop a Digital Patient Engagement Program CNE NHA C1 Improving Your Recruitment Strategies CNE NHA F5 Conflict Management- Handling Difficult Behaviors CNE NHA C2 The Evolution from Activities to Life Enrichment CNE NHA F6 Addressing Physician Disciplinary Issues CNE C3 Discipline & Termination in Montana CNE NHA Session G Friday 10:15 am - 11:45 am (x) only 1 workshop C4 Wounded Warriors: Their Last Battle CNE NHA G1 Advancing Superior Staff Retention CNE NHA C5 “Get Your Head in the Game!” CNE NHA G2 Compensation Models in Home Health CNE C6 The Behavioral Shift to Value-Based Care CNE NHA G3 Benefits and Burdens of Affiliations, Collaborations and..CNE NHA MHA convention sessions are approved by the Montana Board of Nursing Home Administrators. C7 Active Shooter Defense CNE NHA C8 ACHE: Leading a Successful Multigenerational CNE NHA Each session marked with CNE ACHE CATEGORY 1 MHA...An Association of Montana Health Care Providers is an approved provider of continuing nursing education by the Montana Board of Nursing. MHA does not apply for continuing education credits other than the above. For other credits, we encourage participants to apply on an individual basis with the appropriate accreditation organization. Keep a copy of this form for your records. or NHA is eligible for 1.5 contact hours Casey Blumenthal, Vice President The 2015 MHA Annual Convention & Trade Show is an educational opportunity sponsored by MHA...An Association of Montana Health Care Providers. For more information, call (406) 442-1911. 6 PASSPORT TO PRIZES Name: (print) Facility: City: A&E Architects Allegiance American Red Benefit Plan Cross Blood Management, Services Inc. Cerium Networks Cerner Corporation Fringe Benefit Resources Gallagher Benefit Services, Inc. KONE Elevator LifeCenter Northwest/ Sightlife McKinstry MountainPacific Quality Health MT Office of Rural Health/ AHEC American Sentinel University American Welding & Gas Associated Employers ATS Facility Systems Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Commercial Energy of Montana CTA Architects Engineers Delta Dental Insurance Company Evident General Distributing Co. Health Coding and Consulting Services (HCCS) Health o meter Professional Scales Information Technology Core (ITC) Jackson & Coker Medefis, Inc. Mediserve Montana Medical Association Montana Tech MTX Medical Solutions, Inc. New West Medicare NorthWestern Energy Nutrition & Physical Activity Program Orion International Corporation OZ Architects PacificSource Health Plans Paynewest Insurance Precision Document Solutions Presort Plus, LLC Prioricare Staffing Solutions Providence St. Patrick Hospital Rocky Mountain Health Network S. Conley Sales, Inc. Shodair Children’s Hospital Spacelabs Healthcare St. Peter’s Hospital Behavioral Health Unit St. Vincent Healthcare UHIN United Blood Services Vision Net VRI (Valued Relationships, Inc.) Wilderness Medical Staffing Wipfli LLP Xerox Yellowstone Insurance Exchange Official Rules A Map of the Trade Show is listed on Page 41 7 Turn over this card for official rules. PASSPORT TO PRIZES Instructions for Passport to Prizes: 1) Participants will receive a playing card with all eligible exhibitors’ booth numbers and names (see reverse side). 2) Participants must visit each of the booths listed on the playing card to receive a sticker from each vendor. 3) Passport playing cards must be deposited in the receptacle located near the Trade Show stage by 6:30pm on Thursday evening. 4) Drawings for the Passport prizes will be at approximately 6:45pm at the Gala. 5) Prizes will only be awarded to registered participants of the MHA Annual Convention & Trade Show who have paid a registration fee. Guests, Speakers, and Exhibitors are not eligible to win prizes. Only one entry per person. Door Prize Information: 1) Exhibitors that bring their own door prize will be listed on a board which will be set up in booth #39. 2) Exhibitors will draw their door prize by 6:00 pm and winners will be displayed on the boards by 6:15 pm. 3) Participants must check the list to see if your name is posted. If you are lucky enough to win, you must return to the exhibitor’s booth to claim your prize by 6:45 pm. Notes: Passport to Prizes and the Grand Prize will be drawn beginning at 6:45 pm. All Prizes were paid for by the participating vendors. Please be sure to show them your appreciation! If you have any questions about prizes, please locate an MHA member staff person at the MHA registration desk. Trade Show Hours Strolling Lunch 12:00 - 2:00 pm (Vendors will remain open until 2:30pm) Gala 4:00 - 7:00 pm 8 e b t us t the m Yousent a in! w pre ala to G HERE ARE SOME OF THE PRIZES YOU COULD WIN!! Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 with Case Apple Watch Sport GoPro Hero4 Package Automotive Camera Package Outdoor Fire-pit Package 10k White Gold Diamond Necklace Hammaka Chairs and Tailgating Packages! (valued at $350 each) $400 ....And a $400 Kitchen Basket!! 9 400 Health care is too important to stay the same.™ Cerner CommunityWorks has been providing electronic health records to critical access and community hospitals through a Software as a Service model that allows your hospitals more resources to focus on your core business of providing health care and doing what you do best—taking care of the patient. Come visit Cerner CommunityWorks during the Montana Health Association Fall Convention & Trade Show www.cerner.com/communityworks The Experience The Patient Experience The Client Experience Your Vision 406.248.7455 www.CTAGROUP.com 10 Schedule of Events Date/Time Wednesday, September 23 Event Room Wednesday, September 23 Registration Open BONUS SESSION: The Credibility Calculation…. Meaningful Results, Influence, and Credibility 8:00 - 9:30 am X1 MSHE Board Meeting 7:30 - 8:30 am X2 Critical Access Hospital (CAH) Breakfast 8:30 - 11:30 am X2 Critical Access Hospital (CAH) Administrators’ Meeting -- Flex Program Meeting 11:30 am - 1:00 pm X3 LTC Committee Meeting 11:45 am - 12:30 pm X4 MHA House of Delegates and CEO Luncheon Sponsored by Crowley Fleck PLLP 12:30 - 4:30 pm X4 MHA Member CEO Meeting & House of Delegates 1:30 - 2:30 pm X5 ACHE Business Meeting 1:30 - 3:00 pm Concurrent Education Sessions A A1 Spiritual Care Roundtable A2 Advanced Care Planning and POLST - Moving Forward Part 1 A3 Customer Service Niche A4 Hospice Roundtable Discussion A5 Changes in Medical Licensing in Montana A6 Certification Bureau Life Safety Code Update 2:00 - 5:00 pm Vendor Set-Up 3:00 - 3:30 pm BREAK 3:30 - 5:00 pm Concurrent Education Sessions B B1 Find the Money Hidden in Your Facilities B2 What Does the New Nurse License Compact Mean for Nurses... B3 Always On: HIPAA Compliance in an Always Connected World B4 Stopping the Downward Spiral of Unplanned Absence in Health... B5 Clinical Ethics and Chaplaincy B6 ACHE: Risk Issues We Face in Our Daily Roles B7 Advanced Care Planning and POLST - Moving Forward Part 2 B8 Home Health Roundtable Discussion 2:00 - 3:00 pm X6 MSHE Business Meeting 5:00 - 6:30 pm X7 Chairman’s Welcome Reception Sponsored by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana 6:30 - 8:00 pm X8 ACHE: Bending the Execution Curve - Rib and Chop House 7:00 - 10:00 pm X9 MSHE Social Sponsored by Commercial Energy 7:00 am - 6:30 pm 8:30 am - Noon 11 Atrium Gallatin Jefferson Stillwater Bitterroot Jefferson Stillwater Missouri Birch Spruce Lewis & Clark Gallatin Aspen Yellowstone Madison Convention Center Atrium Madison Yellowstone Gallatin Poolside Cottonwood BigHorn Lewis & Clark Aspen Jefferson Atrium Off-site Meadowlark 12 Schedule of Events Date/Time Thursday, September 24 Event Room Registration Open Atrium X10 Mountain-Pacific Quality Health QI Breakfast Poolside Vendor Set-Up Convention Center Thursday, September 24 7:00 am - 10:00 am 10:30 am - 2:00 pm 7:00 - 8:00 am 8:00 - 10:30 am 8:00 - 9:30 am Concurrent Education Sessions C C1 Improving Your Recruitment Strategies C2 The Evolution from Activities to Life Enrichment C3 Discipline & Termination in Montana C4 Wounded Warriors: Their Last Battle C5 “Get Your Head in the Game!” (Are you a starter, substitute, manager...) C6 The Behavioral Shift to Value-Based Care C7 Active Shooter Defense C8 ACHE: Leading a Successful Multigenerational Organization BREAK 9:30 - 10:00 am 10:00 am - 12:00 pm X11 General Session and Keynote Speaker - Ian Morrison “The Future of the Healthcare Marketplace: Playing the New Game” sponsored by US Bank and Pacific Source Health Plans 12:00 - 2:30 PM 2:00 - 3:30 pm Madison Spruce Yellowstone Cottonwood Lewis & Clark Gallatin Bitterroot BigHorn Atrium Missouri/Stillwater X12 Strolling Lunch with Vendors Sponsored by Yellowstone Insurance Exchange and Precision Document Solutions Enjoy a delicious lunch with the vendors and get started on your Passport to Prizes card! Concurrent Education Sessions D D1 Facility Design for the Future: Adapting Your Healthcare Facility to Serve Your Future Care Delivery Model D2 When EHRs Cause Patient Harm: Emerging Risks D3 Emerging Roles: Leading Transformation in a Changing Healthcare Landscape D4 My Story - Learning and Leading From My Patient Experience D5 15 Challenges Facing Hospital Auxiliaries and Volunteer Services - Part 1 D6 Perinatal Loss and Family Support D7 Communication Strategies for Engagement D8 Hospital Preparedness 101 D9 Peace at Last; Stories of Hope and Healing for Veterans and their Families D10 Telehealth Policy – The Present & Future Trends D11 Patient and Community Engagement 13 Convention Center Bitterroot Stillwater Missouri Poolside Lewis & Clark Birch Gallatin BigHorn Cottonwood Madison Yellowstone Schedule of Events Thursday, September 24 Date/Time Event Room 3:30 - 3:45 pm 3:45 - 5:15 pm BREAK Concurrent Education Sessions E E1 Leveraging EHR Functionality for QI Projects E2 Wipe Out Readmissions to the Hospital E3 Long-Term Care Documentation: The Good, The Bad and the Ugly E4 15 Challenges Facing Hospital Auxiliaries and Volunteer Services - Part 2 E5 Integrating Brain Health Concepts into the Activity Program E6 Developing a Sustainable Training and Exercise Program for Healthcare Organizations Atrium E7 Dying Healed: A Shared Quest for Wholeness E8 Patient Centered Medical Home: What is All the Hype? E9 Creating a Culture of Learning, HealthCARE MT Update Cottonwood Poolside Gallatin Thursday, September 24 5:00 - 7:00 pm X13 80s Gala Reception and Trade Show BigHorn Stillwater Madison Lewis & Clark Spruce Yellowstone Sponsored by Jackson & Coker Come dressed in your most Bodacious 80s Threads because Convention Center there will be a contest for the most radical attire! 