Baptist Health Corbin participates in National Age-Friendly Health Systems Initiative

Date:

Baptist Health Corbin recently announced that it has been recognized as an Age-Friendly Health System Participant and is part of a national movement to improve health care for older adults, contributing to a goal of continuing to expand and grow age-friendly care.

As part of the Age-Friendly Health Systems initiative, The John A. Hartford Foundation and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, in partnership with the American Hospital Association and the Catholic Health Association of the United States, are helping health care organizations implement a set of evidence-based interventions specifically designed to improve care for older adults.

Collaborative learning opportunities across the movement bring together health care teams committed to sharing data and improving together. All teams strive toward reliably implementing age-friendly best practices across hospitals, clinics, nursing homes, home health agencies and primary and specialty care settings.

Baptist Health Corbin now joins an international group of more than 5,200 health systems working to tailor care to patients’ goals and preferences and to deliver care that is consistently of the highest quality.

“Baptist Health Corbin has always been on the forefront of patient care, and that’s why we are participating in this vital movement. We look forward to both sharing our best practices and learning what’s working for others providing age-friendly care,” said Heather Napier, Executive Director of Quality and Emergency Services at Baptist Health Corbin. “The Age-Friendly Health Systems initiative is an important part of our overarching vision to provide every older adult with the best care possible.”

The initiative is based on a series of practices focused on addressing four essential elements of care for older patients:

  • What Matters: Know and align care with each older adult’s specific health outcome goals and care preferences including, but not limited to, end-of-life care, and across settings of care.
  • Medication: If medication is necessary, use age-friendly medications that do not interfere with what matters to the older adult, mobility, or mentation across settings of care.
  • Mentation: Prevent, identify, treat, and manage dementia, depression, and delirium across settings of care.
  • Mobility: Ensure that older adults move safely every day to maintain function and do what matters.

Age-Friendly Health Systems is an initiative of The John A. Hartford Foundation and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), in partnership with the American Hospital Association (AHA) and the Catholic Health Association of the US (CHA). For more information, visit www.ihi.org/agefriendly.

Baptist Health Corbin is a 273-bed, acute care facility providing a wide variety of healthcare services to residents of Whitley, Knox, Laurel, Bell, Clay, Harlan and McCreary counties in Kentucky and Campbell County in Tennessee.

Share
Written by:

Subscribe

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

Man charged with failure to comply with sex offender registry

Corbin Police arrested a man with a Michigan state...

Community Easter Celebration returns to Williamsburg

Have a child who likes to hunt Easter Eggs?...

Williamsburg burglary case results in a recommended two year one day sentence

Prosecutors have recommended a prison sentence of two years...

Knox Co. Grand Jury indicts two Gray men for burglary

The Knox County Grand Jury indicted two Gray residents...