This document is the strategic plan for the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) for fiscal years 2019-2023. It outlines APHIS's mission, core values, driving forces, goals, and objectives. The overarching goals are to 1) deliver efficient, effective, and responsive programs, 2) safeguard American agriculture, and 3) facilitate safe U.S. agricultural exports. Objectives include improving the customer experience through IT modernization, maintaining a high-performing workforce, reducing regulatory burdens, maximizing returns on investments, and leveraging workforce differences. The plan is intended to guide APHIS's work over the next five years to meet customer and public needs and expectations.
This document provides an overview of Synergetics' "Industry in Focus" series highlighting trends in the healthcare and life sciences industry and how Synergetics is positioned to help clients in this sector. It discusses the challenges facing third party administrators in healthcare, including balancing costs and provider reimbursement rates. It also identifies factors driving increasing healthcare costs and provides examples of ways Synergetics has helped healthcare clients improve efficiency and profitability through process improvements and technology optimization.
This document summarizes an activity-based costing system implementation project for a large European animal food producer. The system traces products through the production process to understand the full cost of each activity, process step, and product component. It provides visibility into production yields and losses from a financial perspective. Management can now make informed decisions on product profitability and identify areas for cost savings based on accurate, auditable cost data.
The Food Standards Agency strategic plan for 2015-2020 identifies its mission to protect public health and consumer interests in relation to food. The plan focuses on ensuring food is safe and authentic, gathering science and evidence, empowering consumers, and aligning business incentives with consumer interests. Key activities include using evidence-based policy, effective enforcement, transparency, and engaging stakeholders. The plan aims to leverage the agency's impact through developing capabilities in people, collaboration, and monitoring food system performance.
2 015
A N N U A L
R E P O R T
This year at Johnson & Johnson, we are proud
to celebrate 130 years of helping people
everywhere live longer, healthier and happier
lives. As I reflect on our heritage and consider
our future, I am optimistic and confident in the
long-term potential for our business.
We manage our business using a strategic
framework that begins with Our Credo. Written
over 70 years ago, it unites and inspires the
employees of Johnson & Johnson. It reminds
us that our first responsibility is to the patients,
customers and health care professionals who
use our products, and it compels us to deliver
on our responsibilities to our employees,
communities and shareholders.
Our strategic framework positions us well
to continue our leadership in the markets in
which we compete through a set of strategic
principles: we are broadly based in human
health care, our focus is on managing for the
long term, we operate under a decentralized
management approach, and we do all
this aligned with our values. Our Board of
Directors engages in a formal review of
our strategic plans, and provides regular
guidance to ensure our strategy will continue
creating better outcomes for the patients
and customers we serve, while also creating
long-term value for our shareholders.
OUR STRATEGIES ARE BASED ON
OUR BROAD AND DEEP KNOWLEDGE
OF THE HEALTH CARE LANDSCAPE
IN WHICH WE OPERATE.
For 130 years, our company has been
driving breakthrough innovation in health
care – from revolutionizing wound care in
the 1880s to developing cures, vaccines
and treatments for some of today’s most
pressing diseases in the world. We are acutely
aware of the need to evaluate our business
against the changing health care environment
and to challenge ourselves based on the
results we deliver. Consider some of the
changes we are facing in the future global
health care market:
WRITTEN OVER
70 YEARS AGO,
OUR CREDO
UNITES &
INSPIRES THE
EMPLOYEES
OF JOHNSON
& JOHNSON.
MARCH 2016
TO OUR
SHAREHOLDERS
ALEX GORSKY
Chairman, Board of Directors
and Chief Executive Officer
aging rapidly – and we know the elderly
consume about seven times the health
care resources as younger people.
developing nations – and we know that
those developing economies cannot grow
fast enough to meet the demand of nearly
two billion people who want and deserve
greater access to quality health care.
involved in their own health care decisions
– and we know we must deliver a holistic
approach to meet their needs and
expectations; integrating wellness solutions,
innovative new medicines and advanced
technologies.
At Johnson & Johnson, we believe the
most important contribution we can make
to the dynamic challenges we are facing is
innovation – innovation in products, services,
solutions and in everything we do. As I think
back on how far we’ve come, the ...
Scenario A specialty memory chip manufacturer is located in South.docxkenjordan97598
Here are three strategic goals that align with the vision and mission statements:
1. Improve quality of care by investing in advanced medical technology and equipment. This supports the mission of providing quality services and the vision of becoming the leading healthcare provider in the region.
2. Expand patient services to include primary care, dental, behavioral health and community outreach programs. This will help achieve the mission of educating the public and the vision of growing the facility over time.
3. Develop strategic partnerships with insurance companies and government organizations to increase patient volume and ensure financial sustainability. This supports both the mission of serving the local community and the vision of a larger, more profitable facility in the long run.
This document provides guidance on developing and using key performance indicators (KPIs) in the health sector. It discusses how KPIs can help health sector decision-makers track progress toward strategic goals, set performance standards and targets, measure improvements over time, and demonstrate results to stakeholders like the Ministry of Finance. The document emphasizes that KPIs should be linked to a sector's strategic framework and developed through strategic planning processes. It introduces the concept of a logic model to illustrate the logical linkages between problems, policies/measures, and goals. Developing the right KPIs involves aligning them with a sector's overarching strategic goals and objectives.
Ahead of the marcus evans ACO & Payer Leadership Summit 2024, Ruth Krystopolski discusses the technology needed to empower value-based care in a community.
cover sheetProject Analysis ByMatthew PankeyBBA in Finance2011-20simisterchristen
The document provides an analysis of Johnson & Johnson conducted by Matthew Pankey for a BBA in Finance course. It includes 12 analysis tools examining J&J's history, mission statement, remote environment, competitors, internal/external factors, strategies, financials, and SWOT. The tools utilize data from annual reports, news, and textbooks to assess J&J's performance and recommend improvements. Key findings include opportunities in economic growth, talent acquisition, and consumer awareness for healthcare, as well as threats from regulations, inflation, and COVID-19.
This document provides an overview of Synergetics' "Industry in Focus" series highlighting trends in the healthcare and life sciences industry and how Synergetics is positioned to help clients in this sector. It discusses the challenges facing third party administrators in healthcare, including balancing costs and provider reimbursement rates. It also identifies factors driving increasing healthcare costs and provides examples of ways Synergetics has helped healthcare clients improve efficiency and profitability through process improvements and technology optimization.
This document summarizes an activity-based costing system implementation project for a large European animal food producer. The system traces products through the production process to understand the full cost of each activity, process step, and product component. It provides visibility into production yields and losses from a financial perspective. Management can now make informed decisions on product profitability and identify areas for cost savings based on accurate, auditable cost data.
The Food Standards Agency strategic plan for 2015-2020 identifies its mission to protect public health and consumer interests in relation to food. The plan focuses on ensuring food is safe and authentic, gathering science and evidence, empowering consumers, and aligning business incentives with consumer interests. Key activities include using evidence-based policy, effective enforcement, transparency, and engaging stakeholders. The plan aims to leverage the agency's impact through developing capabilities in people, collaboration, and monitoring food system performance.
2 015
A N N U A L
R E P O R T
This year at Johnson & Johnson, we are proud
to celebrate 130 years of helping people
everywhere live longer, healthier and happier
lives. As I reflect on our heritage and consider
our future, I am optimistic and confident in the
long-term potential for our business.
We manage our business using a strategic
framework that begins with Our Credo. Written
over 70 years ago, it unites and inspires the
employees of Johnson & Johnson. It reminds
us that our first responsibility is to the patients,
customers and health care professionals who
use our products, and it compels us to deliver
on our responsibilities to our employees,
communities and shareholders.
Our strategic framework positions us well
to continue our leadership in the markets in
which we compete through a set of strategic
principles: we are broadly based in human
health care, our focus is on managing for the
long term, we operate under a decentralized
management approach, and we do all
this aligned with our values. Our Board of
Directors engages in a formal review of
our strategic plans, and provides regular
guidance to ensure our strategy will continue
creating better outcomes for the patients
and customers we serve, while also creating
long-term value for our shareholders.
OUR STRATEGIES ARE BASED ON
OUR BROAD AND DEEP KNOWLEDGE
OF THE HEALTH CARE LANDSCAPE
IN WHICH WE OPERATE.
For 130 years, our company has been
driving breakthrough innovation in health
care – from revolutionizing wound care in
the 1880s to developing cures, vaccines
and treatments for some of today’s most
pressing diseases in the world. We are acutely
aware of the need to evaluate our business
against the changing health care environment
and to challenge ourselves based on the
results we deliver. Consider some of the
changes we are facing in the future global
health care market:
WRITTEN OVER
70 YEARS AGO,
OUR CREDO
UNITES &
INSPIRES THE
EMPLOYEES
OF JOHNSON
& JOHNSON.
MARCH 2016
TO OUR
SHAREHOLDERS
ALEX GORSKY
Chairman, Board of Directors
and Chief Executive Officer
aging rapidly – and we know the elderly
consume about seven times the health
care resources as younger people.
developing nations – and we know that
those developing economies cannot grow
fast enough to meet the demand of nearly
two billion people who want and deserve
greater access to quality health care.
involved in their own health care decisions
– and we know we must deliver a holistic
approach to meet their needs and
expectations; integrating wellness solutions,
innovative new medicines and advanced
technologies.
At Johnson & Johnson, we believe the
most important contribution we can make
to the dynamic challenges we are facing is
innovation – innovation in products, services,
solutions and in everything we do. As I think
back on how far we’ve come, the ...
Scenario A specialty memory chip manufacturer is located in South.docxkenjordan97598
Here are three strategic goals that align with the vision and mission statements:
1. Improve quality of care by investing in advanced medical technology and equipment. This supports the mission of providing quality services and the vision of becoming the leading healthcare provider in the region.
2. Expand patient services to include primary care, dental, behavioral health and community outreach programs. This will help achieve the mission of educating the public and the vision of growing the facility over time.
3. Develop strategic partnerships with insurance companies and government organizations to increase patient volume and ensure financial sustainability. This supports both the mission of serving the local community and the vision of a larger, more profitable facility in the long run.
This document provides guidance on developing and using key performance indicators (KPIs) in the health sector. It discusses how KPIs can help health sector decision-makers track progress toward strategic goals, set performance standards and targets, measure improvements over time, and demonstrate results to stakeholders like the Ministry of Finance. The document emphasizes that KPIs should be linked to a sector's strategic framework and developed through strategic planning processes. It introduces the concept of a logic model to illustrate the logical linkages between problems, policies/measures, and goals. Developing the right KPIs involves aligning them with a sector's overarching strategic goals and objectives.
Ahead of the marcus evans ACO & Payer Leadership Summit 2024, Ruth Krystopolski discusses the technology needed to empower value-based care in a community.
cover sheetProject Analysis ByMatthew PankeyBBA in Finance2011-20simisterchristen
The document provides an analysis of Johnson & Johnson conducted by Matthew Pankey for a BBA in Finance course. It includes 12 analysis tools examining J&J's history, mission statement, remote environment, competitors, internal/external factors, strategies, financials, and SWOT. The tools utilize data from annual reports, news, and textbooks to assess J&J's performance and recommend improvements. Key findings include opportunities in economic growth, talent acquisition, and consumer awareness for healthcare, as well as threats from regulations, inflation, and COVID-19.
Evaluating and Improving A Compliance Program EncloseBetseyCalderon89
Evaluating and Improving A Compliance Program
Enclosed for reference is a sample compliance document developed in
2003 by a Task Force assigned by the Health Care Compliance Association.
