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Mercy Health Services - Iowa Corp

1000 4th Street Sw
Mason City, IA 50401
EIN: 311373080
Individual Facility Details: Siouxland Surgery Center
600 Sioux Point Road
Dakota Dunes, SD 57049
Bed count40Medicare provider number430089Member of the Council of Teaching HospitalsNOChildren's hospitalNO

Mercy Health Services - Iowa CorpDisplay data for year:

Community Benefit Spending- 2021
(as % of functional expenses, which all tax-exempt organizations report on Form 990 Schedule H)
6.92%
Spending by Community Benefit Category- 2021
(as % of total functional expenses)
* = CBI denoted preventative categories
Community Benefit Spending Compared to Functional Expenses, 2010-2021
Additional data

Community Benefit Expenditures: 2021

  • All tax-exempt organizations file a Form 990 with the IRS for every tax year. If the tax-exempt organization operates one or more hospital facilities during the tax year, the organization must attach a Schedule H to Form 990. On Part I of Schedule H, the organization records the expenditures it made during the tax year for various types of community benefits; 9 types are shown on this web tool. By default, this web tool presents community benefit expenditures as a percentage of the organization’s functional expenses, which it reports on Form 990, Part IX, Line 25, Column A. (The more commonly heard term, ‘total operating expenses’, which organizations report to CMS, is generally about 90% of the ‘functional expenses’). The user may change the default to see the dollar expenditures.

    • Operating expenses$ 966,049,004
      Total amount spent on community benefits
      as % of operating expenses
      $ 66,868,494
      6.92 %
  • Amount spent in the following IRS community benefit categories:
      • Financial Assistance at cost
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 6,784,753
        0.70 %
        Medicaid
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 42,671,455
        4.42 %
        Costs of other means-tested government programs
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 0
        0 %
        Health professions education
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 2,196,859
        0.23 %
        Subsidized health services
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 11,084,751
        1.15 %
        Research
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 1,075
        0.00 %
        Community health improvement services and community benefit operations*
        as % of operating expenses
        Note: these two community benefit categories are reported together on the Schedule H, part I, line 7e.
        $ 3,504,614
        0.36 %
        Cash and in-kind contributions for community benefit*
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 624,987
        0.06 %
        Community building*
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 20,691
        0.00 %
    • * = CBI denoted preventative categories
    • Community building activities details:
        • Did tax-exempt hospital report community building activities?YES
          Number of activities or programs (optional)9
          Physical improvements and housing0
          Economic development2
          Community support2
          Environmental improvements1
          Leadership development and training for community members0
          Coalition building1
          Community health improvement advocacy1
          Workforce development2
          Other0
          Persons served (optional)10,808
          Physical improvements and housing0
          Economic development7,130
          Community support680
          Environmental improvements97
          Leadership development and training for community members0
          Coalition building0
          Community health improvement advocacy2,726
          Workforce development175
          Other0
          Community building expense
          as % of operating expenses
          $ 20,691
          0.00 %
          Physical improvements and housing
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 0
          0 %
          Economic development
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 3,670
          17.74 %
          Community support
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 9,371
          45.29 %
          Environmental improvements
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 611
          2.95 %
          Leadership development and training for community members
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 0
          0 %
          Coalition building
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 80
          0.39 %
          Community health improvement advocacy
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 4,511
          21.80 %
          Workforce development
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 2,448
          11.83 %
          Other
          as % of community building expenses
          $ 0
          0 %
          Direct offsetting revenue$ 0
          Physical improvements and housing$ 0
          Economic development$ 0
          Community support$ 0
          Environmental improvements$ 0
          Leadership development and training for community members$ 0
          Coalition building$ 0
          Community health improvement advocacy$ 0
          Workforce development$ 0
          Other$ 0

    Other Useful Tax-exempt Hospital Information: 2021

    • In addition to community benefit and community building expenditures, the Schedule H worksheet includes sections on what percentage of bad debt can be attributable to patients eligible for financial assistance, and questions on the tax-exempt hospital's debt collection policy. When searching a specific tax-exempt hospital in this web tool, Section II provides information about bad debt and the financial assistance policy, and whether the state in which the tax-exempt hospital resides has expanded Medicaid coverage under the federal ACA.

      • Of the tax-exempt hospital’s overall operating expenses, amount reported as bad debt
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 18,098,216
        1.87 %
        Is the tax-exempt hospital considered a "sole community hospital" under the Medicare program?NO
    • Information about the tax-exempt hospital's Financial Assistance Policy and Debt Collection Policy

      The Financial Assistance Policy section of Schedule H has changed over the years. The questions listed below reflect the questions on the 2009-2011 Schedule H forms and the answers tax-exempt hospitals provided for those years. The Financial Assistance Policy requirements were changed under the ACA. In the future, as the Community Benefit Insight web site is populated with 2021 data and subsequent years, the web tool will also be updated to reflect the new wording and requirements. In the meantime, if you have any questions about this section, we encourage you to contact your tax-exempt hospital directly.

      • Does the organization have a written financial assistance (charity care) policy?YES
        Did the tax-exempt hospital rely upon Federal Poverty Guidelines (FPG) to determine when to provide free or discounted care for patients?YES
        Amount of the tax-exempt hospital’s bad debt (at cost) attributed to patients eligible under the organization’s financial assistance (charity care) policy
        as % of operating expenses
        $ 0
        0 %
    • Did the tax-exempt hospital, or an authorized third party, take any of the following collection activities before determining whether the patient was eligible for financial assistance:
      • Reported to credit agencyNot available
    • Under the ACA, states have the choice to expand Medicaid eligibility for their residents up to 138% of the federal poverty guidelines. The Medicaid expansion provision of the ACA did not go into effect until January 2014, so data in this web tool will not reflect each state's current Medicaid eligibility threshold. For up to date information, please visit the Terms and Glossary under the Resources tab.

