Student Name
Western Governors University
D223 Healthcare Policy and Economics
Prof. Name:
Date
The hospital selected for this examination is Uintah Basin Medical Center (UBMC) located in Roosevelt, Utah.
I chose Uintah Basin Medical Center because I have nearly five years of professional experience working there. Additionally, I have a personal connection to the hospital, as I delivered two of my children at UBMC. I am familiar with many people in the hospital community and feel comfortable with its policies and environment.
UBMC is a non-profit healthcare facility that provides acute care services to the local community. As a non-profit institution, it focuses on serving the community’s healthcare needs rather than generating profits.
Uintah Basin Medical Center offers a wide range of medical services, including:
| Service Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Emergency Services | Immediate care for urgent medical conditions |
| Maternity Care | Support for childbirth and prenatal care |
| Surgery | Various surgical procedures |
| Wound Care | Treatment and management of wounds |
| Dialysis | Kidney failure treatment |
| Long-term Care | Extended care for chronic conditions |
| Rehabilitation | Physical therapy and recovery services |
Ownership structures of hospitals generally fall into three categories:
| Ownership Type | Description |
|---|---|
| For-profit | Operate to generate profits for investors; tend to offer more profitable services. Must still provide some charity care. |
| Non-profit | Focus on community service; exempt from federal, state, and local taxes. Must prove community benefit and charity care. |
| Governmental | Run by government entities and funded primarily by taxpayer dollars; operated on behalf of the public. |
UBMC is a non-profit hospital, meaning it reinvests earnings into community health services rather than distributing profits.
UBMC has received an overall five-star rating from Medicare, which assesses hospitals across five key quality measures:
| Quality Measure | Description |
|---|---|
| Mortality | Patient survival rates |
| Safety of Care | Incidence of medical errors and safety events |
| Readmission Rates | Frequency of patients returning for treatment |
| Patient Experience | Satisfaction levels reported by patients |
| Timely and Effective Care | Efficiency and appropriateness of care delivery |
This five-star rating enables patients to compare the quality of hospitals nationwide, with UBMC ranking among the top performers.
UBMC prioritizes patient privacy and confidentiality, strictly adhering to HIPAA regulations to build trust between patients and staff. The hospital employs enhanced security measures to protect patients’ protected health information (PHI). Another important ethical commitment is improving patient access to specialists, either in person or through telehealth services, which is especially critical for UBMC’s rural community. This access reduces travel burdens and ensures high-quality specialty care is available locally.
Nurses play a vital role in controlling costs by minimizing medical waste and ensuring patients are accurately charged for necessary services. Overbilling or unnecessary services can lead to denied insurance payments. Additionally, nurses maintain strict hygiene and sterile techniques to reduce hospital-acquired infections, lowering readmission rates and overall healthcare expenses.
To enhance value-based care, UBMC could implement advanced business intelligence tools. These tools would allow healthcare staff to make data-driven decisions, optimizing clinical, financial, and administrative processes. Such improvements would enable more patient-centered care and improve outcomes while managing costs effectively.
The two payment models differ significantly in their approach to healthcare delivery and costs:
| Payment Model | Description | Impact on Patient Care |
|---|---|---|
| Fee-for-Service (FFS) | Payment is based on quantity of services provided. No incentive to limit unnecessary care. | Patients may receive adequate but potentially costly and fragmented care. |
| Pay-for-Performance (P4P) | Payment tied to quality and efficiency of care. Encourages coordinated, cost-effective treatment. | Patients receive higher quality, more efficient care at a lower cost. |
P4P encourages better organization and focuses on value, whereas FFS may lead to overutilization without improving outcomes.
Value-based care emphasizes patient outcomes, longer clinician interactions, coordinated services, personalized treatment, and affordability (Gin et al., 2023). UBMC exemplifies this model by ensuring rural patients have access to a broad network of specialists through in-person and telehealth options across Utah. This coordination reduces unnecessary travel and expenses while improving care quality (CMS.gov, 2024). Staff at UBMC are dedicated to creating a trustworthy environment that prioritizes value for patients.
UBMC serves as a regional healthcare hub covering two major cities in the Uintah Basin and numerous smaller clinics in rural areas. This extensive network makes care accessible to populations who otherwise face long travel distances. The hospital offers diverse services, such as wound care, cancer treatment, infusion therapy, rehab, obstetrics, dialysis, and trauma care. Emphasizing patient-and family-centered care (PFCC), UBMC educates patients on utilizing a patient portal that offers electronic access to health records. This transparency empowers patients to participate actively in their care, reducing unnecessary repeat visits and enhancing treatment adherence (Abraham et al., 2024).
The Healthcare Financial Management Association (HFMA) plays a pivotal role in supporting hospitals’ transition from fee-for-service to value-based care. HFMA highlights business intelligence (BI) as one of four essential capabilities required, alongside performance improvement, cultural change, and contract management (Hegwer & Gundling, 2018). Effective data collection and analysis via BI tools help hospitals manage risks and maintain quality while controlling costs during this transformation.
The Qualified Clinical Data Registry (QCDR), approved by CMS, collects clinical data from healthcare providers to enhance quality measurement. QCDRs enable the implementation of evidence-based practices by reporting clinical outcomes to CMS, which hospitals can use to refine care delivery and elevate performance standards (CMS, 2020).
Abraham, M. R., Dokken, D. L., & Johnson, B. H. (2024). Evolution of patient- and family-centered care: Milestones, key drivers, and recommendations. Pediatric Nursing, 50(4), 161–184. https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ccm&AN=179082602&site=edslive&scope=site&authtype=shib&custid=ns017578
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2020, September). Data sources for quality measurement. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/blueprint-data-sources.pdf
CMS.gov. (2024). Value-Based Care. https://www.cms.gov/priorities/innovation/key-concepts/value-based-care
Gin, N. E., Baron, R. J., Greiner, A., & Liao, J. M. (2023). Moving the needle toward true value-based care: An expert panel discussion. Permanente Journal, 27(4), 3–13. https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=asn&AN=174397132&site=edslive&scope=site&authtype=shib&custid=ns017578
Hegwer, L. R., & Gundling, R. L. (2018, October). Using business intelligence to succeed in value-based care. Healthcare Cost Containment, 11(5), 8–9. https://www.hfma.org/technology/business-intelligence/62018/
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