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Welcome to the Empowered Patient Podcast with Karen Jagoda.  This show offers a glimpse into the latest innovations in applying generative AI, novel therapeutics and vaccines, and the evolving dynamics in the medical and healthcare landscape. One focus is on how providers, pharmaceutical companies, and payers are empowering patients.  In addition, conversations often focus on how technology is empowering providers, care facilities, pharmaceutical companies, and payers to improve patient outcomes and reduce friction across the healthcare landscape.  Popular Topics Include: Virtual and digital health Use of AI, ML, and robots for clinical and administrative purposes  Value-based healthcare  Precision and stratified medicine Next-generation immuno, cell, and gene therapies Vaccines for infectious diseases and oncology Biomarkers and diagnostics Rare diseases MedTech and medical devices Clinical trials  Population health Chronic conditions l Clinician and staff burnout Smart hospitals The audience includes life science leaders, researchers, medical professionals, patient advocates, digital health entrepreneurs, patients, caregivers, healthcare solution providers, students, journalists, and investors.

Dec 6, 2024

Maria Perrin, President and Chief Strategy Officer at PPL, is focused on expanding access to self-directed and whole person care allowing people to stay in their homes and receive the services they need to maintain a good quality of life. Consumer-directed care programs funded by Medicaid allows disabled and the aged populations to choose their own caregivers they know and trust to provide personal services like meals, dressing, and transportation. PPL provides training, technology, quality assurance, and other support to help consumers and their caregivers participate in these programs.

Maria explains, "So the programs differ from state to state. If someone needs care in their home, say they had an injury or they need help because of a disability or certain access, they can get help for people to, for example, come in, prepare meals, help them get dressed, and for bathing. Or if they're relatively healthy and can do that themselves, some programs support things like meal services, transportation, occupational assistance, and other goods and services they may need to thrive."

"We see a lot of health disparities. I know that many people who work in healthcare talk about this, and you have communities that are underserved. They don't have enough home health workers in their community to serve them. Often, they don't have facilities that speak the language they speak or consider their religious or cultural implications. Therefore, the consumer-directed care program allows people to choose the caregiver that meets their needs and to have them deliver the services within their home."

"That's a little different than, for example, a home health agency model whereby the agency will choose the caregiver they get, and that person may or may not be trusted by the individual consumer. They may not speak the same language as the individual consumer. So this elevates the care that the consumer is getting to what they specifically need and establishes trust by enabling them to choose the caregiver. A caregiver may be a family member, it might be a church member, a friend of the family, someone who's in the community who they already know and trust, and who can best serve that particular consumer."

#PPL #Healthcare #Caregivers #ConsumerDirectedCare #SelfDirection #AtHomeCare #CommunityBasedSupportServices #LongTermServicesSupports #Medicaid

PPLfirst.com

Download the transcript here

PPL