It was developed as a resource for evaluating and improving a compliance
program for Health Care Executives and Compliance Officers.
The Society of Corporate Compliance & Ethics
HEALTH CARE
COMPLIANCE
ASSOCIATION
5780 Lincoln Drive · Suite 120 · Minneapolis, MN 55436 · 888/580-8373 · www.hcca-info.org
January 24, 2003
Dear HCCA Colleagues:
On behalf of the HCCA Board of Directors and the many volunteers from across the country who served on the
HCCA Compliance Performance Measurement Initiative Task Force and its Steering and Drafting Committees,
we are pleased to announce the release of the following document, “Evaluating and Improving a Compliance
Program, A Resource for Health care Board Members, Health care Executives and Compliance Officers.”
This resource is now available to all HCCA members and other interested parties on the public section of the
HCCA website at www.hcca-info.org.
This document is the product of an extensive collaborative process and reflects hundreds of volunteer hours of
research, meetings, drafting, collaborative discussions, decades of collective professional experience, as well as
the important feedback received from the HCCA membership through surveys, interactions at meetings and
finally, through comments received during a 45-day review and comment period.
We trust that this document will provide added value by identifying and sharing information and best practices
regarding the operation and evaluation of compliance programs. While principally developed for the benefit of
HCCA members, this reference is intended to be a useful guide to all health care compliance professionals.
Nevertheless, it is important to note that this document is not intended nor should it be used as a “cookbook” or
“list of standards.” One size certainly does not fit all. As a reference, you should use and tailor this information
to meet the specific needs of your organization and to better inform your board members, senior management and
executives.
This document will also serve as the foundation for the next steps in HCCA’s continued efforts to provide
practical tools to you, our members, to assess the performance of compliance programs within health care
organizations. Recognizing the complexity and variety of compliance issues within different health care industry
sectors, the HCCA Board has assigned the task of developing specific performance measurement tools for
different health care industry sectors to the HCCA Compliance Focus Groups (CFG’s), e.g., Health Systems CFG,
Home Health CFG, Pharmaceutical CFG, etc. The CFG’s will provide an appropriate and useful forum to attract
volunteers and their ideas to tailor and customize these tools to fit specific industry secto ...
USAID's Center for Innovation and Impact (CII) applies business-minded approaches to the development, introduction and scale-up of health interventions to accelerate impact against the world's most important health challenges.
Bellycare has established several core HR policies to govern its workforce, including policies around equal employment, employee classifications, compensation, time off, evaluations, and termination. The company uses an HRIS system to store employee data and generate reports for management, compliance, and planning purposes. Having formal, consistently applied HR policies in place from the start helps businesses avoid legal and morale issues that can arise from an ad hoc approach to personnel decisions.
Cover SheetProject Analysis ByMatthew PankeyBBA in Finance2011-20MerrileeDelvalle969
Cover SheetProject Analysis By:Matthew PankeyBBA in Finance2011-2021MGT 4810 W1-W2 Fall 2022
Executive SummaryExecutive Summary Johnson & Johnson is a multinational American company with headquarters in New Bunswick, New Jersey. Medical devices, pharmaceuticals, and consumer health are the three main business sectors of Johnson & Johnson, which was founded in 1886. J&J is a Fortune 500 firm with about 250 subsidiary businesses that operate in more than 60 countries and sell goods in more than 175 nations. To stand out from rivals, Johnson & Johnson relies on its products and innovation. With the help of this company analysis, students can examine every facet of Johnson & Johnson's operations as consultants. This pertinent data may be used to shed light on how J&J might enhance internal and external operations while enhancing its financial performance and stockholder value. The Strategic Management textbook and other trustworthy sources, such as Johnson & Johnson's annual reports, investor website, and news releases, were used to compile all of the information for this research. Through this capstone project, students can examine pertinent corporate finances and gain knowledge about the potential pitfalls of their chosen career pathways.I was able to get substantial Microsoft Excel knowledge with this assignment, which will help me as I begin to improve my career-related skills. Due to the significant study and analysis required to create each tool, I also had to learn good time management techniques. When examining a company's financials and annual reports to estimate its value, I also feel as though I learned knowledge.
Table of ContentsTable of ContentsTool 1:Historical AnalysisPage 4Tool 2:Mission Statement AnalysisPage 5Tool 3:Remote Environment AnalysisPage 7Tool 4:Competitive Profile MatrixPage 12Tool 5:Internal Factor EvaluationPage 14Tool 6:CohesionPage 17Tool 7:Generic StrategyPage 20Tool 8:Perceptual MappingPage 22Tool 9:GlobalizationPage 23Tool 10:Financial Ratios and BenchmarkingPage 25Tool 11:SWOTPage 30Tool 12:Financing Recommendations for SWOTPage 35
Tool 1Historical AnalysisPurpose: Identify which strategies have historically been successful and how they have affected revenue by relating recent strategic events inside the company to consumer health, medicines, medical devices, and overall revenues. Findings from this research will be used in a SWOT analysis to identify strengths and weaknesses. Data was taken from yearly reports by Johnson & Johnson.YearsGross RevenueConsumer HealthPharmaceuticalMedical Devices2011$82,584$14,053$45,572$22,9592012$82,059$13,898$42,198$25,9632013$81,581$13,853$40,734$26,9942014$76,450$13,602$36,256$26,5922015$71,890$13,307$33,464$25,1192016$70,074$13,507$31,430$25,1372017$74,331$14,496$32,313$27,5222018$71,312$14,697$28,125$28,4902019$67,224$14,447$25,351$27,4262020$65,030$14,883$24,368$25,7792021$93,775$14,635$52,080$27,060Recent Strategic Events2, 3March 2011: Acquires Crucell, a biopharmac ...
IHP 420 Ethical Theories Worksheet Guidelines and Rubric .docxalanrgibson41217
IHP 420 Ethical Theories Worksheet Guidelines and Rubric
Overview: When you are considering responses to healthcare situations, it is important to be able to quickly identify the underlying ethical and bioethical
theories driving a proposed solution. While completing the worksheet, consider the core elements of the theory that must be addressed in the solution.
Prompt: In this activity, you will utilize the main ethical and bioethical theories in solutions to a proposed scenario.
Part One: Propose a solution to the following scenario using each of the five ethical theories presented in this module. Explain how your solution aligns
with the major ideas within each theory.
Scenario: There is a pandemic of a contagious disease. In the United States, there is only enough of a vaccine to cover 70% of the population. How do you
determine who gets the vaccine?
Part Two: Consider the same scenarios, but explain what process you would need to add to your solution to protect the bioethics principles.
Rubric
Guidelines for Submission: Complete the Ethical Theories Worksheet using complete sentences. If you use resources, cite them according to APA formatting.
Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (85%) Needs Improvement (55%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Part One Meets “Proficient” criteria, and
explanation demonstrates
complex grasp of the theories
Explains a solution to the
scenario and applies the ethical
theories from the worksheet
Explains solutions to the
scenario but applies the
theories incorrectly or
incompletely
Does not provide explanation of
how ethical theories apply to
the provided scenario
50
Part Two Meets “Proficient” criteria, and
explanation demonstrates
complex grasp of the bioethics
principles
Explains a solution to the
scenario and applies the ethical
theories from the worksheet
Explains solutions to the
scenario but applies the
theories incorrectly or
incompletely
Does not provide explanation of
how ethical theories apply to
the provided scenario
45
Articulation of
Response
Submission is free of errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, and
organization and is presented in
a professional and easy-to-read
format
Submission has no major errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, or organization
Submission has major errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, or organization
that negatively impact
readability and articulation of
main ideas
Submission has critical errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, or organization
that prevent understanding of
ideas
5
Total 100%
http://snhu-media.snhu.edu/files/course_repository/undergraduate/ihp/ihp420/ihp420_ethical_theories_worksheet.docx
one vulcan, locally led
201 7 ANNUAL REPORT
from
our chairman
Dear Shareholders & Friends
The past year was one of solid performance
by our employees, as they worked together
to levera.
National Foods Limited is a Pakistani food manufacturing company with four industrial units that produces a variety of food products. The company was selected for an ERP implementation project due to its size, established processes in the food industry, and availability of information. To implement the ERP system, National Foods will need to align their business processes to the ERP software by filtering out unnecessary processes and practices to simplify tasks. Some challenges of ERP implementation include decision making, ensuring standard quality, adequate training, integration issues, and resistance to change. Benefits of ERP for National Foods include improved efficiency, standardization, scalability, reduced silos, and safe information access.
(iCHEFTeam A) (DeVry Inc. MGMT 600 November.docxjoyjonna282
(
iCHEF
Team A
) (
DeVry
Inc.
|
MGMT 600
|
November 24, 2015
)
Industry Review
iCHEF is a convenient service presented to our customer through a mobile APP. We offer an array of Appetizers, Entrees and Desserts. The industry we are embarking on is the Food Service and Catering industry.Examining the food service/ catering industry, we’ve learned that this industry is on the rise. It is an industry that is expected to expand over the next five years. This industry will continue to grow and define its niche by being innovative, offering international cuisines and beverages, and using sustainable locally sourced produce. The industry has received a boost from an improving economy, as consumer spending is expected to rise at an annualized rate of 2.6% during the five years to 2020. Households, which account for over 50.0% of industry demand, are expected to bolster their demand for catering services as consumer conditions improve. Unemployment is forecast to decline over the next five years, while disposable income is expected to moderately grow. As consumer conditions improve, time-poor consumers are also expected to prefer to use catering services, rather than attempt to do it themselves.
Over the next five years, consumers will continue to demand higher-quality food, better food presentation and a wider menu selection with healthier alternatives. Many customers will also begin to seek out caterers that use organic and locally sourced foods. Menus will need to more thoroughly describe items, by methods such as listing ingredients, where they came from and how they were prepared. These new demands may force some operators to increase their purchase expenses, or choose to vertically integrate by owning and operating their own farms. Consumers will also demand more value-added services, such as decorations, floral arrangements and entertainment. Overall, the number of industry enterprises is anticipated to increase 1.2% per year on average to 11,320 households and businesses.
Industry profitability is expected to strengthen and stable over the next five years in line with rising demands of the consumers. However, profit growth will be limited by strong internal and external competition and forecast rising purchasing costs. As competition rises, it will become even more important for operators to define their niche and find a way to differentiate themselves from competitors, whether through services offered or quality of service. Food costs are forecast to increase due to strong emerging market demand and volatile weather conditions. The trend towards serving more innovative, exotic food and using locally sourced and sustainable produce will also increase purchasing costs for caterers. Wage costs are also expected to increase by 2.0% per year on average over the next five years to reach $3.0 billion, as higher-paid chefs and consultants are brought on to provide more complex fare.
Looking ahead the food service/caterers industry is in the mat ...
The document introduces a new textbook on financial management strategies for healthcare organizations. It discusses the high costs of healthcare in the US without commensurate health outcomes. The textbook is intended for healthcare administrators, physicians and executives to help navigate the complex financial systems in healthcare. It covers topics such as cost accounting, revenue cycle management, health IT, mental health programs, auditing and benchmarking. The introduction praises the comprehensive coverage of the textbook and recommends it highly for teaching and as a reference guide.