1st place will receive $200 cash!!! There will be plenty of food, fun and over $4,000 in prizes for those who participate in the Passport to Prizes game. Doors open at 4:00 pm. 14 COSTUME CONTEST for the Best 80s Attire! AT THE GALA RECEPTION & TRADE SHOW THURSDAY, SEPT 24 5:00-7:00 pm DON’T YOU (FORGET ABOUT ME) Costume Contest Winners will be Announced at 6:30 pm! 15 1st Place $200 2nd Place $100 3rd Place $50 FOOD FRIENDS FUN Schedule of Events Friday, September 25 Date/Time Event Room 7:30 am - 8:30 am X14 CEO Exchange - A Conversation Over Breakfast Friday, September 25 Sponsored by LifeCenter Northwest 8:00 am - 10:00 am 8:00 am - 10:00 am 8:00 am - 10:00 am 8:00 am - 10:00 am 8:30 am - 10:00 am 8:30 am - 10:00 am X15 MSHHRA Business Meeting X16 MHREF - PIN Advisory Board Meeting X17 MSOV Business Meeting X18 MSCA Business Meeting X19 MHIMSS Board Meeting Concurrent Education Sessions F F1 HEN Roundtable Discussion F2 Home Health Benchmarks: Montana’s Vital Signs F3 Patient-Centered Care: Straightforward Methods for Implementation F4 How to Develop a Digital Patient Engagement Program F5 Conflict Management- Handling Difficult Behaviors F6 Addressing Physician Disciplinary Issues 10:00 - 10:15 am BREAK 10:15 am - 11:45 am Concurrent Education Sessions G G1 Advancing Superior Staff Retention Gallatin Madison Cottonwood Poolside Jefferson Lewis & Clark Spruce Yellowstone Stillwater Bighorn Missouri Bitterroot Atrium Stillwater G2 Compensation Models in Home Health Yellowstone G3 Benefits and Burdens of Affiliations, Collaborations and Partnerships Bitterroot Speaker Biographies and Evaluations for education sessions are located Online at www.mtha.org By Filling out an Online evaluation, you will be entered into a Drawing to win a $50 Amazon Gift Card!! 16 Spending more time on what matters most to you. Now that’s intelligent care. MedAssets—the healthcare performance improvement experts who help you work smarter. MedAssets is a healthcare performance improvement company focused on helping providers realize financial and operational gains so that they can sustainably serve the needs of their community. Approximately 4,500 hospitals and 123,000 non-acute healthcare providers currently use the company’s evidence-based solutions, best practice processes and analytics to help reduce the total cost of care, enhance operational efficiency, align clinical delivery and improve revenue performance across the care continuum. For more information, please visit www.medassets.com 17 Wednesday, September 23 Linda Bierbach, Providence Health & Services/St. Patrick Hospital 8:00 - 9:30 am X1 MSHE BOARD MEETING Advance care planning has changed and advanced over the years. Presenters will concentrate on the latest research and techniques to communicate with patients about their goals and values particularly as it pertains to serious illness. Hands on techniques will be demonstrated. Appropriate use of POLST will also be discussed. CNE NHA ASSISTED LIVING, NURSING HOME, HOME HEALTH, HOSPICE, CHAPLAIN, MEDICAL STAFF, NURSING, QUALITY SOCIAL SERVICES, RISK MANAGEMENT 8:30 - 11:30 am X2 CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITAL (CAH) ADMINISTRATORS' MEETING -- FLEX PROGRAM MEETING Recommended for: CEO/Administrators, anyone interested in the Rural Hospital Flexibility (Flex) Program 11:30 am - 1:00 pm X3 LTC COMMITTEE MEETING A3 CUSTOMER SERVICE NICHE Bryan Peterson, Associated Employers 11:45 am - 4:30 pm X4 MHA HOUSE OF DELEGATES & MEMBER CEO MEETING This seminar offers customer service training based on attitude, communication, and listening. This session will examine the importance of great customer service from both the external and internal customer standpoint. A connection exists between how we interact with our internal customer (co-worker) and the level of service we will provide our external customer. This session is facilitated through the use of lecture, hands-on activities and a DVD presentation. Topics covered: Customer Service Attitude, Fantastic Service, Effective Communication. CNE NHA ALL Sponsored By: Crowley Fleck, PLLP 1:00 - 2:30 pm X5 ACHE BUSINESS MEETING 1:30 - 3:00 pm CONCURRENT EDUCATION A SESSIONS A1 SPIRITUAL CARE ROUNDTABLE Kim Pepper, St. Peter's Hospital This session will offer the opportunity to discuss the provision of spiritual care in health care settings with the facilitator and other attendees. Possible areas of focus might include creating a spiritual care department; scope of service; spiritual assessments, clinical spiritual care as a member of the interdisciplinary team; core competencies; collaboration with other health care staff; and networking with staff from around Montana. CHAPLAIN/PASTORAL CARE A4 HOSPICE ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION Join your fellow colleagues for an interactive discussion about the latest hospice issues. A5 CHANGES IN MEDICAL LICENSING IN MONTANA Ian Marquand, MT Board of Medical Examiners At the request of the Board of Medical Examiners, the 2015 Montana Legislature made substantial changes to statutes governing the licensing of Physicians. SB 77 removed the Specialized, Temporary and Telemedicine license types, created clear requirements for short- A2 ADVANCE CARE PLANNING AND POLST - MOVING FORWARD PART I Kathryn Borgenicht, Bozeman Deaconess Palliative Care and 18 Wednesday, September 23 term Resident licenses and clarified the requirements for Physician licenses. That bill also added telemedicine to the definition of practice of medicine for Physicians. Additionally, the Legislature passed HB 429, which allowed Montana to enter the new Interstate Medical Licensing Compact, an agreement designed to facilitate multi-state licensing of Physicians. The Board is awaiting the first meeting of a Commission to oversee operation of the Compact. The Board also is preparing rules to implement the legislative changes and recently adopted new fees for applicants and licensees across all license types. Ian Marquand will brief MHA members on all of these changes and what they mean for individual providers and health care facilities. CEO/ADMINISTRATOR, MEDICAL STAFF/PHYSICIAN PERSONNEL/HR CNE NHA B2 WHAT DOES THE NEW NURSE LICENSE COMPACT MEAN FOR NURSES AND EMPLOYERS? Cynthia Gustafson PhD, RN, Board of Nursing An overview of what the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC) means and the implementation of the NLC in MT. Topics covered: What is a multi-state nursing privilege? How can I know, as an employer, if a nurse from another state can practice in MT without a MT license? How will the Board of Nursing handle complaints of poor practice with the NLC? CNE NHA NURSING, CEO/ADMINISTRATOR, PERSONNEL/HR B3 ALWAYS ON: HIPAA COMPLIANCE IN AN ALWAYS CONNECTED WORLD Karen Sprenger, LMG Security A6 CERTIFICATION BUREAU LIFE SAFETY CODE UPDATE Jill Caldwell, RN, MSN, DPHHS Certification Bureau Does social media have a place in modern healthcare? Do you have policies in place to protect your patients, staff and facility? With the proliferation of mobile devices and networks like Facebook, Twitter, Ello, SnapChat, Tumblr, Instagram and more - people are sharing their lives like never before. Policies, training and awareness programs need to be set up so that employees understand fully what is expected, and why confidentiality is important as it pertains to ePHI. We’ll show you what you can do to ensure that patient information remains private in a connected world. CNE NHA ALL The latest news about life safety code from a surveyor perspective. CNE NHA ALL 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm CONCURRENT EDUCATION B SESSIONS B1 FIND THE MONEY HIDDEN IN YOUR FACILITIES Betsy Pahut, NorthWestern Energy NorthWestern Energy’s Building Operator Certification® program achieves measurable savings by training plant engineers and maintenance staff on energy-saving methods to operate facilities. Become acquainted with how you and your staff can translate complex information into practical terms to help achieve savings and accountability for plant operations. NHA CFO, CEO, ADMINISTRATORS, ENGINEERS/PLANT OPERATIONS B4 STOPPING THE DOWNWARD SPIRAL OF UNPLANNED ABSENCE IN HEALTHCARE Daris Freeman & Susan Stowell, Unum Group This session will discuss the impact of unplanned absences on healthcare providers. It will focus on complexities of the Family Medical Leave Act and opportunities to mitigate the high absence rate within hospitals and healthcare providers. CNE NHA PERSONNEL/HR, ANYONE IN A MANAGERIAL ROLE 19 Wednesday, September 23 B5 CLINICAL ETHICS AND CHAPLAINCY Terry Hollister, SCL Health System 5:00 - 6:30 pm An overview of key ethical principles as they apply to the clinical setting in healthcare. CHAPLAIN/PASTORAL CARE, HOSPICE, MEDICAL STAFF, RISK MANAGEMENT, ADMINISTRATORS, NURSING, BOARD MEMBERS Start off your evening by networking with your colleagues while enjoying complimentary hors d’oeuvres and no-host bar. X7 CHAIRMAN'S WELCOME RECEPTION Sponsored By: Blue Cross Blue Shield of MT 6:30 - 8:00 pm B6 ACHE: RISK ISSUES WE FACE IN OUR DAILY ROLES X8 ACHE: BENDING THE EXECUTION CURVE: IMPLEMENTING SUCCESSFUL ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE IN HOSPITALS AND HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONS Panel Discussion, MT Chapter of the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE) CNE NHA ACHE CATEGORY 1 B7 ADVANCE CARE PLANNING AND POLST - MOVING FORWARD PART II Kathryn Borgenicht, Bozeman Deaconess Palliative Care and Linda Bierbach, Providence Health & Services/St. Patrick Hospital Panel Discussion, MT Chapter of the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE) Dinner to be held at the Rib & Chop House Sponsored By: Cerium Networks CNE NHA ACHE CATEGORY 1 Part two will be about demonstrating and modeling communication interview strategies and behaviors for healthcare providers to effectively serve patients and families in having the conversations to name goals of care and how to document evidence of the same. ASSISTED LIVING, NURSING HOME, HOME HEALTH, HOSPICE, CHAPLAIN, MEDICAL STAFF, NURSING, QUALITY SOCIAL SERVICES, RISK MANAGEMENT 7:00 - 10:00 pm X9 MSHE SOCIAL Sponsored By: Commercial Energy B8 HOME HEALTH ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION Join your fellow colleagues for an interactive discussion about the latest home health issues. 2:00 - 3:00 pm X6 MSHE BUSINESS MEETING CNE Course Eligible for Montana Nursing Contact Hours NHA Appropriate for Nursing Home Administrator Credits 20 To those who seek an extraordinary CEO, choose one who has achieved board certification as a Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives. To learn more, visit ache.org/FACHE or call (312) 424-9400. 21 Thursday, September 24 7:00 - 8:00 am C3 DISCIPLINE & TERMINATION IN MONTANA CNE NHA Bryan Peterson, Associated Employers X10 MOUNTAIN-PACIFIC QUALITY HEALTH QI BREAKFAST PRACTICAL TIPS FOR QUALITY IMPROVEMENT This breakout session will provide managers the tools to understand the fair, consistent and legal way to discipline and discharge employees. Session content to include: an overview of the Montana Wrongful Discharge from Employment Act (MWDEA), good cause, due process and the disciplinary process. CEO/ADMINISTRATOR, CFO, EXECUTIVE STAFF, MATERIALS MANAGER, NURSING SUPERVISORS, HR Quality Improvement is an ongoing challenge. Learn practical advice from your colleagues on how to achieve results, and sustain the gains. 