      • After enactment of the ACA, has the state in which this tax-exempt hospital is located expanded Medicaid?NO
    • The federal poverty guidelines (FPG) are set by the government and used to determine eligibility for many federal financial assistance programs. Tax-exempt hospitals often use FPG guidelines in their Financial Assistance policies to determine which patients will qualify for free or discounted care.

      • If not, is the state's Medicaid threshold for working parents at or below 76% of the federal poverty guidelines?YES
    • In addition to the federal requirements, some states have laws stipulating community benefit requirements as a result of tax-exemption. The laws vary from state to state and may require the tax-exempt hospitals to submit community benefit reports. Data on this web tool captures whether or not a state had a mandatory community benefit reporting law as of 2011. For more information, please see Community Benefit State Law Profiles Comparison at The Hilltop Institute.

      • Does the state in which the tax-exempt hospital is located have a mandatory community benefit reporting statute?NO

    Community Health Needs Assessment Activities: 2021

    • The ACA requires all 501(c)(3) tax-exempt hospitals to conduct a Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA) every three years, starting with the hospital's tax year beginning after March 23, 2012. The 2011 Schedule H included an optional section of questions on the CHNA process. This web tool includes responses for those hospitals voluntary reporting this information. The web tool will be updated to reflect changes in these questions on the 2012 and subsequent Schedule H forms.

      • Did the tax-exempt hospital report that they had conducted a CHNA?YES
        Did the CHNA define the community served by the tax-exempt hospital?YES
        Did the CHNA consider input from individuals that represent the broad interests of the community served by the tax-exempt hospital?YES
        Did the tax-exempt hospital make the CHNA widely available (i.e. post online)?YES
        Did the tax-exempt hospital adopt an implementation strategy to address the community needs identified by the CHNA?YES

