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1.
As CHA evolved and expanded in the 1930s, it became a more complex organization with wider responsibilities--and more intractable problems--than it had had before. The third article in the six-part Health Progress series on the history of CHA (April 1990) described the struggles of Rev. Alphonse M. Schwitalla, SJ, the association's second president, to develop effective CHA programs and policies on nursing education. CHA's relations with other national Catholic organizations, the growth and eventual autonomy of its Canadian member hospitals, and its role as an advocate of federal healthcare legislation during the Depression and World War II are covered in this article. Next month's installment will describe CHA's modernization and expansion under the leadership of Rev. John J. Flanagan, SJ.  相似文献   

2.
A leader in U. S. Catholic healthcare since 1915, CHA has helped Catholic hospitals meet the challenges of the standardization movement, the Depression, and two world wars. The fifth Health Progress article on CHA's history (June 1990) described the association's postwar emergence as a service organization under the leadership of Rev. John J. Flanagan, SJ. This article, the last in the series, charts CHA's response to the revolutionary changes within Catholic healthcare brought about by the Second Vatican Council and the passage of Medicare. It recounts the struggles within the U.S. Catholic healthcare community to sustain its Catholic identity, as well as the community's increased presence as an advocate for a just healthcare system. In the spirit of the institutes of women religious who established the Catholic healthcare ministry in the United States, CHA enters the 1990s committed to advocating for universal access to healthcare and enhancing its members' ability to serve the poor and vulnerable.  相似文献   

3.
Having weathered the Depression and war years, CHA in the late 1940s looked forward to a new era in Catholic healthcare. The third and fourth articles of Health Progress's six-part history of CHA described how Rev. Alphonse M. Schwitalla, SJ, led the association through one of the most difficult periods in U.S. history. This article follows CHA's development into a modern service organization under the leadership of Rev. John J. Flanagan, SJ. The series' final installment, which will appear in the July-August issue, describes how CHA has modernized its services and structure in the past two decades to help its members adjust to a turbulent environment.  相似文献   

4.
The Catholic Health Association (CHA) Leadership Task Force on National Health Policy Reform has offered a proposal that, if enacted by Congress, would result in profound changes in the way providers deliver healthcare in the United States. The proposal would result in fewer acute healthcare facilities, challenge some acute care facilities to provide additional services and require each Catholic healthcare provider to collaborate with Catholic providers and others. Two features distinguish CHA's plan from the many other healthcare proposals that have been offered. First, CHA's plan is rooted in six tenets of Catholic healthcare. Second, the plan primarily focuses on client-centered delivery reform rather than on financing issues as other proposals have done. The task force believed it first had to create a vision of what the nation's future healthcare delivery system should look like. The task force decided that providers must do a better job of meeting clients' healthcare needs. To be a credible leader in the healthcare reform debate, the task force believes that CHA must offer a plan that primarily focuses on the needs of people and, second, controls costs effectively.  相似文献   

5.
The restructuring of the Medicare and Medicaid programs poses significant operational, legislative, and mission challenges for the Catholic health ministry. This report highlights meetings held in Chicago and Philadelphia in November and December 1996 to prepare healthcare leaders for the changes that are coming. The meetings were two of seven held across the country last fall. Cosponsored by the National Coalition on Catholic Health Care Ministry, the Catholic Health Care Association (CHA), and Consolidated Catholic Health Care, these regional conferences were part of New Covenant, a process to strengthen the Catholic presence in healthcare through regional and national collaborative strategies. The meetings blended operational and mission concerns. On the first day, speakers reinforced mission as the ministry's foundation and market advantage, and they defined opportunities and strategic responses to the restructuring of the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The second day's sessions moved into collaborative strategies for dealing with Medicare and Medicaid changes. The day concluded with CHA's public policy proposals related to these programs' restructuring.  相似文献   