8:00 - 9:30 am CONCURRENT EDUCATION C SESSIONS C4 WOUNDED WARRIORS: THEIR LAST BATTLE Deborah Grassman, Opus Peace C1 IMPROVING YOUR RECRUITMENT STRATEGIES Rebecca Clinch & Sandra Fladmo, Billings Clinic Many military experiences impact peaceful dying for veterans – even though their death might not occur until decades later. The stoic military culture, combat training, and war itself can change a veteran in fundamental ways; their families may also be affected. Emotional, spiritual, social, and moral injuries that veterans have sustained impact them throughout their lifetime, especially as they face death. In this presentation, you will learn about the unique needs of veterans as they age and face the end of their lives, the impact of the military experience on families, and tools for effective ways to respond to veterans’ needs. ALL CNE NHA Are you struggling with finding the qualified staff you need? Is it taking too long to get the employee hired and working? Is your turnover rate too high? Is social media a foreign term to you? If you are struggling with these questions and more, join the Billings Clinic Team and hear about their Operational Excellence Kaizen to improve their recruitment process. Panel discussion will include representatives from Human Resources, Leadership and Operational Excellence. CNE NHA ALL C2 THE EVOLUTION FROM ACTIVITIES TO LIFE ENRICHMENT Natalie Davis, Activtimes C5 GET YOUR HEAD IN THE GAME! (ARE YOU A STARTER, SUBSTITUTE, MANAGER, COACH, SPECTATOR OR ON THE INJURED RESERVE LIST???) The session will focus on the expectations of today’s activity programs. Both regulatory and societal influences that impact the activity program will be discussed. The session will redefine “activities” and provide strategies for life enrichment professionals to keep pace in a continually changing environment. ACTIVITY DIRECTOR, ASSISTED LIVING, EDUCATION, ADMINISTRATOR, NURSING, SOCIAL SERVICES, VOLUNTEER CNE NHA Ken Culp III, Ph.D., University of Kentucky Every board, council, committee and organization includes a variety of people who each serve different roles and have differing participation levels. This presentation examines the different “positions” that different people “play” while serving on these groups. These “positions” include: starter, sub, bench-warmer, red shirt, injured-reserve, spectator, cheerleader, manager and coach. Each “position”22 Thursday, September 24 will be introduced, along with a discussion regarding that position’s role and the challenges facing players in that position. Participants will rank the positions in their order of importance for their organization and its programs. The presentation wraps up with an overview of recruiting techniques versus “walkons,” with the final activity focusing on determining what kind of a “sport” your organization strives to be; spectator, team or individual. ALL CNE NHA 10:00 am - 12:00 pm X11 THE FUTURE OF THE HEALTHCARE MARKETPLACE: PLAYING THE NEW GAME Ian Morrison, Strategic Health Perspectives All healthcare stakeholders must prepare to play a new game in a reformed health system in 2015 and beyond. Organizations and individuals need to be flexible to adjust to additional modifications in the reform agenda, including the push for more widespread reimbursement reform, the growth in transparency and accountability, and the relentless quest for value in healthcare driven by patients and purchasers. This presentation will focus on the political, economic, and strategic context of change in healthcare, describe the possible scenarios we face and examine how the various actors are preparing for the future. It will identify the leadership challenges and opportunities that lie ahead and will provide strategic insights on how organizations and individuals can flourish in the future. In particular, it will focus on the specific challenges that rural hospitals face in this emerging future, and it will identify some emerging principles for the successful reinvention of rural healthcare. ALL CNE NHA C6 THE BEHAVIORAL SHIFT TO VALUE-BASED CARE Tina Nazier, Wipfli, LLP By 2016, HHS wants 30% of fee for service payments to be tied to quality or value through ACOs, value-based reimbursement, or bundled payments; this jumps to 50% by 2018. Are you and your providers ready to make the behavioral shift necessary to provide the team-based care necessary to deliver quality outcomes? This workshop examines the top six behavioral changes necessary to move your organization toward value-based, collaborative care across the continuum of providers. CNE NHA CEO, CFO, CLINIC MANAGERS, EXECUTIVE STAFF, HOME HEALTH, HOSPICE, MEDICAL STAFF, PHYSICIANS, NURSING, PERSONNEL/HR, QUALITY, RISK MANAGEMENT, SOCIAL SERVICES, TRUSTEE Sponsored By: US Bank & Pacific Source Health Plans C7 ACTIVE SHOOTER DEFENSE Patrick Hoy, Billings Clinic X12 12:00 - 2:00 PM STROLLING LUNCH WITH VENDORS Sponsored By: Yellowstone Insurance exchange & Precision Document Solutions This session describes Active Shooter incidents and actions we can take to improve our chances of surviving an Active Shooter incident should we ever find ourselves in the midst of one. ALL CNE NHA C8 ACHE: LEADING A SUCCESSFUL MULTIGENERATIONAL ORGANIZATION Panel Discussion, MT Chapter of the American College of Healthcare Executives CNE NHA ACHE CATEGORY 1 23 GENERAL SESSION THURSDAY 10:00 am - 12:00 pm Awards and a Message from MHA President, Dick Brown Sponsored By FEATURING: Ian Morrison Author, Consultant, Futurist Ian is an internationally known author, consultant, and futurist specializing in longterm forecasting and planning with particular emphasis on healthcare and the changing business environment. Ian is the author of several books including, most recently, Leading Change in Healthcare: Building a Viable System for Today and Tomorrow. His book, The Second Curve Managing The Velocity of Change (Ballantine, 1996) was a New York Times Business Bestseller and BusinessWeek Bestseller. Ian is a founding partner in Strategic Health Perspectives, a forecasting service for clients in the healthcare industry. He holds a Ph.D. in urban studies from the University of British Columbia; an M.A. in geography from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and a graduate degree from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England. He is a past director and chair of the California Health Care Foundation, and a director of the new Martin Luther King Hospital in Los Angeles. The Future of the Healthcare Marketplace: Playing THE new game 24 Thursday, September 24 end-user actions like copy-and-paste or workarounds can pose a patient safety risk by highlighting real malpractice case examples. ALL CNE NHA 2:00 - 3:30 pm CONCURRENT EDUCATION D SESSIONS D3 EMERGING ROLES: LEADING TRANSFORMATION IN A CHANGING HEALTHCARE LANDSCAPE Mark Madden, B.E. Smith, Inc. D1 FACILITY DESIGN FOR THE FUTURE: ADAPTING YOUR HEALTHCARE FACILITY TO SERVE YOUR FUTURE CARE DELIVERY MODEL Nicholas Smith, Wipfli, LLP As the healthcare industry transitions to a new care model, senior healthcare executives must adapt in order to lead their organizations to meet new incentives and requirements. This dramatic shift is resulting in an equally dramatic shift in the leadership strategies to successfully lead. From new management styles to innovations in patient care, healthcare leaders are challenged with navigating an ever-changing healthcare environment. In this presentation, Mark Madden will share personal insights into evolving executive roles and the new leadership strategies required of current and future healthcare professionals. ALL CNE NHA The trend toward outpatient and ambulatory care is continuing. Factors that are driving this change include financial incentives, increasing competition, and constantly improved technology and evidence-based research. Most of these shifts in care delivery have an impact not only on operations but also an organization’s physical space needs. Exploring these emerging trends, understanding their impact on physical space, and linking them to the overall facility master planning process can ensure that your organization allocates its facility investments wisely. CNE NHA CEO/ADMINISTRATOR, CFO, ENGINEERS/PLANT OPERATIONS D4 MY STORY - LEARNING AND LEADING FROM MY PATIENT EXPERIENCE Casey Buckingham, Benefis Health System D2 WHEN EHRS CAUSE PATIENT HARM: EMERGING RISKS Emily Clegg, JD, MBA, CPHRM, UMIA My perspective of Patient Experience was forever changed the day I traded in my employee badge for a patient identification band. My role at Benefis Health System had always placed me in the epicenter of Patient Experience with process improvement initiatives, rounding, surveys, statistics, action plans, focus groups, and education. I thought I understood the patient experience, but when I was the one laying in the patient bed, I realized that my previous views were based on false assumptions. In this session, I will take you through a personal journey as a patient within the walls of my own organization and explain the impact I generated when the patient identification band was taken off and I put my employee badge back on. ALL CNE NHA Electronic records hold the promise of more efficient care, safer care, and easier access to a wealth of clinical information. As more providers adopt EHRs, however, we also see those EHRs pose new risks to patient safety—or old risks cast in a new electronic light. Where we used to see handwriting errors, we now see user mis-clicks and incorrect drop-down selections, and malpractice claims with EHR-related contributing factors have begun to emerge. This presentation is intended to raise awareness for high-risk EHR-related contributing factors that can cause harm and to encourage participation by risk managers in health IT implementations. This program discusses emerging risks in electronic records brought on by the end user—the provider. We discuss how 25 St. Vincent Healthcare Serving Montana and Northern Wyoming St. Vincent Healthcare delivers compassionate, quality care to the people of Montana and Northern Wyoming. In addition to 11 primary care clinics in and around the Billings area, it offers progressive specialty services in Heart & Vascular, Neuroscience, Oncology, Orthopedics, and Women’s Services. St. Vincent even has a special “hospital within a hospital” just for children, St. Vincent Children’s Healthcare. St. Vincent is part of SCL Health, a faith-based, nonprofit health system. To learn more about St. Vincent Healthcare visit svh.org. 1233 North 30th St., Billings, MT 59101 P 406-237-7000 26 Wilderness Medical Staffing,Inc. AMontanacompanymeetingthemedicalstaffingneedsofMontana AboutWildernessMedicalStaffing Wilderness Medical Staffing is a Montana owned and operated locum tenens corporation. We specialize in staffing hospital and clinic sites in rural areas of Montana with mid-level providers (nurse practitioners and physician assistants). As a Montana grown company, we are completely familiar with the areas that we send practitioners to because we have worked and lived in many of these areas ourselves. Our practitioners all have emergency medicine backgrounds and we pride ourselves on being able to practice excellence in medicine in any location, under any circumstance. WildernessMedicalStaffingServices -Cost-effective top-quality care -Short or long-term locum tenens staffing -Full-time staffing with rotating providers Unique benefits of working with Wilderness Medical Staffing -Montana owned and operated company -Practitioners are Montana licensed and insured -Experience in rural medicine -Practitioners have emergency medical backgrounds -A stable, competent staffing solution that will fit your unique site Formoreinformation,pleasecontact: Noah McWilliams (406) 214-6723 [email protected] Wilderness Medical Staffing, Inc. P.O. Box 442 Red Lodge, MT 59068 (406) 241-9292 (406) 214-6723 27 Thursday, September 24 D5 15 CHALLENGES FACING HOSPITAL AUXILIARIES AND VOLUNTEER SERVICES: PART 1 Ken Culp III, Ph.D., University of Kentucky D8 HOSPITAL PREPAREDNESS 101 Don McGiboney, Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services Don McGiboney will present an overview and interactive discussion