    Supplemental Information: 2021

    This section presents qualitative information submitted by the hospital, verbatim from the 990H record.
    • Statement of Program Service Accomplishments
      Description of the organization's program service accomplishments for each of its three largest program services, as measured by expenses. Section 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) organizations are required to report the amount of grants and allocations to others, the total expenses, and revenue, if any, for each program service reported.
    • 4A (Expenses $ 868838488 including grants of $ 1325646) (Revenue $ 843446096)
      MERCY HEALTH SERVICES-IOWA (MHS-IA) IS COMPRISED OF FOUR HOSPITAL DIVISIONS IN THE STATE OF IOWA THAT PROVIDED OVER 135,000 PATIENT DAYS OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES TO THEIR COMMUNITIES THROUGHOUT THE STATE OF IOWA AND SURROUNDING STATES.PLEASE VISIT SCHEDULE H AND OUR WEBSITE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT OUR SERVICES, RECOGNITIONS, AND AWARDS: WWW.MERCYONE.ORG
      Facility Information
      Schedule H (Form 990) Section C. Supplemental Information for Part V, Section B.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 3J: N/APART V, SECTION B, LINE 3E: MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE NORTH IOWA) INCLUDED IN ITS CHNA WRITTEN REPORT A PRIORITIZED LIST AND DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMUNITY'S SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS, WHICH WERE IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENTLY CONDUCTED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS WERE DEEMED SIGNIFICANT AND WERE PRIORITIZED THROUGH A COMMUNITY-INVOLVED SELECTION PROCESS: THE FOLLOWING ARE THE PRIORTIZED SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS THAT WERE IDENTIFIED:1. ACCESS TO CARE2. EARLY CHILDHOOD ISSUES3. HOUSING
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 3J: N/APART V, SECTION B, LINE 3E: MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE SIOUXLAND) INCLUDED IN ITS CHNA WRITTEN REPORT A PRIORITIZED LIST AND DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMUNITY'S SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS, WHICH WERE IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENTLY CONDUCTED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS WERE DEEMED SIGNIFICANT AND WERE PRIORITIZED THROUGH A COMMUNITY-INVOLVED SELECTION PROCESS: 1. PREVENTATIVE CARE2. SUBSTANCE MISUSE3. PHYSICAL HEALTH4. MENTAL HEALTH
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 3J: N/APART V, SECTION B, LINE 3E: MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE DUBUQUE) INCLUDED IN ITS CHNA WRITTEN REPORT A PRIORITIZED LIST AND DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMUNITY'S SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS, WHICH WERE IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENTLY CONDUCTED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS WERE DEEMED SIGNIFICANT AND WERE PRIORITIZED THROUGH A COMMUNITY-INVOLVED SELECTION PROCESS:1. ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE 2. OBESITY3. BRAIN HEALTH
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 3J: N/APART V, SECTION B, LINE 3E: THE DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL (DUNES) INCLUDED IN ITS CHNA WRITTEN REPORT A PRIORITIZED LIST AND DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMUNITY'S SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS, WHICH WERE IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENTLY CONDUCTED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS WERE DEEMED SIGNIFICANT AND WERE PRIORITIZED THROUGH A COMMUNITY-INVOLVED SELECTION PROCESS: 1. PREVENTATIVE CARE2. SUBSTANCE MISUSE3. PHYSICAL HEALTH4. MENTAL HEALTH
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 3J: N/APART V, SECTION B, LINE 3E: MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON) INCLUDED IN ITS CHNA WRITTEN REPORT A PRIORITIZED LIST AND DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMUNITY'S SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS, WHICH HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENTLY CONDUCTED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS WERE DEEMED SIGNIFICANT AND WERE PRIORITIZED THROUGH A COMMUNITY-INVOLVED SELECTION PROCESS:1. ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE2. AGING POPULATION3. EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES4. KNOWLEDGE OF HEALTH CARE RESOURCES/SERVICES AVAILABLE LOCALLY
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 3J: N/APART V, SECTION B, LINE 3E: MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE DYERSVILLE) INCLUDED IN ITS CHNA WRITTEN REPORT A PRIORITIZED LIST AND DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMUNITY'S SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS, WHICH WERE IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENTLY CONDUCTED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS WERE DEEMED SIGNIFICANT AND WERE PRIORITIZED THROUGH A COMMUNITY-INVOLVED SELECTION PROCESS:1. ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE 2. OBESITY3. BRAIN HEALTH