This document discusses Optum winning the 2018 North American Population Health Management Company of the Year Award. It outlines the challenges in population health management, and how Optum addresses these challenges through its integrated approach leveraging advanced analytics, care coordination, quality reporting, and clinical programs. Optum provides superior capabilities in quality/clinical integration, risk stratification, provider network management, care coordination, and patient engagement to advance cost-effective population health management.
Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap draft version 1.0Ed Dodds
This document presents a draft nationwide interoperability roadmap with the goal of achieving a learning health system over 10 years. The roadmap identifies barriers to current interoperability and lays out a vision, principles, and critical actions for stakeholders. The near-term focus is enabling individuals, providers, and care teams to send, receive, find and use a common set of clinical data by 2017. This includes standardized elements to improve data matching and aggregation for issues like research, personalized medicine, and disparities. The roadmap provides a path from today's landscape to an expanded future state with more ubiquitous sharing of information beyond clinical records for person-centered care and a learning health system.
Health care interoperability roadmap released by HHS ONCDavid Sweigert
This document provides a draft nationwide interoperability roadmap with the goal of achieving an interoperable health IT system to support a broad scale learning health system by 2024. It lays out critical actions that need to be taken by public and private stakeholders in areas such as rules of engagement and governance, supportive business and regulatory environments, privacy and security, certification and testing, core technical standards and functions, and tracking progress. The roadmap was developed through collaboration with federal, state and private partners and is intended to be a living document that will continue to evolve based on input from stakeholders. It identifies priority actions that various stakeholders can commit to in order to advance the country towards the goal of nationwide health information interoperability.
Health Finance and Governance Project Final HFG Project
The Health Finance and Governance Project worked in over 40 countries from 2012-2018 to strengthen health systems. It had four main goals: 1) Improved financing for priority health services; 2) Strengthened health governance; 3) Improved country-owned health management systems; and 4) Improved measurement of health systems progress. Some key accomplishments included helping countries mobilize domestic health financing, reform purchasing strategies, and track resources to support universal health coverage initiatives. The project also provided technical assistance to sustain HIV/AIDS service financing.
This document discusses health care venture capital investments and opportunities. It outlines the goals of focusing on business models that lower costs and increase quality while aligning incentives for payers, providers and patients. Major challenges include lack of health care data and difficulty adopting new products if they don't benefit all stakeholders. Investment opportunities exist in care management, reducing re-hospitalization rates, earlier disease detection, reducing medical errors and the lack of consumerism in health care. The management team is a critical factor and their communication is important for mitigating risks.
Personiform is a social health record platform that allows patients to securely share health information with providers and caregivers. It aims to improve patient-provider communication and engagement by allowing patients to log symptoms and health concerns, and request evaluations from providers. Providers can then generate medical codes from the patient information to integrate with electronic medical records for billing and records. The platform seeks to address limitations of existing health IT and better engage patients in their care through an intuitive social media-like interface.
Start, Run and Manage a Super Speciality Hospital. India Healthcare Market Potential Opportunities for Market Entry
Hospital, an institution that is built, staffed, and equipped for the diagnosis of disease; for the treatment, both medical and surgical, of the sick and the injured; and for their housing during this process. The modern hospital also often serves as a centre for investigation and for teaching.
A speciality hospital is a hospital that is specialized in a certain area. Like cardiac conditions, orthopedic conditions, or any specialized category.
Benefits of Choosing a Specialty Hospital
• High-quality staff with focused experience
• Peer support from patients with similar injuries
• Specialized patient and family education and resources
• More options to participate in research studies
• Access to services not found in most rehabilitation centers
• Specialized long-term support
See more
https://goo.gl/pLWnMd
https://goo.gl/NtMHWo
Contact us:
Niir Project Consultancy Services
An ISO 9001:2015 Company
106-E, Kamla Nagar, Opp. Spark Mall,
New Delhi-110007, India.
Email: npcs.ei@gmail.com , info@entrepreneurindia.co
Tel: +91-11-23843955, 23845654, 23845886, 8800733955
Mobile: +91-9811043595
Website: www.entrepreneurindia.co , www.niir.org
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This document discusses how employee health impacts workplace productivity and costs. It notes that chronic diseases are rising globally, costing lives and economic productivity. While information technology has transformed many areas of life, healthcare has been slow to evolve. Poor health habits among employees are a top challenge for controlling healthcare costs. The document then introduces myHealthvalet as a digital platform that connects employees to healthcare providers to improve health outcomes and reduce absenteeism and costs for employers. By investing in employee health, companies save more money than they spend through lower healthcare costs and productivity losses.
Harken Health Services plans to launch a website called DrPrime.com that will connect concierge doctors and personalized healthcare services to patients. The business aims to address patients' demands for same-day treatment, quality time with doctors, and after-hours access, as well as doctors' desires for a steady revenue stream and limited patient numbers. The startup is seeking $300,000 in funding to develop the site and cover first year expenses. It will provide various healthcare concierge services to patients for annual fees between $1,000-$10,000 and help doctors transition practices to the concierge model.
MMLP3.2InstructionsIn LP01.1, LP02.1, and LP03.1 you were aske.docxraju957290
MMLP3.2Instructions
In LP01.1, LP02.1, and LP03.1 you were asked to prepare milestones for a business plan. An executive summary, while written last, is the first part of a business plan. This document is what the executives will read to determine if the business plan has merit and may determine whether or not they will read the entire business plan. The executive summary covers all the key points of the business plan and should be 650-1,000 words. Must use 3 scholarly sources and cite APA.
Here are some helpful sources that discuss what to include in your Executive Summary:
· Chron
· SBA
REFERENCE ONLY: Below is the LP1.1 information
Description of the Business
Wickham Hospital is a rural hospital that provides quality healthcare services to the local community. Our mission is to engage in the promotion of healthier lives by providing quality healthcare services. This is to be executed in a fiscally responsible way that promotes the social, physical, spiritual and psychological wellbeing of the community and patients it serves. Further, the hospital aims at serving all members of the community regardless of their gender, religion, race or age.
Among the services provided by the hospital include outpatient and inpatient services, emergency services, primary care, skilled nursing care, center for rehabilitation medicine, a lung cancer center and surgical services. Our main competitors are some hospitals established within the same community. Among these are Greenview Hospital, Jordan Memorial Hospital and Sloan Hospital. These hospitals offer outpatient and inpatient services as well as other services such as primary stroke services, rehabilitation for pediatric polio patients.
Recommendations to Stand out of the Competition
To stay on top of the competition, Wickham Hospital needs to invest and adapt to the most recent technology to ensure efficient delivery of quality medical services. Further, all healthcare personnel needs to undergo further training through platforms such as seminars and online educational forums. This will promote safe and efficient delivery of services to patients as they promote the quality of life within the community. Besides this, management needs to be keener with the appropriate allocation and deployment of resources to ensure that all areas are sufficiently covered (Enthoven, 2014).
How to Accommodate a Global Business Environment
The hospital currently serves the adjacent community and a few consumers from the outskirts. To broaden into the global business environment, a few strides should be taken. For instance, a website should be created describing the business and services offered. This way, international consumers will seek the business even when they come visiting within the local community. Further, the organization could seek for international investors whose partnership or involvement would attract international healthcare consumers towards the organization (Lunt & Mannion, 2014). The business ...
Running Head: SLP 2 1
SLP 2 4
SLP 2
DeMario J. Stackhouse
Trident University International
26 May 2019
Market Analysis
As noted in the earlier discussion, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will be located at Tampa Bay in Florida due to the current and future high demand for long-term care services in this state. Besides, the market for long-term care in this area is growing. It is not saturated since most health care organizations have not fully exploited this particular area. The demand is also increasing because of the presence of a high number of older adults and understaffing of nurses which raises the need for long-term care services. The currently available facilities like Woodbridge Care Center and Palm Terrace Assisted Living Facility & Adult Day Care are unable to meet the increasing demand in Tampa Bay and Florida State as a whole. Although some health care organizations that were initially not offering long-term care are now considering providing this service, the demand is still not adequately met.
Therefore, since the market is growing, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will integrate new approaches into the market as well as embrace the latest technology to differentiate from new competitors and become a significant market shareholder. Typically, the facility will adopt a differentiation marketing approach by distinguishing its services from rivals in the market (Kassem & Succar, 2017). It will offer high-quality, speedy, and accurate services that align with client demand. To achieve this, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will hire highly trained nurses and professionals who will ensure that customers receive services that meet or surpass their expectations. Going forward, the facility will also ensure that its services are accessible by opening other branches that are close to clients. It will also offer options for clients to either receive the services within the facility or in their homes. This approach will give the hospital an edge in the market because clients would enjoy receiving services at their comfort zones which might be less costly (Coulter et al., 2015). Additionally, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will also incorporate the latest technologies like efficient diagnostic equipment, EMR, and Big Data techniques that will ensure clients receive high-quality long-term care services. For instance, Big Data techniques will allow the facility to predict clients at risk of developing other diseases in the future, thus take appropriate early response.
Besides, the challenges of the marketplace that BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will be entering include underserved .
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Evaluating and Improving A Compliance Program EncloseBetseyCalderon89
Evaluating and Improving A Compliance Program
Enclosed for reference is a sample compliance document developed in
2003 by a Task Force assigned by the Health Care Compliance Association.
It was developed as a resource for evaluating and improving a compliance
program for Health Care Executives and Compliance Officers.
The Society of Corporate Compliance & Ethics
HEALTH CARE
COMPLIANCE
ASSOCIATION
5780 Lincoln Drive · Suite 120 · Minneapolis, MN 55436 · 888/580-8373 · www.hcca-info.org
January 24, 2003
Dear HCCA Colleagues:
On behalf of the HCCA Board of Directors and the many volunteers from across the country who served on the
HCCA Compliance Performance Measurement Initiative Task Force and its Steering and Drafting Committees,
we are pleased to announce the release of the following document, “Evaluating and Improving a Compliance
Program, A Resource for Health care Board Members, Health care Executives and Compliance Officers.”
This resource is now available to all HCCA members and other interested parties on the public section of the
HCCA website at www.hcca-info.org.
This document is the product of an extensive collaborative process and reflects hundreds of volunteer hours of
research, meetings, drafting, collaborative discussions, decades of collective professional experience, as well as
the important feedback received from the HCCA membership through surveys, interactions at meetings and
finally, through comments received during a 45-day review and comment period.
We trust that this document will provide added value by identifying and sharing information and best practices
regarding the operation and evaluation of compliance programs. While principally developed for the benefit of
HCCA members, this reference is intended to be a useful guide to all health care compliance professionals.
Nevertheless, it is important to note that this document is not intended nor should it be used as a “cookbook” or
“list of standards.” One size certainly does not fit all. As a reference, you should use and tailor this information
to meet the specific needs of your organization and to better inform your board members, senior management and
executives.
This document will also serve as the foundation for the next steps in HCCA’s continued efforts to provide
practical tools to you, our members, to assess the performance of compliance programs within health care
organizations. Recognizing the complexity and variety of compliance issues within different health care industry
sectors, the HCCA Board has assigned the task of developing specific performance measurement tools for
different health care industry sectors to the HCCA Compliance Focus Groups (CFG’s), e.g., Health Systems CFG,
Home Health CFG, Pharmaceutical CFG, etc. The CFG’s will provide an appropriate and useful forum to attract
volunteers and their ideas to tailor and customize these tools to fit specific industry secto ...
USAID's Center for Innovation and Impact (CII) applies business-minded approaches to the development, introduction and scale-up of health interventions to accelerate impact against the world's most important health challenges.