of the tasks and endeavors necessary to create a foundation for Hospital Emergency Preparedness upon which the participants will build planning processes. CNE NHA EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS Hospital volunteer programs are similar to many other nonprofit, volunteer based organizations. In order to survive, they should make a continual effort to remain- current, relevant, vibrant and active. This workshop identifies the 15 common challenges facing Hospital Auxiliaries and Volunteer Services across the nation and explains how these challenges came to be. ALL D9 PEACE AT LAST: STORIES OF HOPE AND HEALING FOR VETERANS AND THEIR FAMILIES Deborah Grassman, Opus Peace D6 PERINATAL LOSS AND FAMILY SUPPORT Kenneth Mottram, Bozeman Deaconess Health Services Don’t miss this unique opportunity to listen as Deborah Grassman shares personal stories about how 10,000 dying veterans fundamentally changed her over her 30-year VA career. “Warrior wisdom” attained from facing the aftermath of war will be highlighted. Forgiveness issues that sometimes surface as veterans prepare themselves to “Meet their Maker” will also be explored. Prepare yourselves for an eye-opening experience that awakens you to the aftermath of war and the potential for healing. ALL CNE NHA This workshop will focus on infant deaths and fetal demises and the support that can be offered by labor and delivery, emergency, or spiritual care departments for parents and families. Presenters include a chaplain, a licensed clinical professional counselor, a parent who has experienced a loss, and a volunteer artist who assembles memory boxes. CNE CEO ADMINISTRATOR, CHAPLAINS, EMERGENCY DEPT. STAFF, LABOR AND DELIVERY NURSES, HOSPICE, MEDICAL STAFF, SOCIAL SERVICES. D10 TELEHEALTH POLICY – THE PRESENT & FUTURE TRENDS Mario Gutierrez, Center for Connected Health Policy D7 COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES FOR ENGAGEMENT Natalie Davis, Activtimes This session will cover current telehealth policy on both the federal and state level, with a focus on Montana. Audience members will also hear about future telehealth policy trends and what health care professionals can expect to see in this area in the coming year. ALL CNE The session will focus on the positive outcomes that can be derived from socialization and engagement. The vital role of relationships throughout the care community will be emphasized. CNE NHA ACTIVITY DIRECTOR, ASSISTED LIVING, EDUCATION, ADMINISTRATOR, NURSING, SOCIAL SERVICES, VOLUNTEER D11 PATIENT AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Rob Brandt, Mountainview Medical Center This session will cover how you can leverage technology to reach, retain and engage patients in their Healthcare process & decisions. CNE NHA 28 Thursday, September 24 3:45 - 5:15 pm E3 LONG-TERM CARE DOCUMENTATION: THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY Lynne Evans, RN, MSN, CPHRM, UMIA CONCURRENT EDUCATION E SESSIONS E1 LEVERAGING EHR FUNCTIONALITY FOR QI PROJECTS Patricia Koesednar, Mountain Pacific Quality Health Documentation serves as a major means of communicating among health care professionals caring for residents. Whether digital or paper, high quality documentation is a critical factor in preventing resident injuries. Deficient documentation not only can lead to injuries, but also can impact the filing and defense of malpractice claims. This presentation will help participants better understand the risks of poor documentation as well as evaluate and improve their documentation practices. CNE NHA ALL This presentation will review a process for organizations to leverage certified health information technology, functionality, data and the Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) project improvement methodology to support and advance their quality improvement (QI) initiatives and help align QI projects with existing quality reporting programs, in an efficient and effective manner. CNE NHA CEO/ADMIN, EDUCATION/INSERVICE/TRAINING, EXECUTIVE STAFF, HIM/IT, QUALITY E4 15 CHALLENGES FACING HOSPITAL AUXILIARIES AND VOLUNTEER SERVICES: PART 2 Ken Culp III, Ph.D., University of Kentucky E2 WIPE OUT READMISSIONS TO THE HOSPITAL Clint Maun, Maun-Lemke Speaking & Consulting, LLC This workshop provides an action plan that Hospital Auxiliaries and Volunteer Services can follow in order to rejuvenate, renew, reactivate and re-energize the organization and its membership. Additionally, strategies for developing new members, programs and activities and their impact on the organization will be shared and outlined. ALL In fiscal year 2013, hospitals started facing penalties for high readmission rates under the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program. Initial performance evaluations will be based upon the 30-day readmission measures for heart attack, heart failure and pneumonia that are currently part of the Medicare pay-for-reporting program and reported on Hospital Compare. Many readmissions to the hospital are avoidable, thus it is imperative that a SNF implements proactive strategies to prevent hospital returns. This session will include an overview of these strategies related to the admission process, teaming and communication within and between shifts and departments, support services, clinical practice tools, provider collaboration and post-transition follow-up. Join us to discuss what needs to be done to wipe out preventable readmissions to the hospital and solidify your position as the SNF provider of choice. ALL CNE NHA E5 INTEGRATING BRAIN HEALTH CONCEPTS INTO THE ACTIVITY PROGRAM Natalie Davis, Activtimes The session will focus on methods to incorporate recent brain health research into the ongoing life enrichment program. Innovative activities will be presented. CNE NHA ACTIVITY DIRECTOR, ASSISTED LIVING, CHAPLAIN, NURSING, SOCIAL SERVICES, VOLUNTEER 29 Questions about Donation? As a fully accredited organ and tissue Working together to save lives through organ and tissue donation procurement agency, we can help you meet all COP requirements. Stop by booth 42 to learn more! In 2014, Montanans who gave the Gift of Life through organ donation saved 113 lives. Federally Designated Organ Procurement Organization AATB Accredited Tissue Recovery Organization YOUR BUSINESS IS HEALING OTHERS. O U R S I S TA K I N G C A R E O F YO U. UMIA provides more than just medical liability insurance for physicians, hospitals and health care facilities. We offer innovative risk solutions that fit your unique needs. Solutions that will help decrease clinical, compliance and health information technology risks and provide well-being support for providers. Call us to hear more or visit UMIA.com 3 1 0 E A S T 4 5 0 0 S O U T H , S U I T E 6 0 0 • S A LT L A K E C I T Y, U TA H 8 4 1 0 7 801-531-0375 • 800-748-4380 30 Thursday, September 24 E6 DEVELOPING A SUSTAINABLE TRAINING AND EXERCISE PROGRAM FOR HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONS Leanne Vreeland CHPCP, Summit Exercises and Training E9 CREATING A CULTURE OF LEARNING, HEALTHCARE MT UPDATE Kristin Juliar, MT AHEC and Office of Rural Health Barry Kenfield, Western Montana AHEC Carol Bischoff, HealthCARE Montana How to use an organization’s organizational and programmatic risk assessment to develop an effective and sustainable training and exercise program for Emergency Preparedness. CNE NHA ALL What resources are available to produce the workforce you need? The MT Area Health Education Centers help create interest in health careers, support health professions students, and provide continuing education for health professionals. Identify strategies to grow your own workforce through AHEC programs and discover what’s available in distance education, tuition reimbursement, and improving skills. Best of all, learn about creating a culture of learning in your facility that will enhance recruitment and retention and build strong partnerships with your higher education partners. Health professions discussed include nursing, physicians, allied health, and HIT. CEO/ADMINISTRATOR, CLINIC MANAGERS, EDUCATION/TRAINING, EXECUTIVE STAFF, MEDICAL STAFF/PHYSICIAN, PERSONNEL/HR, TRUSTEE, QUALITY CNE NHA E7 DYING HEALED: A SHARED QUEST FOR WHOLENESS Deborah Grassman, Opus Peace This presentation will provide information and tools to healthcare providers about the value of providing prognoses to patients so end-of-life strategies can be developed. Deborah will also explore evidence-based palliative care practices that relate to dementia, dyspnea, artificial nutrition, diabetic control, agitation, and implanted defibrillators. Join Deborah for provocative videos and thought-stimulating questions that will help clinicians craft therapeutic dialogue that openly addresses healthcare dilemmas with patients and their families. ALL CNE NHA X13 5:00 - 7:00 PM GALA RECEPTION & TRADE SHOW Sponsored By: Jackson & Coker E8 PATIENT CENTERED MEDICAL HOME: WHAT IS ALL THE HYPE? Megan Littlefield & Nancy Taylor, RiverStone Health Doors open from 4:00 - 7:00 PM Dr. Littelfield will discuss the building blocks for a PCMH and how to operationalize these into practice. She will review ways to engage providers and staff in the process, and how to collaborate with community partners in creating a patient centered medical neighborhood. CNE NHA CEO, CFO, CLINIC MANAGERS, EXECUTIVE STAFF, MEDICAL STAFF, PHYSICIANS, NURSING, PERSONNEL/HR, QUALITY, RISK MANAGEMENT, CNE Course Eligible for Montana Nursing Contact Hours NHA Appropriate for Nursing Home Administrator Credits 31 Visit us at Booth #92 32 Friday, September 25 7:30 - 8:30 am F3 PATIENT-CENTERED CARE: STRAIGHTFORWARD METHODS FOR IMPLEMENTATION Clint Maun, Maun-Lemke Speaking & Consulting, LLC X14 CEO EXCHANGE Conversation Over Breakfast Sponsored By: LifeCenter Northwest Today’s healthcare customers expect to be involved with their caregivers as partners with their care. They want their care to be patient-centered so, as providers, we must move toward relationships where there are opportunities to impact satisfaction in individual circumstances. This session will outline simple, straightforward techniques that can be put in place to greatly enhance the patient experience, improve patient satisfaction scores, increase opportunities for repeat business and assure customer loyalty. ALL CNE NHA 8:00 - 10:00 am X15 MSHHRA BUSINESS MEETING 8:00 - 10:00 am X16 MHREF - PIN ADVISORY BOARD MEETING 8:00 - 10:00 am X17 MSOV BUSINESS MEETING 8:00 - 10:00 am X18 MSCA BUSINESS MEETING F4 HOW TO DEVELOP A DIGITAL PATIENT ENGAGEMENT PROGRAM Chanin Wendling, Geisinger in Motion 8:30 - 10:00 am The purpose of this session is to discuss how consumer technology can be used to enable patient engagement. The presentation will focus on how to develop a program and the benefits of having a program. CEO/ADMINISTRATOR, CLINIC MANAGERS, COMMUNICATIONS & DEVELOPMENT, HIM/IT, MEDICAL STAFF/PHYSICIAN, NURSING, QUALITY (QI/QA) CNE NHA X19 MHIMSS BOARD MEETING 8:30 - 10:00 am CONCURRENT EDUCATION F SESSIONS F1 HEN ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION This session will cover the new Hospital Engagement Network (HEN) 2.0 project. Topics of conversation may include education opportunities, data reporting expectations, performance measurement and more. F5 CONFLICT MANAGEMENTHANDLING DIFFICULT BEHAVIORS Bryan Peterson, Associated Employers When performance problems and inappropriate