I am back! Over the past few weeks, I had the opportunity to do two things that always recharge me—take a vacation and attend the annual Case Management Society of America (CMSA) Conference in Las Vegas.

My husband and I traveled through the Canadian Rockies and the Pacific Northwest by bus, enjoying spectacular scenery, meeting wonderful people, and simply relaxing. It was nice to let someone else handle driving while we focused on the experience.

Just a few days after returning home, I headed to the CMSA Conference in Las Vegas. Every year I leave inspired, energized, and ready to tackle the many challenges we face in the complex healthcare system.

During my travels, I heard an interview by Jalen Brunson, the NY Knicks point guard, he gave after his team won the NBA Championship that really resonated with me. When asked how he handled the pressure of facing what seemed like an impossible situation, he replied:

“You’re allowed to think about the worst possible scenario, but then you’ve got to go out there and do something about it.”

That simple statement stuck with me.

As nurse case managers, we often talk about the challenges in healthcare—rising costs, fragmented care, communication breakdowns, delayed recovery, and frustrated patients. Those problems are real. But instead of simply talking about them, what if we asked ourselves: “What can we do about it?”

That question led me to think about the tremendous influence case managers have every day.

As I’ve written many times before, case managers occupy a unique position. We work at the intersection of patients, employer, healthcare providers, insurers, attorneys, and the healthcare system itself. Very few professionals have the opportunity to see the entire picture.

Because of that unique perspective, we are in a position not only to improve individual outcomes—but to improve the healthcare system itself.

What Can Case Managers Do?

Coordinate Care Across the Continuum

Bring everyone together around one recovery plan. Effective communication among physicians, therapists, employers, and payers reduces fragmented care and unnecessary duplication of services.

Promote Evidence-Based Care

Encourage treatment that follows established clinical guidelines, helping reduce unnecessary testing, procedures, and prolonged treatment while ensuring timely referrals when needed.

Engage and Educate Injured Workers

Patients who understand their diagnosis and treatment plan are more likely to participate actively in their recovery. Case managers also help overcome barriers such as transportation, health literacy, financial concerns, and fear of returning to work.

Identify Problems Early

Recognize delayed recovery, chronic pain risks, psychosocial concerns, or behavioral health issues before they become long-term obstacles, allowing the healthcare team to intervene sooner.

Support Safe Return to Work

Collaborate with employers to identify modified or transitional duty whenever appropriate, helping injured workers remain connected to the workplace while recovering safely.

Improve Communication

Serve as the central point of communication among all stakeholders, preventing misunderstandings that delay treatment, authorization, or recovery.

Focus on Whole-Person Care

Recovery is more than healing an injury. Physical, emotional, vocational, and social factors all influence outcomes. Case managers help ensure each of these areas is addressed.

Measure Outcomes

Track functional improvement—not just medical treatment. Measure return-to-work rates, patient satisfaction, recovery milestones, and interventions that prevented delays or unnecessary costs. Most importantly, share these results with stakeholders so they clearly understand the return on investment (ROI) professional case management provides.

Reduce Costs Without Sacrificing Quality

Prevent unnecessary hospitalizations, imaging studies, procedures, and duplicated services while ensuring patients receive the right care at the right time.

Advocate for the Injured Worker

Help patients understand their rights and responsibilities, navigate a complicated healthcare system, and participate in shared decision-making with their providers.

Use Data to Improve Practice

Analyze trends, identify opportunities for improvement, and share best practices that strengthen programs and improve outcomes across organizations.

Build High-Performing Care Teams

Move providers beyond working in silos and create coordinated teams focused on one common goal: achieving the best possible functional outcome for the patient.

Looking at the Bigger Picture

One point I believe is often overlooked is that case managers can serve as a model for the rest of healthcare.

Many of the challenges facing today’s healthcare system—fragmented care, poor communication, rising costs, unnecessary duplication of services, and lack of coordination—are problems case managers address every single day.

Our work demonstrates that when one professional is accountable for coordinating care, facilitating communication, educating patients, measuring outcomes, and keeping everyone focused on recovery, remarkable things happen.

The results are often:

  • Better patient experiences
  • Improved clinical outcomes
  • Faster recovery
  • Earlier return to productive lives
  • Lower overall healthcare costs

These outcomes align perfectly with healthcare’s Quadruple Aim: improving patient experience, improving population health, reducing costs, and supporting healthcare professionals.

Case managers don’t simply manage cases; they improve healthcare.

Every day, through coordination, communication, advocacy, education, and leadership, we demonstrate what high-quality, patient-centered care should look like.

This summer, I hope you’ll take some time to rest, recharge, and reflect on the impact you make. Then, take this article to your next staff meeting and ask one simple question: What is one thing our team can do to improve healthcare for the patients we serve?” I think you’ll be amazed at the ideas your team generates—and even more amazed at the difference those ideas can make.

If you have topics, you want me to cover in upcoming articles, please let me know. You can email me at anne@nursesadvocates.com

Have a wonderful week!

 

 

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