Bellycare has established several core HR policies to govern its workforce, including policies around equal employment, employee classifications, compensation, time off, evaluations, and termination. The company uses an HRIS system to store employee data and generate reports for management, compliance, and planning purposes. Having formal, consistently applied HR policies in place from the start helps businesses avoid legal and morale issues that can arise from an ad hoc approach to personnel decisions.
Cover SheetProject Analysis ByMatthew PankeyBBA in Finance2011-20MerrileeDelvalle969
Cover SheetProject Analysis By:Matthew PankeyBBA in Finance2011-2021MGT 4810 W1-W2 Fall 2022
Executive SummaryExecutive Summary Johnson & Johnson is a multinational American company with headquarters in New Bunswick, New Jersey. Medical devices, pharmaceuticals, and consumer health are the three main business sectors of Johnson & Johnson, which was founded in 1886. J&J is a Fortune 500 firm with about 250 subsidiary businesses that operate in more than 60 countries and sell goods in more than 175 nations. To stand out from rivals, Johnson & Johnson relies on its products and innovation. With the help of this company analysis, students can examine every facet of Johnson & Johnson's operations as consultants. This pertinent data may be used to shed light on how J&J might enhance internal and external operations while enhancing its financial performance and stockholder value. The Strategic Management textbook and other trustworthy sources, such as Johnson & Johnson's annual reports, investor website, and news releases, were used to compile all of the information for this research. Through this capstone project, students can examine pertinent corporate finances and gain knowledge about the potential pitfalls of their chosen career pathways.I was able to get substantial Microsoft Excel knowledge with this assignment, which will help me as I begin to improve my career-related skills. Due to the significant study and analysis required to create each tool, I also had to learn good time management techniques. When examining a company's financials and annual reports to estimate its value, I also feel as though I learned knowledge.
Table of ContentsTable of ContentsTool 1:Historical AnalysisPage 4Tool 2:Mission Statement AnalysisPage 5Tool 3:Remote Environment AnalysisPage 7Tool 4:Competitive Profile MatrixPage 12Tool 5:Internal Factor EvaluationPage 14Tool 6:CohesionPage 17Tool 7:Generic StrategyPage 20Tool 8:Perceptual MappingPage 22Tool 9:GlobalizationPage 23Tool 10:Financial Ratios and BenchmarkingPage 25Tool 11:SWOTPage 30Tool 12:Financing Recommendations for SWOTPage 35
Tool 1Historical AnalysisPurpose: Identify which strategies have historically been successful and how they have affected revenue by relating recent strategic events inside the company to consumer health, medicines, medical devices, and overall revenues. Findings from this research will be used in a SWOT analysis to identify strengths and weaknesses. Data was taken from yearly reports by Johnson & Johnson.YearsGross RevenueConsumer HealthPharmaceuticalMedical Devices2011$82,584$14,053$45,572$22,9592012$82,059$13,898$42,198$25,9632013$81,581$13,853$40,734$26,9942014$76,450$13,602$36,256$26,5922015$71,890$13,307$33,464$25,1192016$70,074$13,507$31,430$25,1372017$74,331$14,496$32,313$27,5222018$71,312$14,697$28,125$28,4902019$67,224$14,447$25,351$27,4262020$65,030$14,883$24,368$25,7792021$93,775$14,635$52,080$27,060Recent Strategic Events2, 3March 2011: Acquires Crucell, a biopharmac ...
IHP 420 Ethical Theories Worksheet Guidelines and Rubric .docxalanrgibson41217
IHP 420 Ethical Theories Worksheet Guidelines and Rubric
Overview: When you are considering responses to healthcare situations, it is important to be able to quickly identify the underlying ethical and bioethical
theories driving a proposed solution. While completing the worksheet, consider the core elements of the theory that must be addressed in the solution.
Prompt: In this activity, you will utilize the main ethical and bioethical theories in solutions to a proposed scenario.
Part One: Propose a solution to the following scenario using each of the five ethical theories presented in this module. Explain how your solution aligns
with the major ideas within each theory.
Scenario: There is a pandemic of a contagious disease. In the United States, there is only enough of a vaccine to cover 70% of the population. How do you
determine who gets the vaccine?
Part Two: Consider the same scenarios, but explain what process you would need to add to your solution to protect the bioethics principles.
Rubric
Guidelines for Submission: Complete the Ethical Theories Worksheet using complete sentences. If you use resources, cite them according to APA formatting.
Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (85%) Needs Improvement (55%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Part One Meets “Proficient” criteria, and
explanation demonstrates
complex grasp of the theories
Explains a solution to the
scenario and applies the ethical
theories from the worksheet
Explains solutions to the
scenario but applies the
theories incorrectly or
incompletely
Does not provide explanation of
how ethical theories apply to
the provided scenario
50
Part Two Meets “Proficient” criteria, and
explanation demonstrates
complex grasp of the bioethics
principles
Explains a solution to the
scenario and applies the ethical
theories from the worksheet
Explains solutions to the
scenario but applies the
theories incorrectly or
incompletely
Does not provide explanation of
how ethical theories apply to
the provided scenario
45
Articulation of
Response
Submission is free of errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, and
organization and is presented in
a professional and easy-to-read
format
Submission has no major errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, or organization
Submission has major errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, or organization
that negatively impact
readability and articulation of
main ideas
Submission has critical errors
related to citations, grammar,
spelling, syntax, or organization
that prevent understanding of
ideas
5
Total 100%
http://snhu-media.snhu.edu/files/course_repository/undergraduate/ihp/ihp420/ihp420_ethical_theories_worksheet.docx
one vulcan, locally led
201 7 ANNUAL REPORT
from
our chairman
Dear Shareholders & Friends
The past year was one of solid performance
by our employees, as they worked together
to levera.
National Foods Limited is a Pakistani food manufacturing company with four industrial units that produces a variety of food products. The company was selected for an ERP implementation project due to its size, established processes in the food industry, and availability of information. To implement the ERP system, National Foods will need to align their business processes to the ERP software by filtering out unnecessary processes and practices to simplify tasks. Some challenges of ERP implementation include decision making, ensuring standard quality, adequate training, integration issues, and resistance to change. Benefits of ERP for National Foods include improved efficiency, standardization, scalability, reduced silos, and safe information access.
(iCHEFTeam A) (DeVry Inc. MGMT 600 November.docxjoyjonna282
(
iCHEF
Team A
) (
DeVry
Inc.
|
MGMT 600
|
November 24, 2015
)
Industry Review
iCHEF is a convenient service presented to our customer through a mobile APP. We offer an array of Appetizers, Entrees and Desserts. The industry we are embarking on is the Food Service and Catering industry.Examining the food service/ catering industry, we’ve learned that this industry is on the rise. It is an industry that is expected to expand over the next five years. This industry will continue to grow and define its niche by being innovative, offering international cuisines and beverages, and using sustainable locally sourced produce. The industry has received a boost from an improving economy, as consumer spending is expected to rise at an annualized rate of 2.6% during the five years to 2020. Households, which account for over 50.0% of industry demand, are expected to bolster their demand for catering services as consumer conditions improve. Unemployment is forecast to decline over the next five years, while disposable income is expected to moderately grow. As consumer conditions improve, time-poor consumers are also expected to prefer to use catering services, rather than attempt to do it themselves.
Over the next five years, consumers will continue to demand higher-quality food, better food presentation and a wider menu selection with healthier alternatives. Many customers will also begin to seek out caterers that use organic and locally sourced foods. Menus will need to more thoroughly describe items, by methods such as listing ingredients, where they came from and how they were prepared. These new demands may force some operators to increase their purchase expenses, or choose to vertically integrate by owning and operating their own farms. Consumers will also demand more value-added services, such as decorations, floral arrangements and entertainment. Overall, the number of industry enterprises is anticipated to increase 1.2% per year on average to 11,320 households and businesses.
Industry profitability is expected to strengthen and stable over the next five years in line with rising demands of the consumers. However, profit growth will be limited by strong internal and external competition and forecast rising purchasing costs. As competition rises, it will become even more important for operators to define their niche and find a way to differentiate themselves from competitors, whether through services offered or quality of service. Food costs are forecast to increase due to strong emerging market demand and volatile weather conditions. The trend towards serving more innovative, exotic food and using locally sourced and sustainable produce will also increase purchasing costs for caterers. Wage costs are also expected to increase by 2.0% per year on average over the next five years to reach $3.0 billion, as higher-paid chefs and consultants are brought on to provide more complex fare.
Looking ahead the food service/caterers industry is in the mat ...
The document introduces a new textbook on financial management strategies for healthcare organizations. It discusses the high costs of healthcare in the US without commensurate health outcomes. The textbook is intended for healthcare administrators, physicians and executives to help navigate the complex financial systems in healthcare. It covers topics such as cost accounting, revenue cycle management, health IT, mental health programs, auditing and benchmarking. The introduction praises the comprehensive coverage of the textbook and recommends it highly for teaching and as a reference guide.
This document discusses Optum winning the 2018 North American Population Health Management Company of the Year Award. It outlines the challenges in population health management, and how Optum addresses these challenges through its integrated approach leveraging advanced analytics, care coordination, quality reporting, and clinical programs. Optum provides superior capabilities in quality/clinical integration, risk stratification, provider network management, care coordination, and patient engagement to advance cost-effective population health management.
Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap draft version 1.0Ed Dodds
This document presents a draft nationwide interoperability roadmap with the goal of achieving a learning health system over 10 years. The roadmap identifies barriers to current interoperability and lays out a vision, principles, and critical actions for stakeholders. The near-term focus is enabling individuals, providers, and care teams to send, receive, find and use a common set of clinical data by 2017. This includes standardized elements to improve data matching and aggregation for issues like research, personalized medicine, and disparities. The roadmap provides a path from today's landscape to an expanded future state with more ubiquitous sharing of information beyond clinical records for person-centered care and a learning health system.
Health care interoperability roadmap released by HHS ONCDavid Sweigert
This document provides a draft nationwide interoperability roadmap with the goal of achieving an interoperable health IT system to support a broad scale learning health system by 2024. It lays out critical actions that need to be taken by public and private stakeholders in areas such as rules of engagement and governance, supportive business and regulatory environments, privacy and security, certification and testing, core technical standards and functions, and tracking progress. The roadmap was developed through collaboration with federal, state and private partners and is intended to be a living document that will continue to evolve based on input from stakeholders. It identifies priority actions that various stakeholders can commit to in order to advance the country towards the goal of nationwide health information interoperability.
Health Finance and Governance Project Final HFG Project
The Health Finance and Governance Project worked in over 40 countries from 2012-2018 to strengthen health systems. It had four main goals: 1) Improved financing for priority health services; 2) Strengthened health governance; 3) Improved country-owned health management systems; and 4) Improved measurement of health systems progress. Some key accomplishments included helping countries mobilize domestic health financing, reform purchasing strategies, and track resources to support universal health coverage initiatives. The project also provided technical assistance to sustain HIV/AIDS service financing.
This document discusses health care venture capital investments and opportunities. It outlines the goals of focusing on business models that lower costs and increase quality while aligning incentives for payers, providers and patients. Major challenges include lack of health care data and difficulty adopting new products if they don't benefit all stakeholders. Investment opportunities exist in care management, reducing re-hospitalization rates, earlier disease detection, reducing medical errors and the lack of consumerism in health care. The management team is a critical factor and their communication is important for mitigating risks.
