We can work on Care Coordinator Case Study

Scenario: David’s mother, Angie, is 84-years-old, legally blind, and has dementia. She recently
suffered a mini stroke, and the family was worried about in-home safety after she got discharged
from a rehab facility. David lives out of state and is flying to Arizona to be there with his parents
to help determine next steps. His father, John, has been feeling overwhelmed as the primary
caregiver. David’s parents have Medicare and Supplemental insurance and live in zipcode 85374.
They own the home they have lived in for 40+ years and want to ensure that they can remain
together. David is an employee who has access to Wellthy’s coordination services and you are
the assigned coordinator. David is overwhelmed and reaches out because he doesn’t know
where to start or how to plan for next steps.
Instructions: Using the ‘Presenting Findings to Customers Guide’ below and your own best
judgement, help David find the right fit nursing home(s) for his parents. Please include your
reasoning as to why you chose the ones you did over others, your final recommendation for
which facility to find to be the best fit, and top 3 questions you would have asked if you were
calling the location. Then, In a separate section, include bullets to outline what other tasks or
steps you would have taken prior to researching homes when David reached out to you sharing
the above scenario.
Send an email within 48 hours to David (let’s pretend David’s email address is
[email protected]) with the subject line: ‘A Home for Angie and John’ summarizing
your final recommendations. Spend no more than 1 hour doing the research. If you have any
questions about the facility that you can’t find the answer to over the internet, please don’t call
the facilities, but make up the answer to your questions yourself.
Presenting Findings to Customers Guide
Presenting findings can be a defining moment for the customer experience for some of our
most frequent tasks (Find In-Home Support, Find Living Facilities, Find Doctors).
Before starting to research, clearly define what things are required by the customer (e.g.,
must be covered by insurance) and what other things are important to them (e.g., as close
to my home as possible). These preferences should be present throughout your search.
A good presentation should be:
● Easy to understand
● Clearly point to what the best options are, based on the customer’s predefined
preferences
● Demonstrate that we did our duty in researching and are experts on the subject
1 Property of Wellthy, Inc. – for internal use only
● Show comparison in such a way that displays computer skills/knowledge
You can use this as a checklist before you send out your findings:
● Is the information easy to understand and visually pleasing?
● Does it clearly point out the best options?
● Are the customer’s preferences included in the research?
● Does this demonstrate we are experts and have researched accordingly?
Some best practices:
● Eliminate irrelevant information
● Use proper grammar
● Use formatting and colors to highlight important details, but be careful of
introducing too many colors or making the entire document bold
● To present comparisons, use a spreadsheet and chart
● Attach a PDF instead of sharing a Google/Excel/Word document (it looks more
professional and documents might change over time, while the PDF will store your
intent at that time)
● Reference your recommendations in a separate message, explaining the pros and
cons of each
● Mention briefly how many total findings you considered, so that the customer
knows you’ve done your research
● Try to fit your findings on one 8.5” x 11” piece of paper (horizontal or vertical) so the
customer does not have to flip through multiple pages and can print the sheet if
they would like

Sample Solution

Recent government statistics from Department for Education Statistical Release (2013) indicate that the attainment gap is narrowing between Level 2 achievement in English and Maths from 2010/11 and that in 2011/12. In 2011 22.4 % of pupils with any SEN achieved level 2 in both subjects whereas 69.2 % of those with no SEN, which is an attainment gap of 46.8 percentage points. In 2010/11, the equivalent statistics were 22.1% with SEN and 69.5% without SEN, a gap of 47.4 percentage points. Both statistics would suggest that inclusion of SEN students in mainstream schools is improving attainment, self-esteem and life chances. Therefore this would suggest that the implementation of the EA has had a positive impact on the inclusion of SEN and within that group, disabled students, improving their attainment What next for SEN provision in schools? The Lamb Inquiry was set up by the government in 2009 to investigate parental views of the SEN system and improvements that could be introduced. Parents and students were interviewed and were asked about their experiences of provision. According to Lamb (2009) the SEN system was in need of a radical overhaul, and the focus for SEN and disabled students had to have a greater emphasis on the outcomes and progression for these students after school. It also stated that there has to be a stronger voice for parents in order to build confidence in the system and that schools have to be more accountable through monitoring and reporting. Lamb (2009) states that a school cannot be a good school unless it caters properly for all children it is there to serve. The latest SEN initiative to be introduced is the Children and Families Bill which according to The Secretary of State for Education (2013 p3) ‘the Bill has a dual focus on vulnerable children a>

Is this question part of your Assignment?

We can help

Our aim is to help you get A+ grades on your Coursework.

We handle assignments in a multiplicity of subject areas including Admission Essays, General Essays, Case Studies, Coursework, Dissertations, Editing, Research Papers, and Research proposals

Header Button Label: Get Started NowGet Started Header Button Label: View writing samplesView writing samples