behavior are ignored, they don’t go away. They turn into bigger problems—for you and your organization. You’ll learn to identify performance problems and various types of behavior problems, and you will learn to confront them in a positive and productive way. Conflict, strife, and opposing points of view are part of the workplace and part of life; you can’t change that. But you can change the way you react and manage conflict when it does occur. ALL CNE NHA F2 HOME HEALTH BENCHMARKS: MONTANA'S VITAL SIGNS Karen Vance, BKD, LLP Health Care Group Benchmarks tell us which numbers are key performance indicators of home health success. This session compares Montana numbers with benchmarks and translates those numbers to specific performance areas agencies can target for improvement. CNE HOME HEALTH, ADMINISTRATOR/CEO, CFO 33 34 Friday, September 25 F6 ADDRESSING PHYSICIAN DISCIPLINARY ISSUES Tim A. Johnson, Gray Plant Mooty G2 COMPENSATION MODELS IN HOME HEALTH Karen Vance, BKD, LLP Health Care Group Most successful health care organizations understand that generally their success depends on having positive and affirmative relationships with their medical staffs and providers. Unfortunately, organizations can also be held accountable for improper conduct and behavior of physicians. Improper physician behavior subjects the organization to liability risk and malpractice risk, and such behavior can be very disruptive to the organization. This session will address potential risks of such organizations as well as how the organization should properly document and address these situations to both minimize liability and to achieve a successful outcome. CNE ALL Compensation models in home health can either reinforce, counteract, or even have unintended consequences on agency desired outcomes. This session describes the most commonly used compensation models in home health and the inherent incentives and unintended consequences of each. CNE HOME HEALTH, ADMINISTRATOR/CEO, CFO, PERSONNEL/HR G3 BENEFITS AND BURDENS OF AFFILIATIONS, COLLABORATIONS AND PARTNERSHIPS Tim A. Johnson, Gray Plant Mooty With the consolidation of health care providers across the country, as well as the ability to participate in managed care arrangements including accountable care organizations, providers are being faced with the realization that partnering or affiliating with another provider may be the best alternative for survival. This session will address the benefits and burdens of health care providers participating in affiliations, collaborations and partnerships. This presentation will provide insights into the various types of alternatives and models for collaborations and partnerships, and will also go into the benefits of collaborations as well as the burdens and disadvantages of such arrangements. CNE NHA ALL 10:15 - 11:45 am CONCURRENT EDUCATION G SESSIONS G1 ADVANCING SUPERIOR STAFF RETENTION Clint Maun, Maun-Lemke Speaking & Consulting, LLC Many aging services organizations have an ongoing plan for retaining their coworkers. What does it take to specifically advance the plan and achieve results beyond any provider competitors? This session will highlight specific action plans utilized in current client health care organizations. These details include discussion on important areas such as: A. Pay and benefit strategies B. Reward, bonus and recognition C. Career advancement D. Leadership, management and performance feedback. E. Employee engagement. ALL CNE NHA CNE Course Eligible for Montana Nursing Contact Hours NHA Appropriate for Nursing Home Administrator Credits 35 Reduce Their Use... Seize The Savings. Incorporating energy efficiency into your hospital adds value to your bottom line while increasing patient comfort. NorthWestern Energy’s Efficiency Plus (E+) programs provide custom incentives and rebates to make energy efficiency even more attractive. + Custom incentives for qualifying electric and natural gas energy efficiency measures + Rebates for lighting, electronics, refrigeration, air conditioning, and electric or natural gas space and water heating, insulation, and more From simple prescriptive rebates – to custom incentives for complex integrated systems, there is a large set of E+ offerings and resources to assist you with energy efficiency. Learn more about these opportunities by visiting NorthWesternEnergy.com/Eplus or call (800) 823-5995. * Qualifications apply. E+ programs for homes are also available. 36 Networking Opportunities WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON BREAK Wednesday 3:00 - 3:30 pm Holiday Inn Grand Montana Atrium Trade Show CHAIRMAN'S WELCOME RECEPTION Wednesday 5:00 - 6:30 pm Holiday Inn Grand Montana Atrium Kick off the convention by catching up with some old friends and making new ones at the Chairman’s Welcome Reception! Enjoy snacks and no-host beverages as you mingle with fellow attendees, exhibitors, and presenters. Your time is more valuable than ever, so make the most of it by investing it in the trade show. Plan your schedule to allow time in the Trade Show where you’re sure to find an amazing selection of products and services that can enhance patient care, cut costs, and increase revenue. This year’s show features equipment and supplies, as well as services like architects, pharmacy services and insurance. Why should you visit Montana's largest health care trade show? THURSDAY MID-MORNING COFFEE BREAK Thursday 9:30 - 10:00 am Holiday Inn Grand Montana Atrium Grab a cup of coffee on your way to the Opening General Session to hear Ian Morrison’s presentation “The Future of the Healthcare Marketplace: Playing the New Game.” • Renew acquaintances with long-time suppliers and meet new companies. STROLLING LUNCHEON WITH VENDORS Thursday 12:00 - 2:00 pm Convention Center • Visit many suppliers in one location. Relax over a tasty, convenient lunch and still have plenty of time to network with colleagues and vendors. Make the most of your day by spending this time with vendors and learning what they have to offer. Don’t forget your Passport to Prizes! Look for the game page in the convention program. THURSDAY AFTERNOON BREAK Thursday 3:30 - 3:45 pm Holiday Inn Grand Montana Atrium 80s THEMED GALA RECEPTION & TRADE SHOW Thursday 5:00 - 7:00 pm (Doors Open at 4:00 pm) Convention Center Here is the 411 on this event: Come dressed in your most Bodacious 80s Threads because there will be a contest for the most radical attire! 1st place will receive $200 cash!!! There will be plenty of food, fun and prizes. Jackson & Coker, our sponsor for the evening, will be handing out free drink tokens for all who participate! A photo booth will be available to capture the moments, so dust off those leg warmers, bring on the jean jackets and make your hair as big as possible! It’s sure to be a blast from the past!! • Learn about new technologies, products and services. • Take home leads about services that can benefit your organization. • Vendor fees cover over half of the convention expenses. Please thank them for their support! And of course.... Prizes, Prizes, Prizes We will have a grand prize drawing for $500!! The rules are simple: Complete the evaluation included in the on-site program, print your name on your card, then deposit it into the gold raffle drum located near the stage in the trade show before 6:00 pm on Thursday. Don’t miss out on Passport to Prizes! A record number of vendors have opted to participate in this year’s Passport game. To be eligible for the Passport drawings, participants must visit a select number of vendors listed on their Passport entry card. And as always, vendors will have a great selection of giveaways of their own. Be sure to visit them all! Vendor Hours FRIDAY MORNING BREAK Friday 10:00 - 10:15 am Thursday, September 24 12:00 pm - 2:30 pm 4:00 pm - 7:00 pm Holiday Inn Grand Montana Atrium Unless otherwise noted, there are no breakfasts scheduled for Thursday or Friday mornings. All other meals/breaks not listed above are ticketed, part of a meeting or no-host. 37 2015 Convention Sponsors Thank You for the Support! Chairman's Welcome Reception General Session Strolling Lunch with Vendors Gala Reception HOD/CEO Luncheon CEO Exchange Breakfast Audio Visual Sponsor MSHE Social Sponsor Break & Education Session Sponsors GOOD DESIGN IS GOOD MEDICINE 406.248.2633 l aearchitects.com B i l l i n g s l B o z e m an l M issoula 39 Precision Document Solutions (PDS) provides comprehensive managed print services and software solutions that delivers enterprise benefits to the healthcare industry. PDS has been dedicated to healthcare since 1999 and supports hospitals across the United States. 40 Trade Show Map Holiday Inn Convention Center 1- ndd Medical Technologies 2- Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. 3- Kyocera 3A- Merritt Hawkins 4- Lancaster Pollard 5- Healthcare Services Group 6- UHIN 7- Cerium Networks 8- Option Care 9- ePAY Healthcare, LLC 10- KONE Elevator 11- Montana Tech 12- The Gideons International 13- Montana Office of the Commissioner of Securities 14- Rocky Mountain Health Network 15- OZ Architects 16- BRUCO, INC. 17- Allegiance Benefit Plan Management, Inc. 18- Xerox 19- Healthcare Rapid Incident Command Cabinets 20- Associated Employers 21- Spectrum Business 22- A&E Architects 23- HOSA-Future Health Professionals 24- MT Office of Rural Health/ AHEC 25-27 MHA 28/29- Mountain-Pacific Quality Health 30- Cerner Corporation 31- NorthWestern Energy 32- LifeCenter Northwest & Sightlife 33- American Sentinel University 34- Healthland 35- Montana Medical Association 36/37- ATS Facility Systems 38- MTX Medical Solutions, Inc. 39- K&J 40/41-Arjo-Century Distributing 42- Kreisers, Inc 43- Compassion & Choices MT 44- Byo-Safe 45- Photo Booth 46- Montana Health CO-OP 47- American Red Cross Blood Services 48- COMPdata 49- United Blood Services 50- Saunders Associates 50A- Vincent Healthcare 51- Athena Health 52/53- MHA INFO 54- Vision Net 55- LifeNet health 56/57- Swank Enterprises 58- St. Peter’s Hospital BehavioralHealth Unit 59- Montana State University Billings 60- Erdman Company 61- 3M Health Information Systems 62- UMIA Insurance Inc. 63- MEDITECH (Medical Information Technology, Inc.) 64- VersaSuite 65- Evident 66- S. Conley Sales, Inc. 67- American Welding & Gas 41 68- PacificSource Health Plans 69- New West Medicare 70- Providence St. Patrick Hospital 71- McKinstry 72- SUNRx 73- Wilderness Medical Staffing 74- Information Tech Core (ITC) 75- Precision Document Solutions 76- Health o meter Professional Scales 77- Prioricare Staffing Solutions 78- McKesson 79- Spacelabs Healthcare 80/81-Yellowstone Insurance Exchange 82- Medefis, Inc. 83- Mediserve 84- Presort Plus, LLC 85- 360 Office Solutions 86/87-Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana 88- Monida Healthcare Network 89- Fringe Benefit Resources 90- Commercial Energy of Montana 91- Textra Healthcare 92- Jackson & Coker 93- First Interstate Bank 94- LMG Security 95- General Distributing 96- Orion International Corporation 97- HCCS 98- MedAssets 99- CTA Architects Engineers 100- Kenwood Comms 101- Nutrition & Physical Activity Program 102- Avera eCARE 103- Amerinet 104- WipFli LLP 105- Sletten Construction Company 106- Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Bureau 107- Delta Dental Insurance 108- Dundas Interiors 109- RL Solutions 110- Scotsman Ice Systems 111- American Heart Association 112- Encompass Group 113- Dorsey & Whitney 