Personiform is a social health record platform that allows patients to securely share health information with providers and caregivers. It aims to improve patient-provider communication and engagement by allowing patients to log symptoms and health concerns, and request evaluations from providers. Providers can then generate medical codes from the patient information to integrate with electronic medical records for billing and records. The platform seeks to address limitations of existing health IT and better engage patients in their care through an intuitive social media-like interface.
Start, Run and Manage a Super Speciality Hospital. India Healthcare Market Potential Opportunities for Market Entry
Hospital, an institution that is built, staffed, and equipped for the diagnosis of disease; for the treatment, both medical and surgical, of the sick and the injured; and for their housing during this process. The modern hospital also often serves as a centre for investigation and for teaching.
A speciality hospital is a hospital that is specialized in a certain area. Like cardiac conditions, orthopedic conditions, or any specialized category.
Benefits of Choosing a Specialty Hospital
• High-quality staff with focused experience
• Peer support from patients with similar injuries
• Specialized patient and family education and resources
• More options to participate in research studies
• Access to services not found in most rehabilitation centers
• Specialized long-term support
See more
https://goo.gl/pLWnMd
https://goo.gl/NtMHWo
Contact us:
Niir Project Consultancy Services
An ISO 9001:2015 Company
106-E, Kamla Nagar, Opp. Spark Mall,
New Delhi-110007, India.
Email: npcs.ei@gmail.com , info@entrepreneurindia.co
Tel: +91-11-23843955, 23845654, 23845886, 8800733955
Mobile: +91-9811043595
Website: www.entrepreneurindia.co , www.niir.org
Tags
Super Speciality Hospital, Setting up a Super Specialty Hospital in India, Setting up a Hospital in India, Healthcare Project, Hospital Set up Cost, Hospital Set up Cost in India, Cost of Setting up a Small Hospital in India, Multi Speciality Hospital Project Report Pdf, Setting up of Super-Specialty / Multi-Specialty Hospitals, Business Plan for Hospital, Setting up a New Hospital in India, How to Start a Hospital Business? Health Sector in India, Project Report on Multispeciality Hospital, Project Report of Hospital for Bank Loan Pdf, Hospital Project Report in Excel, Hospital Project Report India, Project Report to Start a New Hospital, Multispeciality Hospital, Health Care Business, Starting a Healthcare Business, Healthcare Business Ideas, Setting up a Hospital, Healthcare Business Ideas in Medical Sector, Healthcare & Medical Business Ideas, Project Report on Super Speciality Hospital, Detailed Project Report on Super Speciality Hospital, Project Report on Super Speciality Hospital, Pre-Investment Feasibility Study on Super Speciality Hospital, Techno-Economic feasibility study on Super Speciality Hospital, Feasibility report on Super Speciality Hospital, Free Project Profile on Super Speciality Hospital, Project profile on Super Speciality Hospital, Download free project profile on Super Speciality Hospital, Business Plan for Hospital, How Does One Start a Hospital in India?, Set up Healthcare Centre, Want to Start Health Care Business?, Best Hospital in India, How to Start Hospital, Project Report on Setting up Hospital in India, Business Ideas for Start-ups in Healthcare Industry, Health Care Startups are Booming,
This document discusses how employee health impacts workplace productivity and costs. It notes that chronic diseases are rising globally, costing lives and economic productivity. While information technology has transformed many areas of life, healthcare has been slow to evolve. Poor health habits among employees are a top challenge for controlling healthcare costs. The document then introduces myHealthvalet as a digital platform that connects employees to healthcare providers to improve health outcomes and reduce absenteeism and costs for employers. By investing in employee health, companies save more money than they spend through lower healthcare costs and productivity losses.
Harken Health Services plans to launch a website called DrPrime.com that will connect concierge doctors and personalized healthcare services to patients. The business aims to address patients' demands for same-day treatment, quality time with doctors, and after-hours access, as well as doctors' desires for a steady revenue stream and limited patient numbers. The startup is seeking $300,000 in funding to develop the site and cover first year expenses. It will provide various healthcare concierge services to patients for annual fees between $1,000-$10,000 and help doctors transition practices to the concierge model.
MMLP3.2InstructionsIn LP01.1, LP02.1, and LP03.1 you were aske.docxraju957290
MMLP3.2Instructions
In LP01.1, LP02.1, and LP03.1 you were asked to prepare milestones for a business plan. An executive summary, while written last, is the first part of a business plan. This document is what the executives will read to determine if the business plan has merit and may determine whether or not they will read the entire business plan. The executive summary covers all the key points of the business plan and should be 650-1,000 words. Must use 3 scholarly sources and cite APA.
Here are some helpful sources that discuss what to include in your Executive Summary:
· Chron
· SBA
REFERENCE ONLY: Below is the LP1.1 information
Description of the Business
Wickham Hospital is a rural hospital that provides quality healthcare services to the local community. Our mission is to engage in the promotion of healthier lives by providing quality healthcare services. This is to be executed in a fiscally responsible way that promotes the social, physical, spiritual and psychological wellbeing of the community and patients it serves. Further, the hospital aims at serving all members of the community regardless of their gender, religion, race or age.
Among the services provided by the hospital include outpatient and inpatient services, emergency services, primary care, skilled nursing care, center for rehabilitation medicine, a lung cancer center and surgical services. Our main competitors are some hospitals established within the same community. Among these are Greenview Hospital, Jordan Memorial Hospital and Sloan Hospital. These hospitals offer outpatient and inpatient services as well as other services such as primary stroke services, rehabilitation for pediatric polio patients.
Recommendations to Stand out of the Competition
To stay on top of the competition, Wickham Hospital needs to invest and adapt to the most recent technology to ensure efficient delivery of quality medical services. Further, all healthcare personnel needs to undergo further training through platforms such as seminars and online educational forums. This will promote safe and efficient delivery of services to patients as they promote the quality of life within the community. Besides this, management needs to be keener with the appropriate allocation and deployment of resources to ensure that all areas are sufficiently covered (Enthoven, 2014).
How to Accommodate a Global Business Environment
The hospital currently serves the adjacent community and a few consumers from the outskirts. To broaden into the global business environment, a few strides should be taken. For instance, a website should be created describing the business and services offered. This way, international consumers will seek the business even when they come visiting within the local community. Further, the organization could seek for international investors whose partnership or involvement would attract international healthcare consumers towards the organization (Lunt & Mannion, 2014). The business ...
Running Head: SLP 2 1
SLP 2 4
SLP 2
DeMario J. Stackhouse
Trident University International
26 May 2019
Market Analysis
As noted in the earlier discussion, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will be located at Tampa Bay in Florida due to the current and future high demand for long-term care services in this state. Besides, the market for long-term care in this area is growing. It is not saturated since most health care organizations have not fully exploited this particular area. The demand is also increasing because of the presence of a high number of older adults and understaffing of nurses which raises the need for long-term care services. The currently available facilities like Woodbridge Care Center and Palm Terrace Assisted Living Facility & Adult Day Care are unable to meet the increasing demand in Tampa Bay and Florida State as a whole. Although some health care organizations that were initially not offering long-term care are now considering providing this service, the demand is still not adequately met.
Therefore, since the market is growing, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will integrate new approaches into the market as well as embrace the latest technology to differentiate from new competitors and become a significant market shareholder. Typically, the facility will adopt a differentiation marketing approach by distinguishing its services from rivals in the market (Kassem & Succar, 2017). It will offer high-quality, speedy, and accurate services that align with client demand. To achieve this, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will hire highly trained nurses and professionals who will ensure that customers receive services that meet or surpass their expectations. Going forward, the facility will also ensure that its services are accessible by opening other branches that are close to clients. It will also offer options for clients to either receive the services within the facility or in their homes. This approach will give the hospital an edge in the market because clients would enjoy receiving services at their comfort zones which might be less costly (Coulter et al., 2015). Additionally, BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will also incorporate the latest technologies like efficient diagnostic equipment, EMR, and Big Data techniques that will ensure clients receive high-quality long-term care services. For instance, Big Data techniques will allow the facility to predict clients at risk of developing other diseases in the future, thus take appropriate early response.
Besides, the challenges of the marketplace that BestCare Long-Term Care Facility will be entering include underserved .
Similar to Safeguarding American Agriculture. (20)
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Hybrid celebration of the World Oceans Day, hosted both virtually and in-pers...Christina Parmionova
If the world is numb to numbers, motivating momentum will require opening minds, igniting senses, and inspiring possibilities to protect our planet’s beating heart. We need to awaken new depths within our own
Food safety, prepare for the unexpected - So what can be done in order to be ready to address food safety, food Consumers, food producers and manufacturers, food transporters, food businesses, food retailers can ...
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
Mainstream bicycling into public transportation systems for sustainable devel...Christina Parmionova
The bicycle is an instrument of sustainable transportation and conveys a positive message to foster sustainable consumption and production, and has a positive impact on climate.
Celebrate bicycle as a simple, affordable, clean and environmentally fit sustainable means of transportation; The World Bicycle Day was declared by United Nations General Assembly in 2018, to be celebrated on 3rd June, globally.
Discussing the macro shifts and challenges for tomorrow's parents.Christina Parmionova
- What is The Future of Parenting.
- How brands can navigate complex parenting styles
- How AI can (maybe?) make parenting roles more equal
- How climate anxiety is shaping people’s decisions to have kids
- Tensions that will drive
change
Monitoring Health for the SDGs - Global Health Statistics 2024 - WHOChristina Parmionova
The 2024 World Health Statistics edition reviews more than 50 health-related indicators from the Sustainable Development Goals and WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work. It also highlights the findings from the Global health estimates 2021, notably the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on life expectancy and healthy life expectancy.
About Potato, The scientific name of the plant is Solanum tuberosum (L).Christina Parmionova
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5. 1
A Message from the Administrator
Our mission to protect the health and value of America’s agriculture and
natural resources is no simple task, and cannot be accomplished on our own.
Achieving this mission requires the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) to work collaboratively with other governmental agencies and
industry, and to consult regularly with partners and stakeholders regarding
the effectiveness of our programs. We cannot accomplish alone what we can
accomplish together.
With that in mind, I am pleased to present our Strategic Plan for fiscal years
2019 – 2023. This plan sets our course for safeguarding the health, welfare, and value of
American agriculture and natural resources over the next five years. We will accomplish the
plan’s goals by delivering our programs and services efficiently, effectively, with integrity, and a
strong focus on customer service.
APHIS takes the appropriate measures to protect agricultural health by preventing and
mitigating the spread of plant and animal pests and diseases, and to enable safe agricultural
trade to ensure the prosperity of U.S. producers and the growth of the economy. We will
improve the customer experience by modernizing and consolidating our information
technology infrastructure, as well as other structures and services throughout the agency. We
will seek innovative solutions to best serve the needs of our customers. We will streamline our
processes and reduce regulatory burdens. We will carefully and responsibly manage our
resources and use accurate and reliable data to make decisions and to maximize our return on
investments and deliver value to our customers.
APHIS will maintain a high performing workforce by maximizing employee performance and
providing safe work environments. We will keep employees engaged and empowered because
employees who are passionate about their work have a positive effect on the quality of the
agency’s products and services. We will also leverage the diversity of our workforce to create a
more inclusive and fair work environment.
In the coming years, this plan will guide our work to ensure our efforts meet the needs and
expectations of our customers and the American public. We will remain accountable to each
other and to the people who rely on our services. Together, we will meet the goals and
objectives set forth in this plan.
Kevin Shea, Administrator
USDA, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
6. 2
Mission
To safeguard the health, welfare and value of American agriculture and natural resources.