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 5: LOCAL COMMUNITY NEEDS ASSESSMENTS, STRATEGIC PLANS, AND REPORTS FROM THE PAST THREE YEARS WERE REVIEWED TO IDENTIFY COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS AND TO PROVIDE CONTEXT TO THE QUANTITATIVE DATA COLLECTED. ADDITIONALLY, COMMUNITY INFORMATION (QUALITATIVE DATA) WAS SOUGHT IN A VARIETY OF WAYS INCLUDING, SURVEYS, FOCUS GROUPS, MEETINGS, AND INTERVIEWS. THE QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DATA WAS GATHERED FROM OCTOBER 2019 TO NOVEMBER 2019. THE COMMUNITY PRIORITY SESSION INCLUDED PARTICIPANTS FROM UNITED WAY OF NORTH CENTRAL IOWA, IOWA TOTAL CARE HEALTH PLAN, ELDERBRIDGE AREA ON AGING, PRAIRIE RIDGE INTEGRATED BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE, DEPART OF HUMAN SERVICES, LUTHERAN SERVICES OF IOWA, MASON CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT, TURNING LEAF COUNSELING, HANCOCK COUNTY HEALTH SYSTEM, COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER OF MASON CITY, NORTH IOWA COMMUNITY ACTION ORGANIZATION, CHILD CARE RESOURCE & REFERRAL, CITIZEN AT LARGE, AMERIGROUP HEALTH PLAN, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, CRISIS INTERVENTION SERVICES, CERRO GORDO PUBLIC HEALTH, MASON CITY YOUTH TASK FORCE, FRIEND OF THE FAMILY, FAMILY WELCOME CENTERS NORTH IOWA CARES, AND PRIORITIZED SEVERAL HEALTH ISSUES AND OUTCOMES BY THE FOLLOWING FACTORS:1. SIGNIFICANT IMPACT: A HEALTH ISSUE IS IMPORTANT IN BOTH SCOPE (AFFECTS MANY PEOPLE WITHIN THE POPULATION) AND SCALE (HAS SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES FOR THOSE AFFECTED)2. BENCHMARK: NORTH IOWA LAGS COMPARED TO OTHER AREAS ON THIS HEALTH ISSUE AND/OR IS NOT ON TRACK TO ACHIEVE HEALTHY PEOPLE 2020 GOAL3. DISPARITIES IN HEALTH STATUS: A HEALTH ISSUE DISPROPORTIONATELY IMPACTS THE HEALTH STATUS OF ONE OR MORE SUBPOPULATIONS4. LINKS TO CHRONIC DISEASE: AN INDICATOR IS LINKED TO CHRONIC DISEASE AND RELATED HEALTH OUTCOMES. HIGH MORBIDITY/MORTALITY/DISABILITY/SUFFERING CONSIDERATION. ASKS: DOES THE ISSUE HAVE SERIOUS HEALTH CONSEQUENCES?5. POTENTIAL FOR CHANGE: LOCAL EFFORTS ARE LIKELY TO RESULT IN A MEANINGFUL IMPROVEMENT IN THE SCOPE AND/OR SEVERITY OF A HEALTH ISSUE6. PREVENTION OPPORTUNITY: AN INDICATOR REPRESENTS A SIGNIFICANT OPPORTUNITY TO IMPROVE HEALTH OUTCOMES USING PREVENTION-FOCUSED APPROACHESORGANIZATIONS CONTRIBUTING INPUT INTO THE CHNA INCLUDED REPRESENTATION OF MINORITY POPULATIONS, LOW-INCOME INDIVIDUALS, AND THOSE WHO ARE OTHERWISE UNDERSERVED IN OUR COMMUNITY. IN ADDITION TO THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT PARTICIPATED IN THE PRIORITY SESSION, OTHER ORGANIZATIONS PROVIDING INPUT INCLUDED: NORTH IOWA CHILDREN'S ALLIANCE CITIZEN, MARY SCHISSEL, WRIGHT COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, PALO ALTO COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, FLOYD COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, KOSSUTH COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, WINNEBAGO COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, CERRO GORDO COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE, PRIVATE CITIZEN, MASON CITY TRANSIT, THE SALVATION ARMY, NORTH IOWA CORRIDOR, HEALTHY HARVEST OF NORTH IOWA, COMMUNITY KITCHEN, EARLY CHILDHOOD, FARMERS / GROWERS, AND MINISTERIAL GROUP.
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 5: IN 2021, THE DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER, THE SIOUXLAND DISTRICT HEALTH DEPARTMENT, AND UNITYPOINT HEALTH - ST. LUKE'S PARTNERED TOGETHER TO COMPLETE THE THIRD JOINT CHNA TO DETERMINE THE COMMUNITY'S GREATEST HEALTH NEEDS AND TO COORDINATE EFFORTS TO IMPROVE POPULATION HEALTH OUTCOMES FOR THE SIOUXLAND AREA. THE YEAR-LONG PROCESS INCLUDED COLLABORATION OF REPRESENTATIVES FROM EACH ORGANIZATION, KNOWN AS THE CHNA PLANNING COMMITTEE, AS WELL AS ENGAGEMENT FROM THE COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT ARE LISTED ON LINE 6B. ALL OF THE MEDICALLY UNDERSERVED, LOW-INCOME, AND MINORITY POPULATIONS WERE REPRESENTED BY THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT SERVED THEM.BEGINNING IN EARLY 2021, PRIMARY AND SECONDARY INPUT WAS COLLECTED THROUGH A COMMUNITY MEETING OF FIFTY-TWO COMMUNITY PARTNERS, AS WELL AS THE FOLLOWING SOURCES: U.S CENSUS BUREAU WEBSITE, 2021 NATIONAL COUNTY HEALTH RANKINGS, 2020 IA VITAL STATISTICS, IOWA PUBLIC HEALTH TRACKING PORTAL, 2019 CARES YOUTH SURVEY, 2020 COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGIES DATA BOOKLET, LOCAL HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM DATA, POINT-IN-TIME COUNT FOR IOWA HOMELESS PROGRAMS, CDC 500 CITIES: LOCAL DATA FOR BETTER HEALTH WEBSITE, BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS, IOWA POISON CONTROL CENTER. THE DATA WAS ANALYZED BY THE CHNA PLANNING COMMITTEE. A COMMUNITY INPUT MEETING WAS HELD DURING THE SUMMER OF 2021, WHILE FINAL SUBMISSION OF THE CHNA OCCURRED IN 2022. A WRITTEN, COMMUNITY SURVEY WAS ALSO COMPLETED AND FOCUS GROUPS WERE HELD.THE JOINT CHNA LOOKED AT DATA FROM THE FOLLOWING SIX COUNTIES IN THE TRI-STATE SIOUXLAND AREA, AS EACH HOSPITAL SERVES A LARGER TERRITORY OUTSIDE OF JUST WOODBURY COUNTY:-UNION, SD-DAKOTA, DIXON, AND THURSTON, NE-PLYMOUTH AND WOODBURY, IA
