Issue Briefs
The role of the professional case manager is changing rapidly. Health reform has called upon the industry to ensure that care delivered is efficient, effective, high quality and low cost. Never in our history has the role and the function of the professional case manager been more important. The expectations of today’s case manager are evolving and the experts in policy, research and industry are talking with the Commission about changes affecting case management practice.
The Commission’s Issue Briefs are offered as part of the CMLearning Network®. Each publication covers topics that are timely and relevant to today’s professional case manager. If you would like a hard copy of an Issue Brief for your staff, or for use at a meeting, we can send you a limited amount at no charge. Simply make your request by filling out the form in the sidebar, and we'll be happy to send them to you.
The Issue Briefs displayed below are the most recent.
Becoming aware: Six things every case manager needs to know about dementia
Are you dementia-aware? Are you sure?
Given that roughly 5.8 million Americans lived with Alzheimer’s and other dementia in 2019, we can readily assume it directly affected more than 12 million people. This issue brief highlights six things every case manager needs to know about dementia.
“We can’t stop, fix or change dementia, but we can manage it and have more positive interactions as we begin to understand what’s behind dementia symptoms.”—Laura Wayman, The Dementia Whisperer, author of A Loving Approach to Dementia Care
Rethinking poverty: An evidence-based approach to treatment
Science and data drive health care practice. At least, they usually do: Heart disease, cancers, depression—all have evidence-based standards of care. But one devastating condition affecting millions has no such standards: Poverty. Marcella Wilson, Ph.D., founder and CEO of Transition to Success™, set out to change this, and she did. Multiple external reviews show how her model led improvements in income, mental health status, food security and several other social determinants at little or no additional cost. Her journey has special resonance for case managers—especially those with the CCM® credential, who are ethically bound to serve as patient advocates. What Wilson learned offers insights as case managers work with clients suffering from poverty.
It’s all about the client: How augmented intelligence brings AI to bear on the case management process
“Technology, data and analytics have a very significant impact on the practice of case management, both how we’re using it in our daily work and how our clients are using it to manage their health. It's exciting to think about the possibilities that come with easier, faster access to the information that we need, to help clients live their healthiest lives.” — MaryBeth Kurland, CAE, Chief Executive Officer, CCMC.
This issue brief highlights: the difference between artificial intelligence, machine learning and augmented intelligence; aligning AI and the case management process; and how to become better consumers.
Same ethics, new context: Case managers must understand the new world of medical cannabis
“When I first started my career, medical marijuana was never even discussed. Today, I work with a lot of clients from all walks of life who are using it or thinking about it and weighing the pros and cons,” says Jared Young, PsyD, CAC, LCSW, CCM, chair-elect, Commission for Case Manager Certification®. If you aren’t encountering these patients, you soon will. Case managers, he says, have an ethical obligation to stay on top of the issue. That sometimes proves challenging. “The landscape is constantly changing. But with medical marijuana becoming more mainstream, we’re only going to be addressing these issues more and more.”
When everything is rarely enough: Palliative care and the power of asking the right questions
Palliative care is not curative; the goal is to improve quality of life. However—and this is what often gets missed—palliative care can occur alongside the most aggressive disease treatment. It provides a powerful opportunity for relief and even healing, but many clients, families and even health care professionals don’t fully grasp its full meaning.