Core Values
The USDA’s Strategic Plan for fiscal years (FYs) 2019–2023 identifies the Department’s core
values. As part of the USDA, APHIS embraces the same values, thereby contributing to the
success of the Department as a whole.
The success of USDA depends on the following core values:
Honesty & Integrity – We expect and require complete honesty and integrity in all we do.
Commitment – We make commitments with care and live up to them.
Accountability – We own up to problems and are always responsive.
Reliability – We provide service to our customers on time, every time.
Responsible Stewardship – We guard, conserve, and preserve USDA resources the
taxpayers have entrusted to us.
Driving Forces
Agriculture and the global marketplace continue to evolve, and APHIS must progress and
change to keep pace. The driving forces below require that we take a critical look at how we
strategically conduct our activities to best meet our mission. While some of these driving forces
are predictable and have become established over time, other forces, such as the changing pest
and disease landscape are less predictable and present more uncertainties.
7. 3
A Closer Look at the Driving Forces
Delivering Services with a Customer Focus
Today, customers expect more transparent, accessible, and responsive services from the public
sector. While the public sector has made changes in recent years to improve the delivery of
services, more can be done. According to a recent survey conducted by the McKinsey Center for
Government, customers feel frustrated by cumbersome websites and processes, and dealing
with multiple parties before their needs are met. In addition to traditional customers, the public
sector must also be prepared to meet the needs of new and less traditional customers. For
example, the growth of nontraditional producers in recent years has required APHIS to expand
its services to cover additional species, and new production methods and practices. With this in
mind, we will seek out opportunities to engage with our customers so we can better
understand their needs and gather feedback on our services. This will include reaching out to
underserved communities, socially disadvantaged farmers, ranchers, and tribes. We will focus
on being more efficient and effective. We will base our decisions on robust and timely analysis
of data to better meet the needs of our customers. For a number of APHIS programs, our
customers and stakeholders may have differing viewpoints, and we value these differences.
Engaging partners, stakeholders, and customers including the regulated community with
differing viewpoints is important in managing the risks associated with program operations and
policymaking.
Global Demand for U.S. Agricultural Products
Expanding international marketing opportunities for U.S. farmers and exporters is crucial to
business and income growth across rural America. In fact, today the U.S. farmers export more
than 20 percent of what they produce, and support more than 1 million jobs in communities
across the country for ranchers, growers, truckers, brokers, dockworkers, and other agricultural
businesses. APHIS contributes to this robust export market by providing technical and scientific
expertise to animal and plant health issues, and by preventing and resolving barriers to U.S.
food and agricultural exports. This scientific and technical know-how is vital to the success of
those that negotiate, monitor, and enforce trade agreements. Without it, the task of retaining
or expanding foreign markets would be more challenging than it already is, given the
unpredictability of the trade arena. APHIS plays a crucial role in helping prevent or mitigate
market disruptions for U.S. producers and foreign consumers.
Ensuring Protection is at a Reasonable Cost
APHIS is dedicated to protecting the health, welfare, and value of American agriculture and
natural resources. At the same time, APHIS understands this protection should be at a
reasonable cost. With this understanding, APHIS is committed to easing regulatory burdens on
the American people. Easing regulatory burdens makes it easier to create jobs and promote
economic growth. Agriculture and commerce operations have changed over the years, and the
regulatory tools that worked in the past may not be the best tools to use today. We need to go
beyond regulations and seek out other means for safeguarding animal and plant health, and
animal welfare. We will continue to work closely with our partners, stakeholder, and customers
to explore alternatives to regulations. This may include employing outreach initiatives or
leveraging industry standards. We will look at flexible approaches to apply to existing
8. 4
regulations and identify older regulations that are outdated, unnecessary, ineffective, and no
longer supported by science or sound policy.
Rapid Advances in Science and Technology
Rapid advances in science and technology provide APHIS with opportunities to continually
change how we provide services to our customers. This includes adapting our current practices
and adopting new best practices. Communications and commerce occur electronically—hard-
copy forms are quickly becoming obsolete. Plant and animal sciences are changing quickly with
developments in the areas of genetic engineering, disease detection and veterinary biologics,
among others. Other developing technologies, including unmanned aerial systems (drones) are
increasingly utilized by the public and private sectors to increase efficiencies in surveys and
monitoring. Like USDA’s initiative to provide faster, friendlier and easier service to its
customers, APHIS too is committed to making it easier and faster for customers to find the
information they need. With an eye toward excellence, value, and the future, we are always
finding new ways to accomplish our work so that APHIS’ way of doing business reflects the way
agriculture and commerce operate today. We use more technology to ensure industry moves at
the speed of commerce and keeps up with demand for agricultural commodities. Our science
centers will lead the way by developing and delivering science-based knowledge and methods
to identify and analyze risks and mitigate threats. Along with traditional communication tools
such as publications and public service announcements, we also use new technologies to reach
our partners, stakeholders, and customers.
Changing Pest and Disease Landscape
Today, the landscape for pests and diseases is changing. Pest and disease events are more
frequent, more complex, and less predictable. These changes are occurring for many reasons,
including human population growth, urbanization, economic development, changes in land use,
increases in global travel and trade, and changing farming and production practices. These
global developments are contributing to the worldwide redistribution of pathogens, vectors,
and infected hosts. Examples of recent global emerging disease events include the Middle East
respiratory syndrome outbreak in 2012, the H7N9 avian influenza outbreak in China in 2013,
the Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus (PEDV) outbreak in the United States in 2014, the H5N2
avian influenza outbreak in the United States in 2015, and the Zika virus outbreak in 2016.
Many of these events involve zoonotic diseases with the potential to impact human health and
that requires new partnerships with experts in public health, wildlife, and the environment. It is
essential that APHIS adapts to this changing landscape by preventing the entry and spread of
these pests and diseases in the United States and by strengthening its early detection,
preparedness, and response capabilities. APHIS will employ an integrated systems-based One
Health approach, which focus on the interconnection between people, animals, plants and the
environment, to minimize the risk of pest and disease events, to protect the national food
supply.
9. 5
Goals and Objectives
To respond to these driving forces, APHIS needs to be faster and more agile to meet the needs
of our partners, stakeholders and customers. APHIS will constantly strive to improve and deliver
our services in a way that is less costly, faster, and more effective for American agriculture,
farmers and ranchers, and the public.
To accomplish our mission, our goals are to:
• Deliver efficient, effective, and responsive programs.
• Safeguard American agriculture.
• Facilitate safe U.S. agricultural exports.
These three strategic goals represent our overall priorities. They include 14 objectives that
comprise the agency’s major programmatic efforts and services. To support the objectives of
each goal, APHIS employs numerous proven tactics in the programs. The tactics in this plan
represent only a portion of APHIS activities and by no means embody all the important work
APHIS does to fulfill its mission.
Goal 1. Deliver efficient, effective, and responsive programs
APHIS delivers efficient, effective, and responsive programs, with integrity and a focus on
customer service. APHIS will improve the customer experience by modernizing and
consolidating IT systems and services, strengthening facility and property management, and
streamlining business practices and processes to better serve customers. APHIS will investigate
and incorporate big data tools to enhance research and statistical analyses, as well as support
future data systems investments to create efficiencies and enhance decision-making.
APHIS will also remove obstacles in its programs by reducing regulatory burdens. APHIS will
safeguard the health, welfare, and value of domestic agriculture and natural resources, but will
ensure this effort is at a reasonable costs to American producers. APHIS will also maximize the
return on taxpayer investments by conserving resources and being accountable for the
spending of these resources. To improve its program delivery, the agency will expand use of
performance data and program evaluations to drive its decisions. Information resulting from
these evaluations will help the agency to identify areas of improvement to improve the quality
of services providing by APHIS programs. Additionally, APHIS will embrace workforce
differences to better serve its customers. This includes holding managers accountable for
ensuring all customers receive equal access to programs, activities, and services delivered or
funded by APHIS, and treating employees fairly and equally in the workplace.
The agency will engage employees by listening to them, leveraging training and development
opportunities, fostering effective communications between managers and employees, and
offer work-life flexibilities so employees may perform at their highest levels while maintaining a
balanced life. We will create a safe and modern space for employees.
10. 6
Objective 1.1: Improve the customer experience by modernizing information technology
infrastructure, facilities, and streamlining the delivery of our services.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Support One USDA approach to consolidate information technology structures into one
organization.
• Develop a strategic framework for information technology that focuses on aligning
information technology investments with mission and business priorities; enabling
innovative business driven solutions; optimizing the use and value of information
technology; securing information technology, supporting data collection, storage, and
retrieving for decision-making purposes; and enabling information as a strategic asset.
• Transition to IT cloud services by closing APHIS data centers.
• Use innovative solutions for administrative projects such as strategic sourcing and
marketplace approaches.
• Expand electronic processing of export documentation, adding digital signature
capabilities, full electronic delivery and acceptance of documentation.
• Complete development and implementation of eFile, a system that will automate APHIS’
permitting processes along with other processes like certification, registration, and
licensing.
• Improve electronic sharing of information and data.
• Increase the number of National Animal Health Laboratory Network (NAHLN)
Laboratories that message test results and expand the number of diseases that can be
messaged.
• Complete implementation of electronic submissions for biologic companies and
diagnostic customers.
• Improve public search feature including for the location of accredited veterinarians.
Objective 1.2: Maintain a high performing workforce through employee engagement and
empowerment, and provide a safe workplace.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Invest in developing effective and talented managers, along with building fundamental
management practices that improve employee engagement, performance, recruitment,
retention and work life quality.
• Increase the value of engagement by encouraging management to focus on talent
production resulting from coaching and development that is based on people’s
strengths, placing them in positions to take advantage of these strengths, and giving
feedback that build on these strengths.
• Enhance the leadership skills of current APHIS leaders and develop a cadre of future
leaders.
• Improve APHIS leadership accountability by ensuring equal opportunity accountability
assessments are submitted timely, consistently, and accurately.
• Enhance employee satisfaction by communicating realistic expectations, providing
opportunities for professional development, both within APHIS and outside of the
Agency, and opportunities for career progression.
11. 7
• Increase the percentage of APHIS employees with Individual Development Plans and
Learning Contracts.
• Develop and monitor employee development to ensure both the organization and
employee are benefitting from learning opportunities.
• Encourage innovation from employees to enhance workplace environment and mission
delivery.
• Renew and enhance our commitment to safety and health. Provide a workplace with
zero tolerance for harassing, threatening, and violent behavior.
• Continue knowledge management initiatives to assist with succession planning.
• Enable leaders and managers to align workforce skills with mission needs, including
reskilling and redeploying exisiting workers.
Objective 1.3: Remove obstacles in APHIS programs by reducing regulatory burden and
streamlining processes.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Review and identify regulations not supported by current science and practices.
• Continue streamlining and deregulatory processes to reduce the burdens on
stakeholders to comply with regulations not supported by current science or practices.
• Reinstate an internal executive regulatory management group of executive leaders to
identify agency’s regulatory needs early and track them through approval and
publication.
• Continue to move forward with the VS laboratory approval consolidation initiative in
order to simplify the process for gaining laboratory approval.
• Continue to review and improve business line processes to ensure the delivery of the
services and products to customers and/or stakeholders is efficient, timely, and cost
effective.
Objective 1.4: Maximize the return on taxpayer investment through stewardship of resources
and focused program evaluations.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Prioritize the delivery of program services to customers, align agency staffing
accordingly, and right size the size of the agency’s permanent workforce.