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER
      "PART V, SECTION B, LINE 5: FOR THE PREVIOUS THREE COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT (CHNA) CYCLES, MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER JOINED THE DUBUQUE COUNTY COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT HEALTH IMPROVEMENT PLAN (CHNA-HIP) COALITION. THIS COALITION ASSURED BROAD INVOLVEMENT FROM MANY KEY ORGANIZATIONS ACROSS OUR SERVICE AREA. HOWEVER, DUE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, THE COALITION FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2021 CYCLE WAS COMPRISED PRIMARILY OF MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER, MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER, UNITY POINT FINLEY HOSPITAL, AND HILLCREST FAMILY SERVICES AS CITY OF DUBUQUE AND DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT REQUESTED, AND WERE GRANTED, EXTENSIONS TO COMPLETE THEIR CHNA PROCESS. WHILE PANDEMIC SPECIFIC DEMANDS IMPACTED CAPACITY FOR CITY AND COUNTY INVOLVEMENT IN THE COALITION, BOTH CITY OF DUBUQUE AND DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT DID PROVIDE INPUT FOR THIS CHNA SURVEY AND PLANNING, AS WELL AS INCLUDED THE CHNA SURVEY ON SAID WEBSITES TO ASSIST IN DISSEMINATION OF SURVEYS, ESPECIALLY TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS. MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER PARTICIPATED IN ALL ASPECTS OF STEERING, COORDINATING AND COMPLETING THE CURRENT PROCESS. THE STEERING COMMITTEE COLLECTED INFORMATION FROM PRIMARY AND SECONDARY DATA SOURCES. DATA WAS COLLECTED THROUGH A COMMUNITY INPUT SURVEY IN DUBUQUE COUNTY, ADMINISTERED BETWEEN NOVEMBER 17, 2020 AND JANUARY 4, 2021. THE SURVEY WAS OFFERED ONLINE VIA ""SURVEY MONKEY AND WAS AVAILABLE IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH LANGUAGES. PAPER COPIES OF THE SURVEY WERE ALSO AVAILABLE FOR THOSE WITHOUT COMPUTER ACCESS. THE STEERING COMMITTEE DEVELOPED A COMMUNICATIONS PLAN TO DISSEMINATE IN THE COMMUNITY AND ULTIMATELY, 1,355 COMPLETED RESPONSES WERE COLLECTED, AN INCREASE IN RESPONSE RATE FROM THE PREVIOUS CYCLE. THE STEERING COMMITTEE SOUGHT AND CONSIDERED THE NEEDS, INPUT, AND CONCERNS OF UNDERREPRESENTED PERSONS AND POPULATIONS THROUGHOUT THIS PROCESS, INCLUDING, THOSE WHO ARE MEDICALLY UNDERSERVED, IN POVERTY; AND/OR FROM MINORITY POPULATIONS. IN ADDITION, REPRESENTATIVES FROM VARIOUS AGENCIES WERE ABLE TO REPRESENT THE UNIQUE NEEDS OF THE POPULATIONS THEY SERVE WITH SPECIFIC EMPHASIS ON THOSE WHO ARE UNDERSERVED. THE STEERING COMMITTEE REVIEWED REPORTED DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION OF THOSE WHO COMPLETED THE SURVEY AND FOUND THAT DISTRIBUTION BY ETHNICITY, AGE, INCOME AND ZIP CODE WERE CONSISTENT WITH THE COMMUNITY'S DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE. THE CHNA PROCESS INCLUDED GATHERING BOTH QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE DATA. THE STEERING COMMITTEE THEN REVIEWED AND COMPARED THE SURVEY RESULTS TO THE COLLECTED DATA. THE RESULTS AND DATA WERE CONSISTENT WITH EACH OTHER, VALIDATING BOTH FINDINGS. AFTER THE TOP 13 NEEDS WERE IDENTIFIED, THEY WERE PRESENTED TO THE STEERING COMMITTEE. THE STEERING COMMITTEE PRIORITIZED THE TOP HEALTH NEEDS BASED ON A NEED DIFFERENTIAL AND ON THEIR AREA OF EXPERTISE AND KNOWLEDGE OF THE COMMUNITY. THE STEERING COMMITTEE WAS INSTRUMENTAL IN IDENTIFYING THE PRIORITY AREAS SINCE THIS IS THE GROUP THAT COLLECTIVELY CAN HELP ADDRESS THE NEEDS WITH THE MAXIMUM COMMUNITY IMPACT. THE STEERING COMMITTEE FELT IT WAS BEST TO BUNDLE AREAS OF CONCERN AND ADDRESS A SMALLER NUMBER OF AREAS FOCUSING ON QUALITY AND IMMINENT PRIORITY IN PANDEMIC AND PANDEMIC RECOVERY VERSUS QUANTITY. THE TOP THREE NEEDS, BASED ON NEED DIFFERENTIAL, WERE IDENTIFIED BY THE STEERING COMMITTEE. COMMUNITY MEMBERS, EXPERTS, AND LEADERS FROM ACROSS THE COMMUNITY WERE THEN INVITED TO PARTICIPATE ON THE THREE PRIORITY TASKFORCES. EACH TASKFORCE REVIEWED THE DATA, CONDUCTED A SWOT ANALYSIS, AND MADE RECOMMENDATIONS TO THE STEERING COMMITTEE REGARDING STRATEGY FOR OUR HEALTH IMPROVEMENT PLANS. STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS PROVIDING INPUT INCLUDED:MALISSA SPRENGER, MICHELLE ARENSDORF, GWEN HALL DRISCOLL, (MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER & MERCYONE DYERSVILLE) CAROL CROSS (UNITY POINT FINLEY HOSPITAL)STACEY KILLIAN (UNITY POINT FINLEY HOSPITAL, VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION)JANAE SCHMITT, MARIAH SCHRACK (HILLCREST FAMILY SERVICES)PATRICE LAMBERT (DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT) -ADVISORYMARY ROSE CORRIGAN (CITY OF DUBUQUE) -ADVISORY"
