Tag: Michelle Barlow

Interoperability Tech Strengthens Acute-to-Post-Acute Care

Michelle Barlow, RN

By Michelle Barlow, RN, BSN, Director of Regulatory and Clinical Excellence, Homecare Homebase.

The transition from hospital to home is one of the most delicate moments in a patient’s journey. Both hospitals and home-based care providers, share the same goal, ensuring continuity of care and achieving better outcomes, but too often, they’re held back by fragmented technology and disconnected systems. Instead of working together seamlessly, the lack of communication creates unnecessary roadblocks that slow down the process and add strain to already stretched clinicians.

When discharge summaries, medication lists, and physician orders don’t transfer smoothly between electronic health records (EHRs), home health and hospice agencies are left to piece together vital information. In some cases, they’re still receiving referrals via fax or email, which means manually entering data before care can even begin. These inefficiencies aren’t just frustrating, they can put patients at risk by causing delays and gaps in care.

Creating a truly connected care continuum means breaking down these barriers and building systems that communicate effortlessly, so patients move from the hospital to home without missing a beat. It’s about giving clinicians the tools they need to focus on what matters most, delivering safe, effective, and compassionate care.

A focus on interoperability is closing these gaps and allows providers to establish repeatable interoperability best practices that can be used across multiple partnerships. Connecting hospital systems with post acute EHRs allows, real-time data exchange, removes guesswork from the referral process and increases timely initiation of care. Instead of waiting for documents to be sent back and forth, clinicians get instant access to the information they need to move forward with care – ensuring that post-acute teams can start treatment right away and reduce the chances of miscommunication, delays, or avoidable hospital readmissions.

Repairing the Communication Breakdown Between Hospitals and Home Health

One of the toughest challenges in moving patients from hospital to home care is simply staying connected. Too often, hospital discharge teams and home health agencies are working in silos, using completely different systems that make it hard to share crucial information. Without direct integration, important details can slip through the cracks—discharge summaries might be incomplete, medication changes can go unnoticed, and home health providers may find themselves making countless phone calls just to piece together a patient’s story.

This outdated, fragmented approach creates challenges for every part of the care team:
– For hospitals, a lack of coordination means higher readmission rates. When home health providers don’t have the full picture, follow-up visits might not be scheduled at the right frequency or may miss essential care elements. These gaps put patients at risk for complications that could have been avoided.

For home health agencies, waiting for hospital records slows down the start of care. Instead of focusing on the patient, clinicians spend valuable time chasing down information and waiting for physician approvals, wasting time that could be better spent delivering care.

For patients, it’s frustrating and confusing. Gaps in communication can mean delays in getting the care they need and a higher risk of being readmitted to the hospital.

The good news is that it doesn’t have to be this way. By integrating hospital and post-acute systems, we can keep everyone on the same page. When referrals, physician orders, and discharge notes move seamlessly between providers, home health teams can hit the ground running with a complete care plan. Orders are processed electronically, physician notes are instantly accessible, and the entire care team has a clear, up-to-date view of the patient’s condition. With smooth transitions, everyone benefits, especially the patient.

Reducing Readmissions with a More Connected System

Preventing unnecessary hospital readmissions is one of the biggest priorities in healthcare, and interoperability plays a key role. Many readmissions happen because of poorly managed transitions, patients leave the hospital without clear follow-up plans, medication reconciliation is incomplete, or home health teams don’t receive critical updates in time.

When hospitals and post-acute providers share data in real time, they can work together to prevent these avoidable setbacks. A connected system helps:

– Speed up medication reconciliation, ensuring patients receive the correct prescriptions before transitioning to home care.
– Provide immediate access to hospital records, allowing home health clinicians to understand a patient’s full medical history from the start.
– Enable real-time updates, so hospitals can be notified if a patient’s condition declines, allowing for early intervention before a readmission is necessary.

Instead of simply reacting to problems as they arise, real-time data exchange allows care teams to be proactive. If a home health provider can monitor updates from a patient’s hospital stay, they can anticipate complications and adjust care plans before an issue escalates.

Eliminating Administrative Waste in Post-Acute Care

Home-based care providers already navigate a complex landscape of payer requirements, compliance regulations, and documentation standards. Adding hospital referrals to the mix, especially when they arrive in fragmented formats, only increases the burden on staff, and the risk of errors and miscommunication.

Moving to an integrated system helps post-acute providers:

– Maintain an up-to-date patient record, reducing inconsistencies across care settings.
– Reduce paper-based documentation, eliminating extra administrative steps and human error.
– Improve workflow efficiency, freeing up clinicians to focus on patient care instead of excessive paperwork.
– Retain an EHR system with workflow that is tailored to home-based care needs rather than acute care preferences.

Health information exchanges (HIEs) and Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standards for APIs are making it easier for hospitals, home health agencies, and insurers to work from the same set of patient data. This shift from fragmented communication to real-time data access is helping healthcare move toward a more connected approach to post-acute care.

