Summary
The Inpatient Nurse Care Manager, in collaboration with the multidisciplinary team, is responsible for assessing, planning, implementing, and evaluating patients, incorporating the clinical, psychosocial, and family factors specific to the care and disease management plan. Communicates and manages the transitions of care and assists patients and families to navigate the healthcare systems. Recognizes and intervenes to secure resources necessary for the care and safety of the patient and family across the continuum of care.
Education
Associates in Nursing degree from an accredited nursing program. Bachelor's degree in Nursing preferred.
Certification, Registration & Licensure
Licensure required: Current NH RN License.
Experience
Acute Care Facility experience of 2 years in a clinical specialty or Care Management, Discharge planning, Quality Improvement, and Utilization Review. Demonstrates effective interpersonal, organizational, and motivational skills. Demonstrates ability to function as a team player. Proficient in written and verbal communication.
Responsibilities
- Provides assessment and evaluation of patients for clinical, psychological, and social factors that may contribute to their disease process and may require specific or complex continuing care needs and supportive services. Provides an initial review and concurrent reviews as required for each patient for clinical, psychological, and social factors that may contribute to the disease process for determination of appropriateness of status, severity of illness, and intensity of treatment. Review of admission history and document in EMR.
- Interfaces with patients, physicians, nurses, social workers, other hospital departments, community-based facilities, services, and financial institutions as necessary, to affect changes in the management of cases, monitoring delivery of services and/or to secure the necessary resources. Provides information to third-party payers with required documentation of medical necessity.
- Provides support to patients and families and provides evaluation and coordination with care planning and patient safety while arranging for transitional care and discharge planning needs. Through utilization review determines if the patient is meeting criteria of evidence-based clinical guidelines for appropriate level of care. Identifies the need to execute the appropriate letter when medical necessity is not met and issues letters of patient liability regarding the hospital admission.
- Bases care management and utilization review actions by applying principles of purposeful, organized thinking to make sound clinical judgment/decisions.
- Documents measurement and evaluation of financial, clinical, functional, and satisfaction outcomes as patients progress towards desired goals.
- Evaluates and responds to the learning needs of clients, clinicians, and community regarding discharge planning and utilization review.
- Manages the care and utilization review of simple to complex multi-system patients by using time and resources efficiently.
- Provides leadership to members of the healthcare team relative to discharge and care planning.
- Performs other duties as assigned.
Physical and Work Requirements
The physical demands and characteristics of the work environment described here are representative of those that will be encountered by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
The Dictionary of Occupational Titles Material Handling Classification is LIGHT. The employee must regularly lift, carry or push/pull less than 10 pounds, frequently lift, carry or push/pull up to 10 pounds, and occasionally lift, carry or push/pull up to 20 pounds.
While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to speak. The employee is frequently required to bend, do fine motor, do repetitive motion, hear, kneel, reach, sit, squat, stand, and walk.
Specific vision abilities required by this job include color vision, depth perception, far vision, near vision, and peripheral vision.
The employee is occasionally exposed to airborne contaminants, airborne pathogens, bloodborne pathogens, bodily fluids, and electrical hazards - shock. The noise level in the work environment is usually moderate.
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