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 5: IN 2021, THE DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER, THE SIOUXLAND DISTRICT HEALTH DEPARTMENT, AND UNITYPOINT HEALTH - ST. LUKE'S PARTNERED TOGETHER TO COMPLETE THE THIRD JOINT CHNA TO DETERMINE THE COMMUNITY'S GREATEST HEALTH NEEDS AND TO COORDINATE EFFORTS TO IMPROVE POPULATION HEALTH OUTCOMES FOR THE SIOUXLAND AREA. THE YEAR-LONG PROCESS INCLUDED COLLABORATION OF REPRESENTATIVES FROM EACH ORGANIZATION, KNOWN AS THE CHNA PLANNING COMMITTEE, AS WELL AS ENGAGEMENT FROM THE COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT ARE LISTED ON LINE 6B. ALL OF THE MEDICALLY UNDERSERVED, LOW-INCOME, AND MINORITY POPULATIONS WERE REPRESENTED BY THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT SERVED THEM.BEGINNING IN EARLY 2021, PRIMARY AND SECONDARY INPUT WAS COLLECTED THROUGH A COMMUNITY MEETING OF FIFTY-TWO COMMUNITY PARTNERS, AS WELL AS THE FOLLOWING SOURCES: U.S CENSUS BUREAU WEBSITE, 2021 NATIONAL COUNTY HEALTH RANKINGS, 2020 IA VITAL STATISTICS, IOWA PUBLIC HEALTH TRACKING PORTAL, 2019 CARES YOUTH SURVEY, 2020 COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGIES DATA BOOKLET, LOCAL HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM DATA, POINT-IN-TIME COUNT FOR IOWA HOMELESS PROGRAMS, CDC 500 CITIES: LOCAL DATA FOR BETTER HEALTH WEBSITE, BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS, IOWA POISON CONTROL CENTER. THE DATA WAS ANALYZED BY THE CHNA PLANNING COMMITTEE. A COMMUNITY INPUT MEETING WAS HELD DURING THE SUMMER OF 2021, WHILE FINAL SUBMISSION OF THE CHNA OCCURRED IN 2022. A WRITTEN, COMMUNITY SURVEY WAS ALSO COMPLETED AND FOCUS GROUPS WERE HELD.THE JOINT CHNA LOOKED AT DATA FROM THE FOLLOWING SIX COUNTIES IN THE TRI-STATE SIOUXLAND AREA, AS EACH HOSPITAL SERVES A LARGER TERRITORY OUTSIDE OF JUST WOODBURY COUNTY:-UNION, SD-DAKOTA, DIXON, AND THURSTON, NE-PLYMOUTH AND WOODBURY, IA
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 5: MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON INITIATED THE ASSESSMENT PROCESS FOR THE 2022 CHNA, ALONG WITH A PLANNING TEAM CONSISTING OF REPRESENTATIVES FROM HOSPITAL GOVERNANCE, LEADERSHIP AND MEDICAL STAFF, AREA EMPLOYERS, SCHOOL DISTRICTS, AND AREA HEALTH PROFESSIONALS. BETWEEN SEPTEMBER 2021 AND JANUARY 2022, MERCYONE GATHERED COMMUNITY INPUT THROUGH SURVEYS, PATIENT FEEDBACK, AND SERVICE UTILIZATION DATA. DATA SOURCES INCLUDED COUNTY HEALTH RANKINGS, COMMUNITY COMMONS, NORTHEAST IOWA COMMUNITY ACTION CORPORATION CLIENT NEEDS ASSESSMENT SURVEY. IN ADDITION, FOCUS GROUPS, INTERVIEWS AND INDIVIDUAL STORIES PROVIDE A VALUABLE TOOL TO GATHER QUALITATIVE DATA FOR STRATEGIC PLANNING. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON WAS CAREFUL TO GATHER INPUT FROM REPRESENTATIVES OF VARIOUS MINORITY AND UNDERSERVED INDIVIDUALS INCLUDING: LOW INCOME/UNDERSERVED (SALVATION ARMY, CHICKASAW COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, PASTORAL COMMITTEE, SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION AND NORTHEAST IOWA COMMUNITY ACTION); CHRONIC CONDITIONS (AREA NURSING HOME, MENTAL HEALTH, AND HOSPICE REPRESENTATIVES); AND RACIAL/ETHNIC MINORITY (HISPANIC MINISTER FROM HOLY FAMILY AND PUBLIC HEALTH). SEVERAL SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS WERE IDENTIFIED WITHIN THE MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON COMMUNITY. THOSE NEEDS WERE THEN PRIORITIZED BY THE PLANNING TEAM BASED ON INFORMATION FROM ALL THE SOURCES MENTIONED WHICH WAS DISTILLED INTO A LIST OF OPPORTUNITIES ESTIMATED TO HAVE THE GREATEST POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE IDENTIFIED COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS.
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER
      "PART V, SECTION B, LINE 5: FOR THE PREVIOUS THREE COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT (CHNA) CYCLES, MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER JOINED THE DUBUQUE COUNTY COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT HEALTH IMPROVEMENT PLAN (CHNA-HIP) COALITION. THIS COALITION ASSURED BROAD INVOLVEMENT FROM MANY KEY ORGANIZATIONS ACROSS OUR SERVICE AREA. HOWEVER, DUE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, THE COALITION FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2021 CYCLE WAS COMPRISED PRIMARILY OF MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER, MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER, UNITY POINT FINLEY HOSPITAL, AND HILLCREST FAMILY SERVICES AS CITY OF DUBUQUE AND DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT REQUESTED, AND WERE GRANTED, EXTENSIONS TO COMPLETE THEIR CHNA PROCESS. WHILE PANDEMIC SPECIFIC DEMANDS IMPACTED CAPACITY FOR CITY AND COUNTY INVOLVEMENT IN THE COALITION, BOTH CITY OF DUBUQUE AND DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT DID PROVIDE INPUT FOR THIS CHNA SURVEY AND PLANNING, AS WELL AS INCLUDED THE CHNA SURVEY ON SAID WEBSITES TO ASSIST IN DISSEMINATION OF SURVEYS, ESPECIALLY TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS. MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER PARTICIPATED IN ALL ASPECTS OF STEERING, COORDINATING AND COMPLETING THE CURRENT PROCESS. THE STEERING COMMITTEE COLLECTED INFORMATION FROM PRIMARY AND SECONDARY DATA SOURCES. DATA WAS COLLECTED THROUGH A COMMUNITY INPUT SURVEY IN DUBUQUE COUNTY, ADMINISTERED BETWEEN NOVEMBER 17, 2020 AND JANUARY 4, 2021. THE SURVEY WAS OFFERED ONLINE VIA ""SURVEY MONKEY AND WAS AVAILABLE IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH LANGUAGES. PAPER COPIES OF THE SURVEY WERE ALSO AVAILABLE FOR THOSE WITHOUT COMPUTER ACCESS. THE STEERING COMMITTEE DEVELOPED A COMMUNICATIONS PLAN TO DISSEMINATE IN THE COMMUNITY AND ULTIMATELY, 1,355 COMPLETED RESPONSES WERE COLLECTED, AN INCREASE IN RESPONSE RATE FROM THE PREVIOUS CYCLE. THE STEERING COMMITTEE SOUGHT AND CONSIDERED THE NEEDS, INPUT, AND CONCERNS OF UNDERREPRESENTED PERSONS AND POPULATIONS THROUGHOUT THIS PROCESS, INCLUDING, THOSE WHO ARE MEDICALLY UNDERSERVED, IN POVERTY; AND/OR FROM MINORITY POPULATIONS. IN ADDITION, REPRESENTATIVES FROM VARIOUS AGENCIES WERE ABLE TO REPRESENT THE UNIQUE NEEDS OF THE POPULATIONS THEY SERVE WITH SPECIFIC EMPHASIS ON THOSE WHO ARE UNDERSERVED. THE STEERING COMMITTEE REVIEWED REPORTED DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION OF THOSE WHO COMPLETED THE SURVEY AND FOUND THAT DISTRIBUTION BY ETHNICITY, AGE, INCOME AND ZIP CODE WERE CONSISTENT WITH THE COMMUNITY'S DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE. THE CHNA PROCESS INCLUDED GATHERING BOTH QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE DATA. THE STEERING COMMITTEE THEN REVIEWED AND COMPARED THE SURVEY RESULTS TO THE COLLECTED DATA. THE RESULTS AND DATA WERE CONSISTENT WITH EACH OTHER, VALIDATING BOTH FINDINGS. AFTER THE TOP 13 NEEDS WERE IDENTIFIED, THEY WERE PRESENTED TO THE STEERING COMMITTEE. THE STEERING COMMITTEE PRIORITIZED THE TOP HEALTH NEEDS BASED ON A NEED DIFFERENTIAL AND ON THEIR AREA OF EXPERTISE AND KNOWLEDGE OF THE COMMUNITY. THE STEERING COMMITTEE WAS INSTRUMENTAL IN IDENTIFYING THE PRIORITY AREAS SINCE THIS IS THE GROUP THAT COLLECTIVELY CAN HELP ADDRESS THE NEEDS WITH THE MAXIMUM COMMUNITY IMPACT. THE STEERING COMMITTEE FELT IT WAS BEST TO BUNDLE AREAS OF CONCERN AND ADDRESS A SMALLER NUMBER OF AREAS FOCUSING ON QUALITY AND IMMINENT PRIORITY IN PANDEMIC AND PANDEMIC RECOVERY VERSUS QUANTITY. THE TOP THREE NEEDS, BASED ON NEED DIFFERENTIAL, WERE IDENTIFIED BY THE STEERING COMMITTEE. COMMUNITY MEMBERS, EXPERTS, AND LEADERS FROM ACROSS THE COMMUNITY WERE THEN INVITED TO PARTICIPATE ON THE THREE PRIORITY TASKFORCES. EACH TASKFORCE REVIEWED THE DATA, CONDUCTED A SWOT ANALYSIS, AND MADE RECOMMENDATIONS TO THE STEERING COMMITTEE REGARDING STRATEGY FOR OUR HEALTH IMPROVEMENT PLANS. STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS PROVIDING INPUT INCLUDED:MALISSA SPRENGER, MICHELLE ARENSDORF, GWEN HALL DRISCOLL, (MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER & MERCYONE DYERSVILLE) CAROL CROSS (UNITY POINT FINLEY HOSPITAL)STACEY KILLIAN (UNITY POINT FINLEY HOSPITAL, VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION)JANAE SCHMITT, MARIAH SCHRACK (HILLCREST FAMILY SERVICES)PATRICE LAMBERT (DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT) -ADVISORYMARY ROSE CORRIGAN (CITY OF DUBUQUE) -ADVISORY"
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6A: MERCYONE SIOUXLAND'S CHNA WAS CONDUCTED WITH UNITY POINT HEALTH-ST. LUKE'S AND DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL.
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6A: MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONDUCTED ITS CHNA WITH MERCYONE DYERSVILLE, AND UNITYPOINT HEALTH-FINLEY HOSPITAL, DUBUQUE.
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6A: THE DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL'S CHNA WAS CONDUCTED WITH MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER AND UNITY POINT HEALTH-ST. LUKE'S.
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6A: MERCYONE DYERSVILLE CONDUCTED ITS CHNA WITH MERCYONE DUBUQUE, AND UNITYPOINT HEALTH-FINLEY HOSPITAL, DUBUQUE.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6B: MERCYONE NORTH IOWA CONDUCTED ITS CHNA WITH THE FOLLOWING NON-HOSPITAL ORGANIZATIONS:NORTH IOWA COMMUNITY ACTION ORGANIZATION, PRAIRIE RIDGE INTEGRATED BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE, MASON CITY YOUTH TASK FORCE, NORTH IOWA CHILDREN'S ALLIANCE, TURNING LEAF COUNSELING, CITIZEN MARY SCHISSEL, CG PUBLIC HEALTH, UNITED WAY OF NORTH CENTRAL IOWA, COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, WRIGHT COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, PALO ALTO COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, FLOYD COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, KOSSUTH COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, AND WINNEBAGO COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6B: THROUGHOUT 2021 THE CHNA PLANNING COMMITTEE, MADE UP OF REPRESENTATIVES FROM THE AFOREMENTIONED