6.
In its 1990 National Community Benefits Survey, the Catholic Health Association (CHA) found that in recent years Catholic hospitals increased the amount of uncompensated care they provided, despite growing fiscal constraints. CHA also found that, in the two years since it introduced the Social Accountability Budget, 60 percent of Catholic healthcare facilities have used either CHA's process or a similar structured approach to reinforce, measure, and plan their contributions to the community. Of the hospitals that responded to the survey, 91 percent provided nonbilled services targeted to low-income populations in 1989, more than 75 percent provided free or discounted services to other populations with special needs, and about 82 percent made free or discounted services available to the broader community. In addition, the majority of Catholic facilities can now more accurately report the dollar value of the uncompensated care they provide. In Illinois 31 of the state's 52 Catholic hospitals were able to quantify the value of the benefits they provide to the poor and the broader community. Moreover, facilities and systems throughout the nation are intensifying their efforts to plan and coordinate programs to meet community needs and the needs of the poor.  相似文献   

7.
Whatever the final shape of healthcare reform, providers and sponsors are already collaborating with each other in various network arrangements. As they pursue these arrangements, they are asking questions about their role in a reformed system and whether the networks they participate in will strengthen their mission and ministry. Documents published about five years ago by the Catholic Health Association (CHA) and the Commission on Catholic Health Care Ministry provided the rationale for CHA's proposal to form integrated delivery networks (IDNs) as part of a national healthcare reform plan. The documents called for a continuum of care with comprehensive community- and institution-based services and challenged Catholic healthcare leaders to work for a healthcare system that guarantees access to the needy and most vulnerable in society. The central task for administrators today is to determine whether participating in an IDN enables Catholic healthcare providers to fulfill their original mission and purpose. To determine this, organizations must clarify their mission and evaluate their beliefs. They must also develop a shared vision of motives and goals among everyone with whom they collaborate. IDNs' success in furthering the healthcare ministry will depend on leaders' ability to ensure that new corporate cultures which arise in cooperative ventures and arrangements support Catholic values and mission. In making the transition to a new environment, leaders should remember that aspects of IDNs support many of the goals of the Catholic healthcare ministry.  相似文献   

8.
In response to the increasing outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States, the Catholic Health Association (CHA) has developed a new resource to help its members launch programs that will increase immunization rates among children in their service area. Vaccines are the building blocks of basic primary care. But society and the healthcare system have erected barriers that prevent children from being fully immunized. Impediments include missed opportunities, cost barriers, and facility and resource barriers. Catholic healthcare providers can help eliminate these barriers and ensure that all children in their service areas are vaccinated by assessing their immunization resources, seeking out unvaccinated children, and collaborating with community organizations and agencies. CHA's immunization campaign will guide Catholic healthcare providers as they protect children from preventable diseases. Immunization may help reduce the costs of emergency and acute care for conditions that could have been prevented.  相似文献   

9.
Convinced that Catholic organizations might have special strengths for succeeding in price-competitive markets, the Catholic Health Association, with the assistance of a national membership advisory committee and The Lewin Group, Fairfax, VA, studied six healthcare organizations that are successfully meeting the challenges of difficult environments. Based on more than 100 interviews and assessments of the environments in which these progressive mission-driven organizations operate, the researchers identified strategies that can assist other faith-based health organizations. The Lewin Group's Kevin J. Sexton, who led the research team, explained that "the study examined how the organizations embraced their mission and used their values in three areas: linkages with other organizations, linkages with physicians, and strategies for balancing delivery and insurance." CHA's executive vice president William J. Cox said the study sites were selected to obtain a range of marketplace, sponsorship, and structural experiences. "We wanted to learn how Catholic organizations responded to environmental forces with strategies that were grounded in mission," Cox said. CHA has published the study in a resource packet that describes the five major findings, profiles the cases, and provides Best Practices Checklists--specific pointers to guide organizations in their efforts. The following study excerpts provide a brief overview of the findings and a sample of the Best Practices Checklists. To obtain the complete resource, Mission-Driven Market Strategies: Lessons from the Field, call the Catholic Health Association at 314-253-3458 (for more information see the advertisement on p. 62).  相似文献   

