The AHA and Center to Advance Palliative Care this week announced a strategic partnership to develop and disseminate training and other resources to help health care providers expand access to palliative care and adopt a population health approach to improve care for patients with serious illness. The resources will align with value-based payment models and focus on patient identification; care pathways tailored to the needs of patients with serious illnesses; seamless care delivery across care settings; improved communication; and pain-and-symptom management training. 鈥淥ur partnership with CAPC and strategic use of our combined expertise, resources and influence will improve the overall care of people with serious illness by creating a more personalized approach to care, 鈥 said Jay Bhatt, D.O., AHA senior vice president and chief medical officer. 鈥淚t acknowledges the importance of people getting the right care, at the right time, in the right setting from the right caregiver.鈥

Related News Articles

Perspective
Public
One year ago, a nurse at Children鈥檚 Hospital Colorado went above and beyond in a way that a very young patient and her family will never forget. Kayla鈥
Headline
The deadline for health delivery organizations to apply for the AHA鈥檚 2026 Foster G. McGaw Prize is 1 p.m. ET May 6. The award honors organizations that鈥
Headline
Achieving operational and survey readiness on day one is an issue that many health care facilities professionals continue to grapple with, according to鈥
AHA Cyber Intel
While the rate of cyberattacks on hospitals has risen dramatically, the severity of the impacts has also grown exponentially. Let鈥檚 look at the state of cyber鈥
Headline
A study published March 31 by the National Institutes of Health found that adults living in rural areas have worse cardiovascular health than those in urban鈥
Headline
The AHA March 10 filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, urging the court to oppose a motion by鈥