Graduate Certificate in Long Term Care Management

The graduate certificate in Long Term Care is designed for healthcare or general business professionals. In the next 25 years, the US population is expected to include 82 million Americans over the age of 65, the vast majority of whom will require some type of Long-Term Care as they age. The need for skilled, thoughtful and strategic healthcare administrators specific to long term care is greater than ever before. This certificate combines the theoretical aspects of leadership with a focus on the practical components of day-to-day management in the specialty of long-term care. You will gain exposure to key concepts including ethical leadership and strategic management, environmental and regulatory policies that impact access and availability of long-term services and supports for adults with disabilities and disabled older adults, in addition to population health management. You will also have the opportunity to self-select pre-determined elective courses that reflect your individual interests and career goals but serve as a compliment to the credential and potential future master’s program pathway opportunities.

The Graduate Certificate in Long Term Care Management is a 12 credit certificate. All four courses will automatically transfer to the Masters in Healthcare Administration or Masters of Management and Organizational Leadership programs.

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Tuition and Fees

Classes start in January, March, May, and July. 

Curriculum (12 credits)

(3) Required Courses

Note: Every student must complete Long Term Care. Students can choose two more courses from the four identified required courses based on availability and progression preferences.

  • Long Term Care-MHA Elective-Required
  • Clinical Integration in Health Service Management-MHA Core
  • Ethical, Legal and Policy Issues in Healthcare Management-MHA Core
  • Operations and Value Based Strategies-MHA Core
  • Population Health Management for Healthcare Leaders-MHA Elective

(1) Elective Courses (must choose one and are based upon availability)

  • Leadership Through Self Awareness-MMOL Core
  • Leading and Organizing Teams-MMOL Core
  • Managerial Communications-MMOL Core
  • Leading Strategic Organizational Change-MMOL Core
  • Patient Access and Value Based Care-MHA Elective
Course Descriptions

This course provides a prescriptive and analytic overview of the history, economic matrix and current operation of the US healthcare industry and its impact on the evolution of healthcare in the U.S.  Emphasis will be placed on analysis of organizational components, health policy, healthcare delivery mechanisms, access to care, health services personnel, national demography, mortality and morbidity, political influence, and sociological forces that have and continue to shape healthcare as we know it. Students will identify, explore, analyze and compare current systems and identify opportunities for reform or fundamental restructuring.

This course covers the origin and evolution of health care marketing as it began in the 1950’s through today’s current environment.  Students will learn about the changing healthcare landscape, such as the shift from targeting an individual patient to focusing on an entire consumer population, as well as its impact on health care marketers in the 21st Century.   Students will learn the variety of touch-points that exist in today’s health care environment and how various forms of marketing communication channels, such as social media, play a part in the creation, development and maintenance of those relationships.   Patients are now viewed as consumers with greater ability than ever before to make their own decisions about how their health care will be delivered.  This has created many challenges as well as opportunities for health care marketers today that students will identify, explore and study.    Traditional marketing terms and concepts, such as segmentation, target marketing, marketing mix, market planning, and strategy development will be analyzed with specific application to various types of businesses within the health care industry.

Fundamental principles of healthcare finance; critical elements of the healthcare revenue cycle, with links to customer service and regulatory standards;  pricing and third party reimbursement principles; financial reporting requirements, and important norms for executing and recording of financial transactions; statement evaluation and viability assessment; capital planning, budgeting and variance analysis; cost allocation, mastery of spreadsheet skills for use in analytics and decision support.  Apply practical concepts of financial management and explore the interaction of financial, strategic, organizational policy and external information and other factors on decision making; discuss the impact of economic models for supply and resource management, labor productivity and efficiency measurement; integrated delivery systems and emerging payment models. 

This course is designed to identify, analyze and apply leadership concepts and disease management principles as employed in health care organizations; required to solve the most pressing operational problems found across departments within today’s complex health care institutions.  Students will learn about key operational issues and leadership techniques including effective approaches to communication, change and conflict management, quality improvement, monitoring and measurement, cultural competence, patient safety, organizational relationships, performance and performance metrics, power and group dynamics; case-based approach.