• Deliver greater consistency and continuity to the review, approval, and operations of all
APHIS Federal Advisory Committees.
• Optimize use of hiring flexibilities for temporary and TERM employees to leverage
cooperator-provided funding.
• Enhance the agency’s use of performance data and program evaluation results to drive
decisions.
• Continue to reduce the footprint of leased and owned real property assets through
consolidations and co-locations.
• Increase cross-program coordination on the acquisition and use of APHIS fleet vehicles
to maximize use.
12. 8
• Identify and implement additional procurement opportunities suitable for strategic
sourcing within the agency and the Department.
• Seek opportunities to provide administrative support services through shared service
operations.
Objective 1.5: Leverage workforce differences to better serve the Agency’s customers.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Ensure employees understand the needs of all agency partners, stakeholders, and
customers.
• Focus on new strategies and allocate resources to expand the traditional stakeholder
base, and establish effective service delivery methods for groups that do not have
access to services and technology.
• Hold APHIS’ leaders, managers, supervisors and employees accountable for treating the
agency’s customers and employees in accordance with USDA’s and APHIS’ civil rights
policies and applicable laws.
• Ensure all customers equal access to programs, activities, and services delivered or
funded by USDA and APHIS.
• Provide a workplace that is free of discrimination.
• Enhance the diversity of the workforce through focused recruitment and retention
efforts.
• Use the alternative dispute resolution (ADR) process, whenever possible.
• Promote procurement with small businesses, small disadvantaged businesses, and
minority owned businesses.
• Enhance special emphasis programs to expand diversity awareness and to increase
employee understanding of minority, small, or disadvantaged customer needs.
Goal 2. Safeguard American agriculture
American agriculture faces many threats from foreign and domestic pests and diseases, which
have the potential to negatively impact animal and plant agricultural production, trade, and the
economy. Identifying these threats early enables APHIS to anticipate potential outbreaks and to
act appropriately to prevent entry and prolonged damage if there is an incursion. Because
these threats are ever-changing, APHIS adjusts it strategies for identifying these pests and
diseases and applying appropriate mitigation measures.
By working collaboratively with its stakeholders and partners, APHIS maintains the capacity and
capability to rapidly respond to an agricultural pest or disease outbreak. APHIS also actively
engages other Federal agencies, State, Tribal, local governments, and industry to advance their
emergency preparedness and response capabilities. If a pest or disease is established in the
country, APHIS works with its stakeholders and partners to eradicate the pest or disease, or
where eradication is not feasible, to manage the pest or disease, minimizing its impact to the
economy.
13. 9
APHIS also manages damage or other conflicts caused by wildlife, detects and controls wildlife
diseases, and protects natural resources. APHIS will continue to ensure the safety, purity, and
effectiveness of veterinary biologics and provide oversight of genetically engineered organisms.
APHIS also conducts diagnostic laboratory activities to support the agency’s veterinary disease
prevention, detection, control, and eradication programs, and provides technology
development to support plant protection programs. The agency will also conduct program
operations to ensure the humane care and treatment of vulnerable animals covered under the
Animal Welfare Act and the Horse Protection Act.
APHIS must balance its safeguarding efforts against increasing requests for market access by
international trading partners for agricultural products. The Agency makes trade safe by
examining disease and pest risks and inserting mitigation strategies into international
agreements and interstate movement protocols. This reduces the risk of unsafe agricultural
imported products entering the United States and negatively impacting U.S. agricultural
resources. Helping other countries under the Global Health Security Agenda build capacity for
early detection helps protect the U.S. agricultural enterprises.
Objective 2.1: Prevent damaging plant and animal pests and diseases from entering and
spreading in the United States to promote plant and animal health.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Monitor feral swine populations along the northern and southern borders with Canada
and Mexico respectively for selected feral swine diseases of concern to US pork
producers.
• Maintain the screwworm barrier at the Darien Gap of Panama.
• Maintain a sterile Medfly barrier in Guatemala preventing the northward movement
into Chiapas, Mexico and the Yucatan, including Belize.
• Produce and provide sterile Medfly pupae to support preventive release operations in
high-risk areas in Florida and California.
• Collaborate and work with states, foreign governments, and international partners to
reduce risk pathways; support disease and pest-free zones and animal and plant pest
and disease pathway analyses and risk assessments; identify sources of introductions
and determine mitigations to prevent new introductions; obtain timely information on
pests, diseases, trends and changing risk patterns; monitor and prevent the spread and
introduction of pests and diseases; and develop regional cooperation and awareness.
• Collaborate with Canada to monitor for raccoon rabies variant and prevent the re-
emergence of raccoon rabies along the broader landscape in Canada, monitor for canine
rabies along the Texas-Mexico border to prevent the re-emergence of canine rabies in
Texas, while continuing to monitor for the emergence of vampire bat rabies along the
southern US borders with Mexico.
• Provide technical expertise and leadership to global and regional animal and plant
health organizations in their efforts to support local, regional, and global pest and
disease control and eradication efforts.
14. 10
• Partner with other Federal agencies to fund, design, develop, and deliver animal and
plant pest and disease training to foreign counterparts and to leverage infrastructure
overseas and provide training and technical assistance on animal, plant and zoonotic
diseases.
• Engage in capacity building activities to promote efficient use of exporting countries’
Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) infrastructure, technical capacities, and inspection
processes to safeguard agricultural exports destined to the United States.
• Conduct evaluations of the animal health status of countries and regions in response to
their requests, completing risk assessments and regulatory recognition as appropriate.
Conduct reviews of countries and regions that have been previously granted animal
health status recognition.
• Conduct risk assessments for permits for imported veterinary biologics, thereby assuring
that risks of foreign animal disease threats are mitigated.
• Coordinate a formal comprehensive countermeasures program to include: updating and
maintaining a list of priority high-consequence diseases or pests; providing guidance on
research needs and reviewing proposals; and providing guidance on purchasing
(stocking) and on diagnostic preparedness priorities including surge capabilities.
• Partner with other reference laboratories around the world to advance collective
expertise in diagnostics, including partnering with Canada and Mexico to harmonize
diagnostic methods.
• Provide—through the National Veterinary Services Laboratories—national and
international leadership on diagnostic techniques, assays, and new technologies, serving
as the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) reference laboratory and as USDA’s
reference laboratory.
• Conduct disease surveillance to identify incursions of pests and diseases of concern,
evaluating and improving surveillance for the most significant foreign animal diseases.
• Work with Texas to maintain a permanent quarantine buffer preventing cattle fever
ticks from becoming established in the United States. Collaborate with Mexico to
support cattle fever tick free zone(s) in Mexico, reducing risks of introduction at land
border ports.
• Apply molecular diagnostic capabilities to plant pest and animal disease identification as
a means to achieve efficiencies, improve consistency, and increase the precision of
diagnostic services and associated quarantine or response decision-making.
• Manage inspections at Plant Inspection Stations (PIS) through Risk Based Sampling (RBS)
to reduce inspections of low-risk shipments and proportionally increase inspections of
higher-risk consignments.
• Develop the Regulatory Framework for Seed Health (ReFreSH) to prevent the
introduction of seed borne pests using a systems approach for imported seed.
• Streamline the importation of plant cuttings produced in approved offshore facilities to
expedite the entry of low-risk cuttings while refocusing APHIS inspectors on higher risk
imports.
• Address the threat of invasive pests and diseases associated with the international
movement of sea containers to mitigate pest risks associated with the sea container
pathway.
15. 11
• Strengthen the North American perimeter against pest threats from outside the region
to prevent the introduction of agricultural, forest, and other invasive pests.
• Prevent the sale of prohibited plant material via the internet or e-commerce.
• Address gaps identified in the U.S. Joint External Evaluation (JEE).
Objective 2.2: Manage plant and animal pests and diseases once established in the United
States to promote plant and animal health.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Work with the associated livestock industries to develop, implement, and enhance
rational, affordable biosecurity programs to protect the health, wellbeing, and economic
security of the livestock and poultry industries and the rural economies driven by those
industries.
• Understand antibiotic use in livestock, conduct surveillance of antibiotic drug
susceptibility of selected bacterial organisms, and monitor antimicrobial resistance in
animals over time.
• Strengthen partnerships to develop strategies to control and potentially eradicate
harmful plant and animal pests and diseases through effective and innovative
education, surveillance, and border control efforts.
• Collaborate with industry, Tribes, and States to develop approaches that take advantage
of best management and husbandry practices to minimize the damage and spread of
plant and animal diseases.
• Implement innovative strategies to control diseases through testing, identifying, and
removing infected and high-risk exposed animals without having to depopulate entire
herds.
• Implement the Emerging Animal Disease Preparedness and Response Plan.
• Fully implement Animal Disease Traceability (ADT) and make significant progress in
demonstrating and delivering value to producers for complying with the framework.
• Advance One Health goals by continuing to identify and work with relevant partners to
address zoonotic disease issues and incidents; finalize operating procedures for
conducting on-farm epidemiologic investigations; and continue to build and expand
upon university partnerships to leverage international networks.
• Implement the National List of Reportable Animal Diseases.
• Deploy mobile data collection tools and transfer capabilities for data retrieval to
optimize internal IT development resources to build stronger domestic pest
management and trade safety missions.
• Improve poultry and poultry products under the National Poultry Improvement Plan
(NPIP) by applying new technologies.
• Strengthen the efficiency and effectiveness of programs for pest detection, mitigation,
and wildlife damage assessments through the use of Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS)
and environmental DNA technologies.
• Train canine teams for early detection of pests and disease to more precisely target
plant management and eradication activities in domestic programs.
16. 12
Objective 2.3: Ensure effective emergency preparedness and response systems.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Partner with stakeholders and customers to evaluate response options and update
response plans, adjusting for changing agricultural production systems and societal
expectations (e.g., the potential for expanded use of vaccination as a response tool for
FMD).
• Develop emergency preparedness responses for pest and disease outbreaks that include
ensuring resources are available and personnel are trained.
• Assist industry in the design of secure food supply plans to ensure business continuity
during disease outbreaks.
• Develop and use models to enhance emergency preparedness and response.
• Build upon APHIS’ animal and plant health networks to deal with pest and disease
emergencies.
• Continue to expand capabilities of the National Animal Health Laboratory Network.
• Coordinate with stakeholders and other Federal agencies on all-hazards agriculture and
natural resources response support (Emergency Support Function #11 of the National
Response Framework). Use APHIS animal and plant health networks, capabilities, and
structures to support State, local, territorial, and Tribal governments as they assist with
animal and agricultural emergency management.
• Evaluate and improve preparedness for the most significant foreign animal diseases as
identified by stakeholders and partners.
• Expedite animal disease traceability by working with states to optimize their trace
exercise performance metrics to enhance rapid response to disease control.
• Enhance data collection, quality, and reporting systems for emergency response
through modernization of infrastructure, information technology, and integration.
• Design training and exercise plans to enhance the preparedness of APHIS and its
partners to respond to livestock and poultry health incidents, as well as other hazards
that include One Health and zoonotic disease preparedness and response trainings.
• Identify priorities and develop strategies around emergency preparedness and response
exercises and other training.
Objective 2.4: Manage conflicts caused by wildlife, detect and control wildlife diseases, and
protect agricultural and natural resources.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Develop and implement science-based, effective, and practical methods and new
technology for eliminating and managing wildlife damage and threats posed by diseases
to agricultural resources, livestock, property, human health and safety, and natural
resources. Emphasize the development of methods that present a low environmental
burden and a high degree of species-specificity.
