Understanding Risk In Your Homecare Population: Remember To Protect Your Patients At Risk Of Dying, Not Just From The COVID 19 Virus, But From The Effects Of The Pandemic

Kenyon HomeCare Consulting • March 3, 2021
 As we continue to deal with the effects to family, friends, and ourselves, we must also consider the effects of Covid on our patients. You may be thinking this is an everyday thing! However, often this focus is about the virus and not about the effects of the pandemic. We need to have care plans that cover more than the disease because we are losing patients because of the pandemic and not the virus. Let me explain.

A Typical Issue:
A friend of mine had an elderly mother in an assisted living facility for the last several years. She was thriving there until a fall required her to be temporarily placed in a SNF. You guessed it. Covid hit. Suddenly, the individual who was accustomed to multiple visits from family every week was isolated when the SNF no longer allowed visitors. She had an iPhone, but it often had a dead battery. It limited the ability for family to Facetime call or be able to see her face and she theirs. Family reported calling the SNF several times per week to ask them to plug in her phone. Over the course of a couple of months, my friend’s mother became very depressed and felt very isolated. She told her family she would like to go on hospice and that she was basically ready to go.

Then, after hospice had admitted, the SNF came to a point that lockdown was no longer deemed necessary. Family was able to visit at certain times and they had to do so on the patios where there was adequate ventilation. Things changed for the patient. She was discharged from hospice and doing well with therapy. Her goal was to return to the assisted living facility. Everything was moving in that direction. Then, there was a covid outbreak in the SNF and lockdown was back in effect. Later, this patient ultimately tests positive. She is asymptomatic with the exception of some noted shortness of breath. However, she also had CHF, so the shortness of breath could have been a combination of both. These symptoms resolve, but the SNF is still on lockdown while others recuperate. Family continues to do everything possible to connect like phone calls, Facetime, and visits to her window. Ultimately, she lost the will to continue on with no foreseeable end to all of this in sight. My friend gets a phone call her mother is gone. Her mother was listed as a covid death even though her symptoms resolved and she was no longer positive. Her daughter told me that if the virus didn’t take her, then the pandemic did.

The Virus Didn’t Take Her, But The Pandemic Did:
This is such a huge statement. I know we all see commercials from our health departments speaking to mental health issues associated with the pandemic. Usually these commercials feature young people or middle aged folks who have ongoing mental health issues. I know we see the feel good commercials with the family outside the nursing home and everyone smiling back and forth at one another. However, our care plans and post acute care aren’t structured to drill down and keep these patients from deteriorating because of the effects of the pandemic. We are doing everything in our power not to spread the virus and that is great, but we need to consider more. Educate staff to be cognizant on admission to what is different for patients today and how they are coping with isolation issues. What does your agency do or attempt to do in order to prevent isolation? Do you do more calls to the patients? Do you ever Facetime patients? If you pulled 10 random care plans of patients currently living alone, would those care plans address social isolation issues or do they look the exact same as before the pandemic? These changes to how you take care of patients can make the difference in outcomes and overall wellness for your patient population.

Kenyon Homecare Consulting:
At Kenyon Homecare Consulting, we focus on high-quality, patient-centered care. We can help you with clinical, operational, or financial issues you may be struggling to overcome. We work with agencies and clinical staff to help with education and patient-focused outcome-based care planning. Call us today at 206-721-5091 or contact us online to see how we can help you make a difference for your patients and business.source.