10.
In "The Catholic Hospital Today: Mission Impossible?" (Origins, March 16, 1995, pp. 648-653), Rev. Richard A. McCormick, SJ, STD, questions whether Catholic hospitals can continue their missions in a society with so many factors and influences that seem to oppose efforts to perpetuate the healing ministry of Christ. As Fr. McCormick states, the matrix of good medicine is centered on the good of the individual. But too often, the patient has been considered an individual isolated from others. The rights of families, people who belong to the same insurance program, and the society funding much of healthcare must also be considered. Fr. McCormick points out that an obstacle to the healing mission arises because healthcare is often treated as a business instead of a service. If not-for-profit healthcare facilities come to exist for the well-being of the shareholders, as do for-profit healthcare facilities, then a perversion of values results. This should lead us to renounce for-profit healthcare and the behavior that some Catholic health organizations have borrowed from the for-profit sector. In addition, Fr. McCormick calls attention to our society's denial of death and tendency to call on medicine to cure personal, social, or economic problems. This denial-of-death phenomenon helps us realize the need for the mission of Catholic hospitals. Continuing the mission of Catholic hospitals will require the attention of all involved in them-physicians, trustees, nurses, administrators, and ancillary personnel. These healthcare providers must not be distracted from the mission by joint ventures and economic issues.  相似文献   

11.
The ongoing crisis in long-term care has forced administrators and chief executive officers (CEOs) to reassess their position within the U.S. healthcare system and define their response to the challenges they face. This article identifies the issues that Catholic long-term care CEOs find most pressing based on two recent opinion surveys conducted by the Catholic Health Association (CHA). In the area of management and governance, the subject of a 1990 CHA survey, respondents rated as their top concern the inadequacy of funds to treat chronically ill elderly persons. Other important issues included threats to the tax-exempt status of healthcare providers, availability of healthcare for the poor, and scarcity of nursing staff. Respondents to a 1991 survey that focused on collaboration within the Catholic healthcare ministry cited the lack of a forum for communications as the greatest hindrance to collaborative enterprises. A lack of available time to pursue and develop collaborative projects and the absence of compelling reasons to collaborate with other Catholic organizations were also identified as important issues. Overall, the consensus among long-term care CEOs was strong on the importance of certain management and governance issues and on the need for Catholic organizations to work together more closely.  相似文献   

12.
The Catholic Health Association's (CHA's) study "Transformational Leadership for the Healing Ministry: Competencies for the Future" is a powerful tool for the identification and development of leaders in Catholic healthcare. The study can help executives measure their own performance against a standard of excellence and establish goals to improve their performance. Trustees can use the study to establish policies for identification, assessment, development, and career planning for senior executives. Sponsors might consider the competencies as they intensify collaboration in ministry with lay colleagues by encouraging leadership development or as they participate with trustees in the selection of executives. The model presented in CHA's study is dynamic and adaptable to the leadership needs of various organizations. It should not yield a homogenized view of the "ideal" leader in the Catholic ministry. Nor should it encourage elitism or invidious comparisons between leaders or organizations.  相似文献   

13.
During the past six years the Catholic Health Association (CHA) has developed and modified a process to help leaders evaluate and implement merger, cosponsorship, and sponsorship transfer decisions. CHA's highest priority in these efforts has been to keep Catholic healthcare facilities under Catholic sponsorship, control, and management. Proposals to change sponsorship arrangements usually originate with sponsoring institutes, whereas local boards generally initiate merger proposals. In either case, it is critical that all interested parties--such as sponsors, boards, administrators, medical staff, employees, and the local Church--be involved in the decision-making process at some point. Once leaders have decided on a course of action, they should appoint a task force to implement the proposal. The board, administration, and medical staff will all have important roles to play in the implementation process. Another important step is to establish criteria for evaluating candidates for a proposed merger or sponsorship transfer. Leaders should ensure that people affected by the transaction have an opportunity to give input and to grieve their loss. After leaders have selected a candidate, they must negotiate the details of the agreement and take the necessary legal steps to complete the transaction. It is imperative that a facility secure outside legal counsel to help it through this stage.  相似文献   

14.
The Catholic healthcare ministry is at a challenging moment in its history. Not only is the ministry called to continue to be authentic to its own self, but the ministry also has the opportunity to communicate the richness and universality of its values to others. In response to our members' genuine concerns, the Catholic Health Association of the United States (CHA) has prepared this document to support our members in the expression of their Catholic identity in new forms of healthcare service.  相似文献   

