About this Event
<h4>Description</h4>
If you're reading this, chances are you know how complicated nursing home policy and regulations can be. Some of that complexity is necessary to ensure we can provide high-quality care to all nursing home residents, but sometimes lack of clarity can cause challenges with efficiency and effectiveness of care delivery and oversight. Join Stephanie Allred, Director, LTC Regulation Licensing and Credentialing, Texas Health and Human Services Commission, to discuss how state policymakers can think about and execute efforts to clarify complex state policies.
She'll talk about three recent initiatives in Texas to clarify nursing home licensure and certification processes and data collection and to clarify the process of becoming a certified nurse aide.
- The first creates consistent definitions of ownership, affiliates, and controlling persons across licensure, certification, and Medicaid contracting within the state—reducing data duplication. [PL 2024-11 (texas.gov)]
- The second maps the processes for licensure, certification, and bed allocation in long-term care. [How to Become a NF Provider | Texas Health and Human Services]
- The third maps the nine different ways to become a certified nurse aide in Texas. [Become a Certified Nurse Aide in Texas | Texas Health and Human Services]
We hope the discussion will provide inspiration and ideas for advocates, policymakers, and others across the country for ways to simplify, standardize, and clarify nursing home policy in other states. And we hope you'll come with other examples of initiatives that have made nursing home policy more comprehensible and accessible for providers, residents, families, and staff.
<h4>Speaker</h4>
Stephanie obtained her doctorate of experimental psychology from the University of Texas at Arlington, with a major in cognitive psychology and a minor in statistics. Her focus of study was ambiguity in the English language. She began her career with the state as a professor at the University of Texas at Tyler, teaching various psychology and statistics courses. Following, she worked for a state-owned psychiatric hospital for 17 years. Her positions at the hospital varied from Data Specialist, Director of Training, Standards Compliance Officer, to Director of Quality Management. Currently, she is the Director of Long-term Care Regulation Licensing and Credentialing for the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. She is responsible for the provider licensure and certification of over 13,000 providers, and credentialing of over 140,000 individuals.
Event Venue
Online
USD 0.00