114- Paynewest Insurace 115- Montana Board of Nursing 116- Tandus Centiva 117- Legal Shield 118- Shodair Children’s Hospital 119- Rocky Mountain Hospice Trade Show Vendors th # B oo 85 360 Office Solutions www.360-os.com th # B oo 44Byo-Safe byosafemt.com 61 3M Health Information Systems www.3mhis.com 86/87 Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana www.bcbsmt.com 22 A&E Architects www.aearchitects.com 16 BRUCO, Inc. www.Bruco.com 30 Cerner Corporation www.cerner.com 17 Allegiance Benefit Plan Management, Inc. www.allegianceflexadvantage.com 111 American Heart Association www.heart.org/missionlifelinemontana 47 American Red Cross Blood Services www.redcrossblood.org/hospitals 33 American Sentinel University www.americansentinel.edu 67 American Welding & Gas www.amwelding.com 103Amerinet www.amerinet-gpo.com 2 Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. www.ajg.com 40/41 Arjo-Century Distributing, Inc. www.arjohuntleigh.com 20 Associated Employers www.associatedemployers.org 51 Athena Health www.athenahealth.com 36/37 ATS Facility Systems www.atsfacilitysystems.com and atsinlandnw.com 102 Avera eCARE www.avera.org/ecare 7 Cerium Networks www.ceriumnetworks.com 106 Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Bureau www.dphhs.mt.gov/publichealth/chronic disease 90 Commercial Energy of Montana www.commercialenergy.net 43 Compassion & Choices Montana www.compassionandchoices.org 48COMPdata www.ctagroup.com 99 CTA Architects Engineers www.ctagroup.com 107 Delta Dental Insurance Company www.deltadentalins.com 113 Dorsey & Whitney www.dorsey.com 108 Dundas Interiors www.dundasinteriors.com 112 Encompass Group www.encompassgroup.net 9 ePAY Healthcare, LLC www.epayhealthcare.com 42 Trade Show Vendors th # B oo 60 Erdman Company www.erdman.com th # B oo 42 Kreisers, Inc. www.kreisers.com 65Evident www.evident.com 3Kyocera 39 K&J Convention Services 4 Lancaster Pollard www.lancasterpollard.com 93 First Interstate Bank www.firstinterstatebank.com/ 89 Fringe Benefit Resources, LLC www.fringebenefitresources.com 117 Legal Shield [email protected] 95 General Distributing Co www.gendco.com 32 LifeCenter Northwest & Sighlife www.lcnw.org & www.sightlife.org 97 HCCS www.hccscoding.com 55 LifeNet Health www.lifenethealth.org 76 Health o meter Professional Scales www.homscales.com 94 LMG Security lmgsecurity.com 19 Healthcare Rapid Incident Command Cabinets-H.R.I.C.C.-LLC. 78McKesson www.HRICC.com www.mckesson.com 5 Healthcare Services Group Inc. 71McKinstry www.hcsg.com www.mckinstry.com 98 MedAssets 34Healthland www.medassets.com www.healthland.com 82 Medefis, Inc. 23 HOSA-Future Health Professionals www.medefis.com 74 Information Technology Core 83Mediserve www.itcmt.com www.mediserve.com 92 Jackson & Coker 63 MEDITECH www.jacksoncoker.com www.meditech.com 100 Kenwood Communications 3A Merritt Hawkins www.merritthawkins.com 10 KONE Elevator www.kone.us 43 Trade Show Vendors th # B oo 88 Monida Healthcare Network www.monida.com 115 Montana Board of Nursing www.nurse.mt.gov 46 Montana Health CO-OP www.mhc.coop th # B oo 96 Orion International Corporation www.orioninvestigation.com 15 OZ Architects oza.com 68 PacificSource Health Plans www.pacificsource.com 114 Paynewest Insurance 35 Montana Medical Association www.paynewest.com www.mmaoffice.org 75 Precision Document Solutions 13 Montana Office of the Commissioner www.pdsnow.com of Securities and Insurance www.csi.mt.gov 84 Presort Plus, LLC www.presortplus.net 59 Montana State University Billings www.msubillings.edu/grad 77 Prioricare Staffing Solutions www.prioricare.com 11 Montana Tech www.mtech.edu 70 Providence St. Patrick Hospital www.saintpatrick.org 28/29 Mountain-Pacific Quality Health Quality Improvement Organization 109 RL Solutions www.mpqhf.org www.rlsolutions.com 24 MT Office of Rural Health/AHEC 14 Rocky Mountain Health Network www.healthinfo.montana.edu rmhn.org 38 MTX Medical Solutions, Inc. 119 Rocky Mountain Hospice www.mtxmedical.com rockymountainhospice.com 1 ndd Medical Technologies 66 S. Conley Sales, Inc. www.nddmed.com www.sconleysalesinc.com 69 New West Medicare 50 Saunders Associates www.newwestmedicare.com www.saencompass.com 31 NorthWestern Energy www.northwesternenergy.com 101 Nutrition & Physical Activity Program www.dphhs.mt.gov/publichealth/napa 8 Option Care www.optioncare.com 58 St. Peter’s Hospital Behavioral Health Unit www.stpetes.org 50A St. Vincent Healthcare www.svh-mt.org 44 Trade Show Vendors th # B oo 110 Scotsman Ice System www.scotsman-ice.com th # B oo 6UHIN www.uhin.org 118 Shodair Children’s Hospital www.shodair.org 62 UMIA Insurance Inc. www.umia.com 105 Sletten Construction Company 49 United Blood Services www.sletteninc.com www.unitedbloodservices.org 79 Spacelabs Healthcare 64VersaSuite www.spacelabs.com www.versasuite.com 21 Spectrum Business 54 Vision Net www.vision.net 72SUNRx 73 Wilderness Medical Staffing www.sunrx.com www.wildernessmedicalstaffing.com 56/57 Swank Enterprises 104 Wipfli LLP www.swankenterprises.com www.wipfli.com 116 Tandus Centiva 18 Xerox www.tandus-centiva.com 80/81 Yellowstone Insurance Exchange, RRG 91 Textra Healthcare www.yierrg.com www.textrahealthcare.com 12 The Gideons International www.gideons.org 45 Virtual Trade Show Did you forget the vendor you talked to at the Trade Show? Do you need contact Information for a vendor? The Virtual Trade Show features all the vendors and will be available at www.mtha.org shortly after convention. 46 YOUR BENEFITS AT WORK™ Allegiance Benefit Plan Management, Inc. Allegiance Life & Health Insurance Co., Inc. Allegiance Flex Advantage Allegiance Provider Direct Allegiance COBRA Services, Inc. StarPoint Healthcare Group Offices in Missoula, Helena, Billings, Montana & Tualatin, Oregon 1.800.877.1122 | www.askallegiance.com HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS HAVE FELT, MARTIN, FRAZIER & WELDON P.C. HIGH EXPECTATIONS. THAT’S WHY THEY TURN TO US. ATTORNEYS AT LAW We have counseled and represented health care providers for over 35 years, providing the highest level of legal service and quality at competitive prices. With experience like this, health care providers depend on us. Laurence R. Martin Kenneth S. Frazier Jeffrey A. Weldon Mary E. Duncan Martin S. Smith Burt N. Hurwitz Ryan P. Browne Randolph Jacobs, Jr. Of Counsel 47 208 North Broadway, Suite 313 Billings, Montana 59101 406-248-7646 [email protected] Lifetime Achievement Award Kristianne B. Wilson Billings Clinic Kristianne Wilson has distinguished herself as a health care advocate. She held many leadership positions during her 35 year career at Billings Clinic, though she is most proud of the strategic planning and governance development roles that contributed to the evolution of today’s regional health care system footprint. She is humbled by the national reputation for quality, patient safety, service and value Billings Clinic has achieved in its 20 plus year history as an integrated, physician-led, not-for-profit health care organization. Kristianne served for many years on the Board of Directors of the Montana Health Network. She was instrumental in developing the Montana Family Medicine Residency Program and later in her career led efforts to ensure state funding support for the growing number of graduate medical education programs in Montana. As a native of northeastern Montana, she has been committed in her various roles to ensuring access to quality health care in rural settings. That passion is evidenced in the Eastern Montana Telemedicine Network, for which she led the development 22 years ago. As a community-focused executive, she applied her strategic planning skills to assist United Way of Yellowstone County transform from primarily a fundraising and allocations agency to one committed to achieving sustained and measurable community impact. In collaboration with leaders at Riverstone Health, St. Vincent Healthcare, and the South Central Montana Regional Mental Health Center, she helped create the Community Crisis Center for clients with acute mental health and substance abuse problems. The Community Crisis Center has served for over nine years as a sustainable model for other Montana communities challenged to serve this population, receiving both local mill levy and state general funding support. Described as mission-focused, in the 1990s Kristianne proactively worked with the other western United States secular health care leaders to voluntarily define community benefit in not-for-profit hospitals long before the current IRS mandates. More importantly, she supported in her organization and the state the linkage to community health improvement and the needed and appropriate collaboration with our public health partners. In the last five years of her career, Kristianne was able to focus on health policy and advocacy serving on several regional and national government affairs councils. About the Lifetime Achievement Award MHA established the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007 to honor individuals who have made important contributions to health and/or health care in Montana. The Award was presented to Senator Baucus in 2007; John Chappuis, DPHHS, in 2008; Jack Casey, Shodair Hospital, in 2010; Dr. J.W. “Bill” Bloemendaal, in 2011; Lil Anderson in 2012; Shane Roberts, St. Luke Community Healthcare in 2013 and Larry White, St. Patrick Hospital in 2014. There was no award presented in 2009. 48 architects OZ Architects helps create places where you can thrive. Together we engage in a design process that blends artistic and technical skill to promote well being, strengthen communities and inspire. We’ve been a regional leader in Health Care design for over twenty years. Our experience base is multi-faceted with expertise in projects varying in scope, size and budget. We care about every project we do and what matters to our clients matters to us. OZ Architects 531 N. Higgins Avenue, Missoula MT 59802 49 ph 406.728.3013 www.oza.com Innovation in Healthcare Award Billings Clinic Leadership Saves Lives Saving the lives of individuals in the midst of a heart attack is difficult in any setting, but Montana’s vast geography and lack of services in rural areas pose special problems in reducing time to treatment. Leadership Saves Lives (LSL) is helping Billings Clinic (BC) reduce mortality due to heart attack (AMI) by coordinating and streamlining care between rural and urban health care providers; lives are being saved. The initiative began by examining the realities faced by critical access hospitals (CAHs) when a patient presents with heart attack symptoms. By analyzing all aspects at 26 sending sites, baseline data was established and opportunities identified. Internal BC procedures such as ED triage, diagnosis, and speed of protocol activation were simultaneously examined by an interprofessional, multi-departmental team dedicated to improving holistic collaboration. The inspiration for LSL springs from our participation in the Mayo Clinic Care Network and an opportunity led by Yale University’s Global Health Leadership Institute. The project focuses on communications and organizational culture in health care organizations and how it relates to (and can affect) the quality of care. The opportunity came at the same time as “Mission Lifeline: Montana” was being implemented across the state, creating a chance to examine internal communications and organizational culture, and to focus on these