15.
The Catholic Health Association's (CHA's) Standards for Community Benefit ask Catholic healthcare organizations to show their commitment to addressing community needs. The standards call on providers to stress the importance of community service in a variety of contexts--from their statements of philosophy and values to the decisions made in their board and executive staff meetings. At the heart of the Standards for Community Benefit is the requirement that an organization's governing body adopt a community benefit plan. The community benefit plan can help orient staff, physicians, and volunteers to the facility's charitable role. A provider can also use a completed plan to elicit community members' views on the organization's interpretation of community needs, its priorities, and performance. Not-for-profit healthcare organizations can prepare a community benefit plan by completing the following steps: Restate the organization's mission and commitment Define the community being served Identify unmet community needs Determine and describe the organization's leadership role Determine and describe the organization's community service role Seek public comment on the plan Prepare a formal, written community benefit plan.  相似文献   

16.
Catholic healthcare leaders must use all their will and creative imagination to find a way to maintain a significant Catholic presence in healthcare. Catholic healthcare leaders across the nation are acquiring, consolidating, and merging hospitals; forming alliances and networks of integrated services; and bringing together Catholic healthcare systems on a regional and local basis. The next few years are critical for Catholic sponsors of healthcare services. The unique challenge is to pursue the development of a Catholic network that would include a wide range of health, mental health, home care, long-term care, social, and housing services. The key ingredient to making networks happen will be leadership, and I think CHA and sponsors rightly emphasize the need for continuing leadership formation and development of trustees and executives in Catholic healthcare. A united effort by Catholic healthcare providers could have a penetrating influence on the overall development of healthcare in this nation. Now is the time to exercise imaginative leadership; to reach out to the existing Catholic and community-based providers of health and human services; and to create networks that can provide a continuum of accessible, high-quality, values-based, and cost-efficient services.  相似文献   

17.
The following is an excerpt of the CHA 2000 Task Force Final Report and Recommendations, approved by the Catholic Health Association (CHA) Board of Trustees at its April meeting. The recommendations for the future of CHA were presented to the CHA membership at the annual business meeting at the Joint Assembly of the Catholic Health Associations of Canada and the United States, June 10 in Montreal.  相似文献   

18.
Reilly P 《Modern healthcare》2002,32(46):8-9, 16, 1
Some observers may say the timing was preordained. Against the backdrop of Tenet Healthcare Corp.'s mounting woes, the Catholic Health Association, headed by the Rev. Michael Place (left), is expected this week to release a report arguing that Roman Catholic hospitals deserve special and distinct financial concessions from the federal government because of the role they play.  相似文献   

19.
In a world that is rapidly changing, healthcare stands in the midst of the maelstrom. Yet the one thing that everybody agrees on is the need for more change. The 75th Annual Catholic Health Assembly brought together members of the Catholic healthcare community to reflect on the need to reform the U.S. healthcare system. Together, they examined the problems, the proposals, and the processes for change. At the assembly, marking the 75th anniversary of the founding of CHA, the ministry's leaders reaffirmed their commitment to the founders' values and looked at practical ways to fulfill their mission to serve the poor and most vulnerable among us.  相似文献   

20.
The charitable acts of women religious in response to the needs of the communities in which they settled is one of the great chapters in the history of the Church in America. But in the past two decades providers have had to contend with extraordinary changes in the healthcare environment. The Catholic healthcare mission was rooted in concern for the poor. Should Catholic healthcare providers withdraw from this field in which they have had such a significant presence and have contributed so much, or be driven from healthcare by the fiscal consequences of fidelity to mission? Instead, through its reform proposal, the Catholic Health Association has recommended that Catholic providers become advocates of change. However, even if change, such as universal access to healthcare, is achieved, we shall still have a society in which there will be many poor people. The challenge will be to see that healthcare for the poor does not become poor healthcare. Although the changing urban environment presents enormous challenges to providers, the Catholic healthcare ministry is a significant presence in urban areas. Widespread poverty accompanied by behavioral problems and social breakdowns are significant factors affecting healthcare and healthcare costs. Drug addiction; AIDS; teenage pregnancy; homelessness; the deterioration of the family; and generations of unemployment, anomie, abuse, and violence, which are often most acute in concentrated neighborhoods of poverty, challenge the ability of Catholic hospitals to meet their community's needs. Catholic providers today have a real opportunity to bring about positive changes in healthcare. They have the history, experience, and will to preserve a Catholic presence in the provision of healthcare.  相似文献   

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