Recorded Webinar | Sue Dill Calloway | May 22 ,2020 | 11:0:am EST | 120 Minutes
Description
This webinar will go over in detail the CMS hospital anesthesia hospital CoPs that all hospitals that accept Medicare patients must follow. Deep sedation is considered anesthesia so these standards can affect the care provided in places like the emergency department, radiology, GI lab, pain clinic or any other place deep sedation is provided. This includes the use of Propofol. The number of deficiencies for the anesthesia tag numbers will be discussed.
This program will cover the CMS standards on pre-anesthesia evaluations, post-anesthesia evaluation, and anesthesia services. Hospitals are required to have many policies including one on specific clinical situations involving anesthesia or analgesia. This session also addresses what anesthesia policies are required and what must be documented by the anesthesia provider during surgery.
Come to this program and learn all about the CMS anesthesia guidelines and how your hospital can ensure compliance. The hospital must demonstrate the acceptable standard of care and this should be referenced in the policy and procedure. Do you know what four things CMS defines as anesthesia and the four things defined in the pain bucket? What do you need to do if your emergency department physicians and GI doctors want to do deep sedation to ensure compliance? Anesthesia infection control issues will be discussed.
A two page FAQ on anesthesia by CMS will also be discussed. This includes interpretive guidelines on moderate sedation and deep sedation. It impacts moderate and deep sedation done in other places like the emergency department and GI lab and patients who have ECTs.
Comes to hear about the CMS anesthesia standards from a speaker who wrote the book on how to comply with these standards.
CMS said that hospitals are expected to develop policies and procedures that address the clinical circumstances under which medications that fall along the analgesia-anesthesia are considered anesthesia and to specify the qualifications of the practitioners who can administer analgesia. This seminar will explain each of the past four changes and when and why the changes were made.
These also impact issues related to CRNAs and the provision of analgesia during labor and delivery. The regulations discuss who can administer anesthesia and supervision requirements of CRNAs and anesthesiology assistants. The guidance also covers what types of anesthesia services are subject to the requirements governing the administration of anesthesia including deep sedation. Hospitals will need to make sure their policies and procedures and credentialing and privileging policies reflect these requirements. A good change was made regarding the previous requirement that all outpatients who have had anesthesia must have a postanesthesia assessment before they left the hospital as long as it has done and documented within 48 hours. (except CAH)
Detailed Outline:-
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Who Should Attend?
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