• Expand feral swine damage management for agricultural, livestock, property, ecological,
and human health and safety purposes.
17. 13
• Provide Federal leadership to industry, organizations, and natural resource agencies for
an effective, ecologically sound, and socially responsible integrated wildlife damage
management program that is responsive to changes in agriculture, the livestock
industry, natural resource agencies, wildlife populations, and societal values.
• Advance One Health goals by strategically focusing on wildlife disease and invasive
species surveillance capacity and control on issues of greatest importance involving
wildlife.
• Expand and improve collaborative efforts to enhance public safety within the aviation
community through the implementation of science-based assistance by investigating
methods and addressing wildlife hazards that meet continuing demands for safe air
operations of civil and military partners, the aviation industry and travelling public.
• Enhance coordination and collaboration in research and management to prevent the
spread of key terrestrial rabies variants in wild carnivores while working toward
elimination of rabies in carnivores in North America.
• Provide outreach to State, Tribal, and international partners, and the general public
about APHIS’ role in reducing conflicts between humans and wildlife, detecting and
controlling wildlife diseases, and protecting natural resources.
Objective 2.5: Ensure the safety, purity, and effectiveness of veterinary biologics and protect
plant health by optimizing our oversight of genetically engineered (GE) organisms.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Modernize APHIS’ biotechnology regulatory framework to ensure the most effective,
science-based approach for regulating the products of biotechnology on the basis of
risks to plant health.
• Improve processes to produce greater predictability and more timely completion of
regulatory oversight.
• Improve compliance through rigorous inspection and compliance assistance programs.
• Pursue alternatives to rulemaking that optimize our oversight of GE organisms.
• Provide outreach to State, Tribal, and international partners, and the general public
about APHIS’ role regarding GE organisms.
• Streamline processes of evaluating, testing, and licensing veterinary biologics products
used to diagnose, prevent, and treat animal diseases to safely move important new
technology to the market faster.
• Explore new veterinary biologics licensing pathways and implement more efficient
methods of regulating current, low-risk veterinary biologics products (e.g., antibody
products) and other non-traditional products.
• Refine and enhance an electronic system for processing biologic licensing requests and
for notifying manufacturers when biologic serials are approved for the marketplace.
• Participate in the Coordinated Framework for Regulation of Biotechnology.
18. 14
Objective 2.6: Provide and coordinate timely diagnostic laboratory support and services.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Provide leadership and coordinate with other partners on diagnostic techniques, assays,
and new technologies including scientific computing to support greater use of genomics
and bioinformatics.
• Coordinate with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and other partners to
address timeliness of diagnostic capabilities for early detection of high consequence
diseases.
• Partner with the National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the American
Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians to enhance Federal, university, and
State laboratory resources in the National Animal Health Laboratory Network.
• Implement the APHIS National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF) workforce
development plan to ensure sufficient foreign animal disease diagnostic subject matter
expertise to establish VS operations at the NBAF, capture diagnostic institutional
knowledge, and successfully complete the transition of VS operations from the Plum
Island Animal Disease Center to the NBAF.
• Adhere to the principles of quality assurance and conform to the requirements of ISO
17025 for testing and calibration activities, ISO 17034 for reference material production,
ISO 17043 for proficiency test production, ISO 9001 for products and services, and any
other relevant ISO guides or requirements.
• Participate in the interagency consortium of laboratory networks to foster the exchange
of data and bioinformatics and facilitate disease detection and response.
Objective 2.7: Ensure the humane treatment of vulnerable covered animals.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Coordinate with the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) to assure adherence to animal
care guidelines to enhance and enable agriculture production research while meeting
public expectation for animal care.
• Combine appropriate inspection and enforcement activities with greater learning
opportunities to protect vulnerable animals.
• Review companion animal programs to assure we are effectively partnering with state
regulatory agencies.
• Expand the AWA-licensing exemptions for dealers and exhibitors whose size of business
is de minimis, through rulemaking.
• Revise the licensing regulations to better promote sustained compliance, reduce
licensing fees, and strengthen existing safeguards, through rulemaking.
• Complete a pilot project using the Business Process Improvement framework to
determine whether a blended use of announced and unannounced inspections
improves compliance and working relationships at regulated facilities.
• Ensure and maintain an effective emergency management point-of-contact program.
• Update selected content in the National Veterinary Accreditation Program’s training
materials.
19. 15
Goal 3. Facilitate safe U.S. agricultural exports
APHIS plays a vital role in facilitating the safe flow of agricultural trade. The agency strives to
ensure that U.S. producers and exporters can sell safe, wholesome food and agricultural
products around the world. Sales from these exports promote the U.S. economy and sustain
millions of well-paying jobs for Americans. APHIS' efforts include keeping U.S. agricultural
industries free from pests and diseases, certifying that the millions of U.S. agricultural and food
products shipped to markets abroad meet the importing countries' entry requirements,
partnering with other countries to develop international standards, removing trade barriers
through monitoring and enforcing existing trade agreements, and negotiating new trade
agreements that benefit the U.S. agricultural economy.
APHIS will continue to work with foreign countries that lack the capacity to conduct required
risk assessments and other activities needed to engage in agricultural trade to build animal and
plant health regulatory capacity. Helping other countries strengthen regulatory capacity allows
them to participate in safe agricultural trade and prevent the spread of pests and diseases
beyond their borders. Ultimately, these activities will help protect the United States from
foreign pests and diseases as well as potentially lead to new export opportunities in the future.
Objective 3.1: Create export opportunities for American producers.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Identify strategic opportunities for removing or reducing trade barriers that impact
market retention, access, and expansion of U.S. agricultural products.
• Work closely with the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture, industry
partners, and key international counterparts to better understand the changing profiles
of business and commerce and their relationship to SPS issues.
• Play an active role in supporting U.S. Government (USG) negotiations and renegotiations
of free trade agreements.
• Promote the development and worldwide implementation of science-based trade
standards to ensure a safe, fair, predictable trade system and a level playing field for
U.S. products abroad. This includes providing leadership and scientific expertise to OIE,
IPPC, and regional plant protection organizations to promote science-based standards
for animal and plant health and welfare.
• Provide technical assistance and support to emerging market countries on
implementing international standards.
• Provide technical assistance to foreign regulatory counterparts to improve their capacity
to implement scientifically sound regulations that affect U.S. exports.
• Provide outreach to State, Tribal, underserved communities and the general public
about APHIS’ role regarding expanding/participating in international trade.
20. 16
Objective 3.2: Ensure resolution of sanitary and phytosanitary issues and trade barriers.
Tactics to achieve the objective:
• Identify and prioritize resolution of plant and animal trade issues with all trading
partners.
• Play an active role in the USG delegation to the WTO-SPS Committee.
• Work with other Federal agencies (USTR, State Department, FSIS, and FAS) to develop
strategies to engage trading partners that continue to impose unjustified plant or animal
health-related restrictions.
• Engage trading partners in discussions and negotiations of forward-looking
regionalization agreements that can limit trade restrictions in the face of a significant
disease outbreak.
• Engage U.S. exporters and other countries to eliminate Avian Influenza (AI) barriers to
export markets by initiating animal health discussions.
• Work collaboratively with state and industry to address gaps in animal disease
traceability that impact trade.
• Fully deploy the service center concept for meeting animal and animal product
exporter’s certification needs, allowing for more timely and consistent service.
• Improve compliance of federal export and sanitary activities performed by accredited
veterinarians by designing effective and targeted education, outreach, and e-messaging
materials and standardizing and coordinating enforcement actions.
• Expand notification systems to accredited veterinarians who have allowed their
accreditation to expire to include SMS (text) messaging and telephone calling.
• Facilitate the export of veterinary biological products through the issuance of
Certificates of Licensing and Inspection.
• Demonstrate to trading partners that our regulations have the same results as Good
Manufacturing Practices (GMP) regulations by addressing “quality” in our regulations.
This will make it easier for trading partners to find specific GMP requirements to help
facilitate the export of biologics.
• Inspect and clear livestock, poultry, and germplasm at ports of entry consistent with
regulations.
• Advance the adoption and implementation of electronic certification (ePhyto) to make
certificate exchange fast, efficient, and fraud-resistant.
• Conduct technical meetings with trading partners to establish fair, practical, science-
based plant health requirements for commodity imports and exports.
21. 17
Appendices
Appendix A: Performance Measures
Actual Target
Performance Measure FY 2017 FY 2018 FY 2019
Goal 1
Number of APHIS data centers (1.1) 4 2 0
Percentage of employees with IDPs and/or Learning
Contracts (1.2)
32% 40% 47%
Number of permanent APHIS employees (1.2) 5,853 5,753 5,853
Number of formal process improvement projects
completed annually (1.3)
7 3 3
Number of deregulatory actions published (1.3) 11 10 15
Goal 2
Percent of incoming propagative plant material
consignments arriving at a plant inspection station cleared
using risk-based sampling protocol. (2.1)
N/A 20% 60%
Percent of high-risk target pests on the Cooperative
Agricultural Pest Survey (CAPS) Priority Pest List for which
surveys were conducted (2.1)
96% 93% 80%
Value of livestock, poultry, and specialty crops protected
by APHIS animal and health and specialty crop pest
programs (2.2)
$193
billion
$193
billion
$193
billion
Total elapsed time to conduct Traceability Performance
Measures (TPM). This is the sum of averaged elapsed times
to complete three TPM activities in participating states.
(2.2)
72 hours 70 hours 68 hours
Number of on-farm longitudinal visits to gather
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) use and resistance data
(2.2)
0 0 10
Number of hours it takes to mobilize resources once it is
determined that a Federal emergency response is needed
to manage an agricultural outbreak (2.3)
24 24 24
Number of states where feral swine populations were
reduced or eliminated (2.4)
1 1 1
Number of methods developed that reduce damage causes
by wildlife to agriculture, human safety, property, and
natural resources (2.4)
17 17 17
22. 18
Actual Target
Performance Measure FY 2017 FY 2018 FY 2019
Cumulative number of biotechnology products deregulated
by USDA and available to market (2.5)
127 128 129
Percent of field release sites in compliance with
biotechnology regulations designed to protect agriculture
from plant pests (2.5)
90% 90% 90%
Number of Animal Diagnostic Laboratories collaborating in
the development of laboratory network component for
antimicrobial susceptibility testing efforts (2.6)
31 35 38
Percent of licensees inspected and registrants in
substantial compliance of the Animal Welfare Act (2.7)
96% 96% 96%
Percent of facilities determined to be in substantial
compliance at the first announced inspection after
receiving a license (conducted 6 to 9 months later) (2.7)
95% 95% 95%
Goal 3
Value of retained, expanded, and new country access for
agricultural products (in billions) (3.1)
$2.6 $2.6 $2.6
Number of international and regional standards that have
been adopted or substantially progressed (3.1)
9 10 10
Number of international and regional initiatives that have
contributed to global harmonization
7 5 5
Number of shipments released (in foreign ports of entry)
as a result of APHIS intervention (3.2)
275 275 275
Number of ePhytos issued from trading partners (3.2) 5,731 4,772 10,000
Number of ePhytos received from trading partners (3.2) 6,092 3,967 10,000
Number of resolved SPS issues with foreign trading
partners to benefit U.S. export markets (3.2)
15 18 18
Number of technical meetings with NPPOs to meet
established, new, or modified entry requirements for U.S.
products (3.2)
10 8 6