issues in our regional health care as a system. In an AMI, standardized care guidelines must be implemented in every setting, with all providers in the entire chain of care working collaboratively to achieve optimal results. Mission Lifeline: Montana provides a funding opportunity to obtain standardized state-of-the-art equipment as well as ‘best practice’ guidelines for treatment protocols and acceptable time thresholds. Leadership Saves Lives has enabled this opportunity in our region by collecting data, sharing information and enhancing the ability of everyone in the system to focus on reducing mortality from AMI across eastern Montana. The internal BC initiative began working in June, 2014 on improving heart attack survivability by assembling a team of project ‘champions’ and focusing on length of stay in the ED, variations in practice, standardized discharge planning and clarity regarding processes and communication. It was soon realized that streamlining all care from symptom onset to treatment is essential to increase survivability in the event of an AMI. As about half of the AMIs treated at BC are transfer patients from the region, LSL needed both internal and external strategies. Standardized equipment that transmits the patient’s EKG while enroute to the comprehensive treatment center is vital; Mission Lifeline: Montana is essential in addressing this aspect. A feedback loop was established on all STEMI transfers back to the referring hospitals. Each CAH has a different system of workflow and structure and it has been very challenging to extract data for an accurate picture of current conditions. However, based on Year 1 of the project, CAHs that transfer patients to BC are now working collaboratively with real data to identify ways to improve treatment and transfer of their AMI patients. Internally, time from presentation in the ED to administration of treatment has been reduced, inter-depart50 mental communications enhanced and data capture improved. Evidence so far is that survivability during the performance period measurably improved over the baseline data collection period, moving from a survival rate of 83.6% (baseline) to 85.9%, meaning 2+ patients per 100 treated survived because of the LSL program. This project is innovative because it amplifies and improves the impact of Mission Lifeline: Montana, and speeds the adoption and dissemination of this program’s protocols. It unites independent organizations across the region to work collaboratively toward the common goal of improved patient outcomes and encourages organizations to view the entire system of care. Also, the Yale Global Health Leadership Institute is collecting data not only on health outcomes, but on internal processes and challenges so that this model can be replicated in other locations based on “lessons learned.” Through difficult and time-consuming effort, LSL has produced measurable results. Streamlined BC teamwork has minimized the time from admission to treatment to 52 minutes. As a result, heart attack survival rates have measurably increased in the first year. This initiative promotes Mission Lifeline best-practice guidelines and supports quality improvement in CAHs across eastern Montana, creating synergy that is saving lives across our region. Innovation in Health Care Award Nominees • • • • • • • Beartooth Children’s Center: An Innovative Approach to Caring for Children and Supporting Families in Carbon County – Beartooth Billings Clinic The Save the Brain Campaign – Kalispell Regional Healthcare Concussion Care and Prevention – Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital Community Nursing Home of Anaconda Sensory Therapy Program – Community Hospital of Anaconda Associate Safety Improvement – St. Vincent Healthcare Improving Emergency Room Care in Garfield County – Garfield County Health Center Employee Giving Program – St. Luke Community Healthcare 51 Trustee of the Year Award 2015 Award Winner - Patti Mitchell, Barrett Hospital & HealthCare Patti Mitchell has been serving on the Barrett Hospital & HealthCare board for 21 years. As board president (since August, 2009), she oversaw the construction of our new, 83,000 square foot hospital which was completed in 2012, on time and under budget. Patti influenced the design of our state-of-the-art and environmentally friendly hospital that is LEED® Gold Certified and espouses a healing environment. Patti also served on Barrett Hospital Foundation board from 1996 to 2014 – 18 years! During this time, the Foundation Board completed a very successful capital campaign for the new hospital, raising over 3 million dollars. Under Patti’s leadership, Barrett Hospital & HealthCare has received numerous awards for patient quality and safety. Barrett Hospital & HealthCare was named an iVantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital in 2011, 2013, 2014 and 2015. Additionally, BHH was named a 2015 Top 20 Critical Access Hospital in the nation by the National Rural Health Association. In the past 5 years, BHH has seen a lot of growth under Patti’s leadership as well. Areas of growth have included (but are not limited to): more primary care providers and the opening of our walk-in clinic to improve access to healthcare in our service areas, a hospitalist program, specialty clinic and more visiting specialists, new EHR in our hospital and clinic, expanded rehabilitation department, outpatient infusion center, disease state management clinics, integrated behavioral health and numerous other new services. This has led to employment growth from 221 employees in 2011 to 257 employees in 2015. Revenues have grown from $32.5 million (gross) in 2011 to $41.8 million (gross/unaudited) in 2015. Patti is a busy full-time pharmacist and mother. Yet, she remains passionately engaged in the governance of BHH. She stays abreast of current trends and issues in healthcare and religiously attends annual trustee education through HealthTech Management Services. Patti is a visionary and strategic thinker and is always pushing us to reach our vision “to be the model in rural healthcare delivery for the United States in all facets of primary health services.” Patti truly understands governance and trustee accountability. She ensures our board members understand their roles in the governance of BHH as well. She always makes herself available to me (us) when needed -- no matter how busy she may be. She has relentlessly supported our development of a culture of continuous improvement including a “just culture” and our Lean initiatives over the past several years. Her commitment to patient centeredness and patient quality and safety are inspiring. Patti settles for nothing less than excellence for our patients and holds us all accountable to achieving our mission and vision. BHH’s mission is to “provide compassionate care, healing, and health-improving services to all community members throughout life’s journey”. Without a doubt, Patti’s leadership and the example she sets for us all assures we will continue to achieve this mission. Trustee of the Year Nominees: J. Scott Millikan, MD – Billings Clinic Howard J. Hammond – Phillips County Hospital Brad Campbell – Broadwater Health Center Dr. Tom Strizich – St. Peter’s Hospital Bill ‘Doc’ Schendel - Mountain View Medical Center 52 Adult & Geriatric Behavioral Health See our newly expanded 14-bed Geriatric Unit! • Patient access 24 hours a day, 7 days a week • Also serving ages 18 and older in our 8-bed Adult Unit Schedule a tour now with Rebecca Chance: (406) 495-6576 or [email protected] Delivering Integrity & Accuracy One Chart At A Time. 53 PIN Quality Awards Barrett Hospital & HealthCare • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation Clark Fork Valley Hospital • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation Providence St. Joseph Medical Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication Beartooth Billings Clinic • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation Daniels Memorial Healthcare Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication Roosevelt Medical Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication Cabinet Peaks Medical Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation Holy Rosary Healthcare • Emergency Department Transfer Communication Central Montana Medical Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation Livingston HealthCare • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation Northern Rockies Medical Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication Rosebud Health Care Center • Emergency Department Transfer Communication Sheridan Memorial Hospital • Emergency Department Transfer Communication • Medication Reconciliation St. Luke Community Healthcare • Emergency Department Transfer Communication In addition to improving patient care and safety, award winners also participated in the PIN Benchmarking project and shared learning with their peers during the past year. The Montana Rural Healthcare Performance Improvement Network, or PIN, assists member facilities in their efforts to achieve compliance with the Medicare Critical Access Hospital (CAH) Conditions of Participation quality assurance regulations and also supports a multitude of other CAH quality improvement efforts. Funded predominantly by the Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibilty grant, the PIN formed in 2002 with just 14 members. Today, all 48 Montana CAHs are voluntary participants in this vibrant, active network. In addition to quality improvement efforts, the PIN currently supports a variety of other projects outlined in the Network Strategic Plan. All PIN projects are designed to strengthen the fragile infrastructure of Montana’s small rural Critical Access Hospitals. Foremost in this list is a wide variety of network meetings for administrators, rural providers, quality coordinators, nursing directors and finance office managers. Other key activities include leadership training, clinical, operational and utilization data collection and reporting services, educational programming and a host of special projects determined necessary and useful by network members. 54 Meet the U.S. Market Leader in Medical Scales! Visit Booth #76 • See the market’s first and only Antimicrobial Scale • Learn about our Exclusive benefits to MHAV members • Enter a prize drawing to win a 600KL scale for your facility! Health o meter® Professional Scales is an MHAV Endorsed Vendor Visit www.homscales.com to view their comprehensive line of medical scales 55 Quality Improvement Awards Presented by: Hospital Quality Achievement Award • Barrett Hospital & HealthCare - Ken Westman, CEO • Billings Clinic - Nicholas Wolter, MD, President/CEO • Community Hospital of Anaconda - Steve McNeece, CEO • Marcus Daly Memorial Hospital - John Bartos, CEO Hospital Commitment to Quality Award • St. Patrick Hospital - Jeff Fee, CEO Nursing Home Recognition of Excellence Awards • Benefis Senior Care - Peter Gray, Executive Director • NEMHS Faith Home - Margaret Norgaard, CEO • Immanuel Lutheran Skilled Care - Kim Schildt, Administrator • Kindred Nursing and Rehab Parkview - Claire Miller, Administrator Stroke and Cardiac Recognition The Cardiovascular Health Program, at the state health department, is committed to working with partners to improve the acute treatment of heart attack and stroke in Montana. In 2011, the Cardiovascular Health Program introduced the Stroke Recognition Award and last year added a Cardiac Recognition Award. The Recognition Awards single out Critical Access Hospitals that demonstrated that they have the infrastructure and commitment to provide high quality care for patients with heart attack and stroke. Each hospital that applies for the Recognition must demonstrate that they have evidence-based order-sets, laboratory and radiology services available 24/7, administrative commitment, and will be involved in outcomes tracking and quality improvement activities. The Recognition Award is valid for 3 years. Stroke Recognition Pondera Medical Center – Conrad Cardiac Recognition Community Hospital of Anaconda Beartooth Billings Clinic – Red Lodge 56 POWERFUL MEDICINE. 