What’s Next for Interoperability in Post-Acute Care?

As hospitals deepen their partnerships with home-based care providers, seamless data exchange will become a deciding factor in how well these collaborations succeed. The next steps for improving interoperability should focus on:

– Expanding integration with behavioral health and social determinants of health (SDOH) data to better address patient needs beyond medical treatment.
– Automating prior authorizations to speed up referrals and reduce bottlenecks in post-acute care.
– Leveraging AI and predictive analytics to help identify high-risk patients and enable earlier interventions.

The ability to share patient data without friction is no longer just a convenience—it’s essential for delivering quality care. As technology advances, providers who embrace interoperability will see the biggest improvements in efficiency, care coordination, and patient outcomes. When hospitals and home health agencies can act as a true extension of one another, patients get the uninterrupted care they need, clinicians spend less time on administrative tasks, and healthcare as a whole moves toward a more connected future.

Having Ears on the Ground: Why Listening To Providers Matters for the Future of Home Care Technology

Michelle Barlow, RN

By Michelle Barlow, RN, BSN, Director of Regulatory and Clinical Excellence, Homecare Homebase.

The rising cost of in-facility healthcare, an aging population, and a growing preference for receiving care at home have prompted the home-based care industry to excel. Traditionally, nursing homes were considered the best option for long-term elderly care by healthcare organizations, but the COVID-19 pandemic has since altered this perception, introducing notable benefits and growing demand for home-based care.

However, there is a shortage of in-home caregiving aides and clinicians. This is prompting many home care agencies to adopt end-to-end tech solutions to help streamline daily tasks and caregiver duties. But creating technology for the sake of technology won’t solve these problems.

To recruit quality talent and support existing caregivers, it’s vital to ensure their feedback is built into the design of the software. It needs to be intentional with the end user in mind. This undertaking starts with listening to the people on the front lines, the ones whom the technology directly impacts. Here’s why collaboration between software developers, caregivers, and providers during the product design process matters:

1. Practical Application and Caregiver Feedback

Designing software for healthcare professionals without their feedback or including them in early user testing is simply impractical. Leveraging clinical experience provides a deeper understanding of the software’s impact on patient care that only those working directly with patients can understand. This unique perspective empowers them to identify inefficiencies in existing processes. By working together, caregivers and providers can pinpoint areas where technology can automate tasks and seamlessly integrate them into daily routines.

Product development teams with clinical expertise add an extra layer of understanding. They possess a deep knowledge of the needs, challenges, and treatment plans different patient populations face. They bridge the communication gap, translating caregiver and provider feedback from the language of healthcare into actionable insights that developers can easily grasp and implement.

Software developers must also include providers and caregivers in the testing process to ensure its functionality and usability, as well as identifying any possible challenges that may need to be fixed before a product’s rollout. Providers can identify specific areas for improvement in clinical practices and discover unexpected uses for the product, helping to resolve issues before a broader release.

2. Building a Trustworthy Foundation

When caregivers and providers are actively involved from the beginning, they become invested partners, but this can only be achieved through continuous user feedback so the software is prepared to change as the market inevitably shifts. They understand the product’s purpose and value, encouraging enthusiastic endorsement within their agencies. This fosters user adoption and builds industry-wide credibility for the software. As a result, developers gain invaluable user insights, and the healthcare community receives a solution designed with their specific needs in mind and is applicable in a real-world setting.

3. Eliminating Costly Missteps

No tech developer wants to create a product that nobody wants, or that cannot be integrated into existing workflows. By skipping caregiver and provider input, developers risk creating inefficient software that misses the mark entirely. Collaboration during the design phase helps identify and avoid these pitfalls. By actively listening to providers from the start, developers can create a product that truly aligns with caregiver and patient needs, saving time, money, and dissatisfaction.

Fostering Enduring Partnerships

Software development is a shared and ongoing journey with intricacies that should be tested and updated regularly. To ensure provider feedback is woven into the very fabric of the product, involve them from the outset. Gather insights through surveys and focus groups, keep them engaged during pilot programs, and continuously solicit their thoughts.

This invaluable input will guide product iterations, leading to refined solutions. Comprehensive training and support upon launch will further ensure successful implementation. Both parties should actively contribute ideas – tech vendors must continuously update features based on user feedback, and providers should feel empowered to suggest improvements.

Redefining the Future of Home-Based Care

The future of home-based care is here, and it’s not just about a singular innovation. As we look to use technology responsibly and in a way that enhances human capabilities rather than replacing them, it’s clear that cultivating a powerful, mutually beneficial partnership between developers and those at the heart of care delivery is mission-critical.

Through collaborative effort and strategy, we can design solutions that empower caregivers, optimize workflows, and, ultimately, revolutionize in-home patient care. This is not merely about achieving growth; it’s about crafting a future where exceptional and dignified care flourishes within the comfort of a patient’s home.