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competitive
strategy
By Ginny Kenyon July 4, 2026
In an increasingly competitive healthcare and senior care landscape, providers are constantly searching for ways to differentiate themselves. Families looking for care, and the hospital discharge planners who guide them, are no longer satisfied with generic promises of "quality service" and "compassionate staff." They want proof of specialized capability. One of the most effective yet often overlooked ways to grow in this sector is to provide caregiving staff with thorough training in chronic disease care. In addition to improving patient outcomes and reducing hospital readmissions, this training also serves as a powerful marketing advantage and sales driver. Here is how turning your caregiving team into specialized chronic disease experts transforms your market positioning and accelerates revenue growth. 1. Transforming Specialized Care into a Unique Selling Proposition (USP) Most care agencies and senior living communities market themselves using the same language: "assistance with daily living," "meal preparation," and "medication reminders." When everyone says the same thing, care becomes a commodity, and pricing becomes the only differentiator. By equipping caregivers with advanced training in prevalent chronic conditions—such as Alzheimer’s/dementia, Parkinson’s, Congestive Heart Failure (CHF), Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), and Diabetes—you shift your brand positioning from a general utility to a specialized medical solution . The Marketing Edge: Your marketing materials transition from passive descriptions of tasks to authoritative statements of capability . Instead of advertising "we help with seniors," you can market "specialized, evidence-based care protocols for advanced Parkinson's management." 2. Building High-Value B2B Referral Pipelines The lifeblood of senior care sales is the professional referral pipeline—hospital discharge planners, social workers, physicians, and elder law attorneys. These professionals risk their own reputation when they recommend a care provider. Discharge planners, in particular, are intensely focused on preventing 30-day hospital readmissions , a metric heavily tied to hospital funding and penalties. The Sales Edge: When your sales team meets with a hospital transition manager, they aren't just dropping off brochures and lip balm. They are presenting a clinical solution. The Pitch: "Our staff, nurses, PT, and Home Care Aides undergo a rigorous 8-hour certification program specifically for CHF symptoms, care, and tracking. We actively monitor daily weights and fluid retention to catch exacerbations before they require an ER visit." This level of specificity builds immediate trust, establishing your organization as a preferred partner capable of handling high-acuity, complex cases that other agencies might turn away. 3. Creating Authentic Trust in B2C Digital Marketing When a family member realizes their loved one needs help, their first stop is almost always a search engine. They aren't looking for broad corporate statistics; they are looking for answers to specific, frightening problems (e.g., "How do I stop my dad with dementia from wandering at night?" ). In-depth staff education provides a goldmine of content for inbound marketing strategies: Expert Content Marketing: You can leverage your staff's training to create highly targeted blog posts, downloadable care guides, and educational webinars. Thought Leadership: By hosting free community seminars on managing chronic conditions, you position your brand as the local authority. When families are ready to transition from self-care to professional care, your organization is already their trusted advisor. 4. Shortening the Sales Cycle Through Consultative Selling The consumer sales process in senior care is deeply emotional and fraught with guilt, anxiety, and confusion. Families are often in crisis mode. A standard salesperson who only speaks about room dimensions or hourly rates will struggle to close the deal. When your sales representatives are backed by a highly trained clinical and aide staff, the sales discovery call morphs into a clinical consultation . Traditional Sales Approach: Focuses on features, schedules, and pricing "We can send a caregiver on Tuesdays and Thursdays for four hours to help your mother clean and cook." Consultative, Education-Backed Approach: Focuses on disease progression, symptom management, and quality of life. "Because your mother is dealing with advanced COPD, our caregivers are trained to recognize early signs of respiratory distress, manage energy conservation techniques during bathing, and ensure proper oxygen optimization." The latter approach instantly alleviates family anxiety. It proves that you see their loved one as a person with specific medical needs, not just a line item on a ledger, effectively neutralizing price sensitivity and shortening the time it takes to sign a contract. 5. Maximizing Lifetime Value (LTV) and Word-of-Mouth In senior care, the best marketing is a glowing testimonial from a relieved family. In-depth chronic disease education directly correlates with higher client satisfaction and longer length of stay (or care retention). Preventing Care Burnout: Caregivers who lack training get overwhelmed by the behavioral or physical symptoms of chronic diseases, leading to high staff turnover and disrupted care. Trained caregivers handle difficult symptoms with confidence and skill. The Ripple Effect: Stable, high-quality care leads to happy families. Happy families write powerful 5-star online reviews and passionately recommend your services to friends and neighbors, creating an organic, self-sustaining sales loop. Conclusion: Education as an Investment, Not an Expense In-depth chronic disease education for caregiving staff should never be viewed as a mere regulatory compliance box to check. It is a foundational business strategy. By investing in the clinical intellect of your frontline workforce, you feed your marketing engine with authentic, high-value content, arm your sales team with an undeniable competitive advantage, and build a brand reputation that commands premium pricing. In a crowded market, the most educated care team wins the deepest trust—and ultimately, the client. At Kenyon Homecare Consulting , we focus on high-quality home care, home health, and hospice services. In doing so, we provide in-depth chronic disease education on the conditions that affect our clients population the most. If you are interesting in development of a true competitive advantage, visit Kenyon's Chronic Disease University for your educational needs. Call us at 206-721-5091 or at gkenyon@kenyonhcc.com with any questions.
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