142 Years of Innovation. You take care of patients. We’ll take care of business. Most health professionals signed up to care for people, not just to care about network administration, insurance billing, payroll taxes, security or call centers. But how do you run the business for a private practice, a clinic or a hospital and deliver the kind of quality care your patients deserve? Providence Management Services works with you to provide hospital management and clinical operations solutions specific to your needs. If you take care of your patients, we’ll help you take care of the rest. Providence Management Services. Building partnerships for patient health. Find a complete listing of services and information at www.providence.org/ManagementServices or call 406-327-5990. Providence Medical Group | St. Patrick Hospital | St. Joseph Medical Center | Management Services 57 Paul Taylor Award Presented by the Montana Spiritual Care Association The Reverend Doctor Kenneth P. Mottram A Montana native, Ken graduated from the University of Montana, Missoula, with a Bachelor Degree in Music Education. He subsequently received his M.Div. from the American Baptist Seminary of the West, Berkeley, CA and Doctor of Ministry (D.Min.) from Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, Mill Valley, CA. Ken is an ordained American Baptist minister and Board Certified Chaplain (Association of Professional Chaplains) who has worked in the parish setting for 20 years before moving to hospital crisis/trauma support where he has an additional 20 years of experience. He has been Manager of Spiritual Care at Bozeman Deaconess Hospital, Bozeman, MT since 2004 and a past and current president of the Montana Spiritual Care Assoc. Dr. Mottram has been Principal Investigator for the research project “Spirituality and Suicide” (“Suicide and Its’ Bereavement: A Description,” Death Studies, Sept.2009), is a QPR Institute Gatekeeper Instructor in suicide prevention, and an American Association of Suicidology Certified Crisis Worker. He was the co-founder of SOLAS (Surviving Our Loss After Suicide) support group in Flathead County and the co-founder of Suicide Loss/Saving Lives community support group in Bozeman, MT. He is the author of “Caring For Those In Crisis: Facing Ethical Dilemmas With Patients and Families” (Brazos Press, 2007). Dr. Mottram is married to wife Susan and has three adult children. His other interests include climbing as a member of the Glacier Mountaineering Society, traveling to the American Southwest, and spending time with two wonderful grandchildren. The Montana Spiritual Care Association is proud to honor the Reverend Doctor Kenneth Mottram and the Spiritual Care Department of Bozeman Deaconess Health Services as its’ recipient of the 2015 Paul Taylor Award for excellence in promoting spiritual care in our region. About the Paul Taylor Award The Montana Spiritual Care Association regularly presents the Paul Taylor Award to an individual and/or healthcare organization that promotes and provides for the advancement of spiritual care as a necessary completion to holistic care. It is given as a testimony to the achievement of each recipient’s active and pioneering work in the development of spiritual care within health care organizations of Montana. The Paul Taylor Award is named after Chaplain Paul Taylor, its first recipient in 1994. Chaplain Taylor, a long-time resident of the Flathead Valley, was an Episcopal priest and pioneering spiritual care provider. He developed chaplaincy programs for Kalispell Regional Hospital and the Sheriff’s Department of Flathead County. He tirelessly labored to meet the spiritual needs of all persons experiencing the emotional and spiritual stress of life-changing events and trauma in unfamiliar and specialized settings. Under his visionary guidance and enlightenment, the need to address the spiritual care of all persons in hospitals, hospices and long term care facilities has now become a reality in Montana. 58 Protect yourself with affordable legal and identity theft protection. Unexpected legal questions and identity theft issues arise every day, and with LegalShield on your side, you’ll have access to affordable legal and identity theft advice and services, all so you can worry less and live more. Join over 1.4 million members and protect yourself today with LegalShield. R i c kH al mesand G reg K o h n I nd e pe nd e ntA s s o c iat e 4 0 6 2 0 881 4 2o r4 0 66 9 7 87 87 rmh al me s @h o t mail . c o m www. gre gk o h n. l e gal s h ie l d as s o c iat e . c o m This is a general overview of our legal plan and/or identity theft plan coverage for illustration purposes only. See a plan contract for your state of residence for complete terms, coverage, amounts, conditions and exclusions. More arrows in our quiver means better outcomes for our clients Providing comprehensive capital funding solutions to health care providers • Taxable/Tax-Exempt Bonds • Loan Syndications & Placements • FHA/HUD and USDA Programs • Mergers & Acquisitions Services Matt Lindsay, Senior Vice President [email protected] Rob McAdams, Vice President [email protected] (866) 611-6555 Lancaster Pollard & Co., LLC is a registered securities broker/dealer with the SEC and a member of FINRA, MSRB & SIPC. Lancaster Pollard Mortgage Company is a Fannie Mae/GNMA/HUD-FHA/USDA approved lender. 59 E H T E V E A S AT D 2016 Health Summit March 16-18, 2016 Holiday Inn & Best Western GranTree - Bozeman 2016 Western Regional Trustee Symposium June 8-10, 2016 Arizona Grand Resort & Spa, Phoenix, AZ 2016 Annual Convention & Trade Show September 28-30, 2016 Holiday Inn Grand Montana - Billings Visit www.mtha.org to find about all MHA education opportunities. 60 CONVENTION PLANNING COMMITTEE Many thanks to the following individuals for their contributions! EDUCATION & MEMBER DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE Bren Lowe, Committee Chair Livingston HealthCare Livingston Jill DomekGlendive Medical CenterGlendive Brad Garpestad Benefis Health System Great Falls Beth Putnam Central Montana Medical Center Lewistown Andy Stetzner Community Hospital of Anaconda Anaconda Shari DolanLiberty Medical CenterChester David Trost St. John’s Lutheran Ministries Billings Erik WoodPioneer Medical CenterBig Timber Nadine ElmoreDahl Memorial HealthcareEkalaka AFFILIATE REPRESENTATIVES Montana Society for Healthcare Human Resource Administrators (MSHHRA) Casey Buckingham Benefis Health System Montana Spiritual Care Association (MSCA) Kenneth Mottram Bozeman Deaconess Health Services Montana Society of Healthcare Risk Managers (MSHRM) Mona Humphrey Glendive Medical Center Montana Society of Volunteerism (MSOV) Peg Smith, Billings Clinic Montana Healthcare Information & Management Systems Society (MHIMSS) Deb Anderson Mountain-Pacific Quality Health, Health Technology Services Montana Healthcare Telecommunications Alliance (MHTA) Thelma McClosky Armstrong, Billings Clinic Montana Society of Healthcare Engineers (MSHE) Tony Rebo Cabinet Peaks Medical Center 61 2015 Staff Directory Dick Brown President/CEO [email protected] Bob Olsen Vice President [email protected] Connie Dewey HR Coordinator [email protected] Crystal Bridges Workforce Programs/Shared Services Coordinator [email protected] Casey Blumenthal Vice President [email protected] Dakota Stonehouse Group Purchasing Coord., Sales & Marketing [email protected] Ashley Fusaro South Central MT AHEC Health Professionals Career Coach [email protected] Gina Bruner Rural Hospital Flexibility Grant Director [email protected] Belinda Begger Administrative Professional [email protected] Casey J. Brewington Technical Assistance Director [email protected] Casey M. Driscoll Administrative Professional [email protected] Cindee McKee Hospital Preparedness Coordinator [email protected] Clint Taranik Information Technology [email protected] Jamie Schultz Rural Hospital Improvement Coordinator [email protected] Jason M. Wood Education & Conferences Coordinator [email protected] Jennifer Wagner Flex Project Specialist [email protected] Karen Nowakowski North Central MT AHEC Health Professionals Career Coach karen@mtha,org Kelly Casey Director of Shared Services [email protected] Kim Wiens Administrative Professional III [email protected] 62 Kristyn Egbert Group Purchasing Program Coordinator [email protected] Natascha Robinson Director, South Central AHEC & Oral Health Recruiter [email protected] Roberta Yager Information Services Coordinator [email protected] Shani Rich Director, North Central AHEC & Oral Health Recruiter [email protected] Sherrie Hogan Finance Director [email protected] Terri McCoy Director of Communications & Advocacy [email protected] Terri Perrigo AHEC/TAACCCT Workforce Coordinator [email protected] Vickey Simonson Office Manager [email protected] Victoria Cech Foundation Director [email protected] Yellowstone has the game winning plan for hospital liability insurance and risk management. We understand the X’s and O’s of insurance and risk management for hospitals! Yellowstone Insurance Exchange, RRG is a member owned professional and general liability insurance company managed by member hospitals to serve their liability insurance and risk management needs. Our primary objective is to ensure the availability of liability insurance and to maintain premium stability over the long-term. Yellowstone offers more than simply insurance. We take a proactive approach to the entire insurance process by reducing the likelihood of a claim before it occurs. Through our superior risk management services and in-house claims handling, we work to contain your total cost of risk and protect your good standing in the community. By altering what has been thought of as a commodity based, lowest price wins model, Yellowstone has developed a way to turn professional and general liability insurance into a profitable investment for rural community hospitals. As a result, any net income for the company is distributed back to the member facilities in the form of Subscriber Savings Allocations. To date, Yellowstone has paid out over $7.5 Million in Subscriber Savings Allocations and over $5.4 Million in returned capital. “Our focus is to provide hospitals with ongoing access to fair, affordable coverage while protecting your facility and your reputation.” 866-216-7433 [email protected] www.yierrg.com We are Montana’s largest hospice provider of choice! nurses KIND. www.rockymountainhospice.com Serving: Serving: -0785 Billings Butte(406) 294-0785 (406) 494-6114 Butte (406) 494-6114 -0640Bozeman Helena (406) 442-2214 (406) 556-0640 Helena (406) 442-2214 Missoula (406) 549-2766 (406) 549-2766 You have a CHOICE. Ask for us by name.