Health Information Systems and Informatics for Innovative Leaders (also called Health Information Systems or Healthcare Informatics in other academic milieus) is a survey course that provides an overview of healthcare information technology and its application in modern healthcare organizations. This course focuses on how healthcare organizations use information technology to organize and analyze health records to improve healthcare outcomes through efficient workflow, transaction processing and data analytics. Health Informatics deals with the resources, devices and methods to utilize acquisition, storage, retrieval, and computation of information in health and medicine.

Essential data analytics skill set that can be applied across the continuum of healthcare service and delivery; core functions of data analysis; visualization and presentation; data mining strategies; database management; modelling of trends and population health management applications; projects that integrate an understanding of health data and analytic strategies that are appropriate for making strategic choices in health policy and general healthcare delivery research and management within the Triple Aim framework.

This course designed to provide an overview of the quality measures in healthcare and the statistical and process improvement methods utilized to improve quality. This course focuses on the acquisition and application of skills necessary to identify the culture of the environment, the quality measure and problem identification, the Root Cause Analysis (RCA) tools, application of metrics and implementation plans that address and improve quality measures. Quality and performance improvement success in the healthcare organization is based on the ability to apply quality metrics to appropriate quality measures, determine the circumstances leading to the performance and to formulate a plan to improve the metrics. 

This course provides a constructive framework for healthcare organizations to gain competitive success through improved healthcare operations and a value-based focus. Emphasis is on attaining excellence by aligning business strategy with key competitive priorities of quality, cost, performance and flexibility. Effective management depends on structuring care processes to deliver the value proposition for emerging payment models that reward quality outcomes, cost efficiency, patient satisfaction and timely service.   Students will identify, explore, analyze and compare key components of business strategy planning, and how to manage operations and measure performance to successfully compete in value-based models and adapt to population health. 

The capstone course is a culminating experience in the MHA program. Students have the opportunity to apply techniques and learned methods to solve a healthcare administration problem and offer viable and thoughtful solutions. Students will address the problem or issue as a team and conduct a project partnering with a local healthcare organization. Additionally, students will have the opportunity to demonstrate and apply competencies learned throughout the MHA program.  

Electives

This course will provide an overview of the various types of services and housing options that are available to chronically ill, and frail older adult populations in the U.S. A focus of the course will be on the environment and regulatory policies that impact access and availability of long-term services and supports for adults with disabilities and disabled older adults. Consumer and provider perspectives will be defined particularly as they relate to quality of life issues in the community.

As healthcare continues to evolve, many organizations are changing their focus beyond individual patient care and moving toward managing the health of populations.  The continued evolvement of healthcare will require healthcare administrators to stay up to date of present-day and potential trends.  Population health focuses on improving the quality and effectiveness of care while controlling costs for a specific group of people.  This course will introduce concepts of population health and leadership, which may be applied to challenges faced within healthcare systems.  In addition, the course will cover basic principles of population health management that may assist with being a healthcare administrator to critically analyze healthcare leadership scenarios and develop effective, ethical approaches to leading individuals, teams, organizations, and communities.  Prominence will also be placed on methodologies used by project managers to sustain population health project teams through organizational challenges that usually take place at various stages of a project life cycle.  Furthermore, students will acquire competencies that will amplify their leadership qualities.  The class will be conducted via the DelVal Blackboard online platform for 15-weeks within a semester, with the use of various learning techniques, including individual and group exercises, reading assignments, and discussion posts on Blackboard.

This course will explore the framework of value-based care and its impact on consumers, providers, employers, and policy makers. Emphasis will be placed on the changing landscape of healthcare, including waste in the system, what solutions are currently available and implementing value-based programs. Challenges to accessing care and its impact on the healthcare system will be researched along with the role of patients in a value based, patient centric care model.