HOSPITALS, AS WELL AS THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS; BRIAR CLIFF UNIVERSITY, GROWING COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS, SIOUXLAND COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, SIOUXLAND DISTRICT HEALTH DEPARTMENT, AND SOURCE FOR SIOUXLAND, CONDUCTED THE JOINT CHNA IN COLLABORATION WITH: BOYS AND GIRLS HOME AND FAMILY SERVICES, DAKOTA COUNTY JUVENILE DIVERSION, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES, GIRLS INC., INSTITUTE FOR COMMUNITY ALLIANCE, IOWA POISON CONTROL, IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY EXTENSION, JUNE E. NYLEN CANCER CENTER, MORNINGSIDE UNIVERSITY, NAACP, NORM WAITT SR. YMCA, ONE SIOUXLAND, PROTEUS, ROSECRANCE JACKSON RECOVERY CENTER, SIOUXLAND CARES, SIOUXLAND COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, SIOUXLAND HUMAN INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIP, SIOUXLAND MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, THE WARMING SHELTER, AND UNITED WAY OF SIOUXLAND.
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6B: MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONDUCTED ITS CHNA WITH THE FOLLOWING NON-HOSPITAL ORGANIZATIONS:CITY OF DUBUQUE HEALTH SERVICES, DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT, CRESCENT COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, GRAND RIVER MEDICAL GROUP, HILLCREST FAMILY SERVICES, VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION, MEDICAL ASSOCIATES CLINIC, RIVERBEND FOOD BANK, DUBUQUE FOOD POLICY COUNCIL, CONVIVIUM URBAN FARMSTEAD, PROJECT ROOTED, BRAIN HEALTH NOW, ZTM SOBER LIVING, AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES CENTER.
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6B: THROUGHOUT 2021 THE CHNA PLANNING COMMITTEE, MADE UP OF REPRESENTATIVES FROM THE AFOREMENTIONED HOSPITALS, AS WELL AS THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS; BRIAR CLIFF UNIVERSITY, GROWING COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS, SIOUXLAND COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, SIOUXLAND DISTRICT HEALTH DEPARTMENT, AND SOURCE FOR SIOUXLAND, CONDUCTED THE JOINT CHNA IN COLLABORATION WITH: BOYS AND GIRLS HOME AND FAMILY SERVICES, DAKOTA COUNTY JUVENILE DIVERSION, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES, GIRLS INC., INSTITUTE FOR COMMUNITY ALLIANCE, IOWA POISON CONTROL, IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY EXTENSION, JUNE E. NYLEN CANCER CENTER, MORNINGSIDE UNIVERSITY, NAACP, NORM WAITT SR. YMCA, ONE SIOUXLAND, PROTEUS, ROSECRANCE JACKSON RECOVERY CENTER, SIOUXLAND CARES, SIOUXLAND COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, SIOUXLAND HUMAN INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIP, SIOUXLAND MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, THE WARMING SHELTER, AND UNITED WAY OF SIOUXLAND.
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 6B: MERCYONE DYERSVILLE CONDUCTED ITS CHNA WITH THE FOLLOWING NON-HOSPITAL ORGANIZATIONS:CITY OF DUBUQUE HEALTH SERVICES, DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT, CRESCENT COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, GRAND RIVER MEDICAL GROUP, HILLCREST FAMILY SERVICES, VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION, MEDICAL ASSOCIATES CLINIC, RIVERBEND FOOD BANK, DUBUQUE FOOD POLICY COUNCIL, CONVIVIUM URBAN FARMSTEAD, PROJECT ROOTED, BRAIN HEALTH NOW, ZTM SOBER LIVING, AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES CENTER.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 11: MERCYONE NORTH IOWA ADOPTED A NEW CHNA IN FISCAL YEAR 2020, WHICH IDENTIFIED THE FOLLOWING NEEDS: ACCESS TO CARE, EARLY CHILDHOOD ISSUES, AND HOUSING. THE FOLLOWING SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS WERE ADDRESSED WITHIN FISCAL YEAR 2022 (FY22): ACCESS TO CARE:MERCYONE NORTH IOWA SUCCESSFULLY EXPANDED ITS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE SERVICES TO SOUTHERN MINNESOTA BY THE DEVELOPMENT, OPENING AND STAFFING OF A PRIMARY HEALTH CARE CLINIC IN ALBERT LEA, MN. TO ADDRESS THE LACK OF MENTAL HEALTH PROVIDERS IN THE COMMUNITY, SUPPORT FOR RECRUITMENT OF PROVIDERS AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES CONTINUED TO BE A PRIORITY. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA'S BEHAVIORAL HEALTH UNIT EXPERIENCED AN INCREASE OVERALL FOR DETOX TREATMENT OR COMORBID MENTAL HEALTH/MEDICAL DIAGNOSES ON MEDICAL FLOORS. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA CONTINUES TO SPONSOR THE SENIOR HEALTH INSURANCE INFORMATION PROGRAM (SHIIP) TO ADDRESS THE HIGH COST OF SENIOR MEDICATIONS. COUNSELORS OFFERED SESSIONS TO SENIORS TO ACCESS UNBIASED COUNSELING FOR DRUG PLAN COVERAGE AND PUBLIC BENEFIT ENROLLMENT. COUNSELORS HOSTED WELCOME TO MEDICARE SEMINARS, VIRTUAL AND IN PERSON COUNSELING SESSIONS SERVING AN INCREASED NUMBER OF CLIENTS FROM THE PREVIOUS YEAR. AN ADDITIONAL TWO COUNSELORS WERE ADDED FOR A TOTAL OF SIX. MERCY ONE NORTH IOWA HAS CONTINUED TO PARTNER WITH NORTH IOWA COMMUNITY ACTION ORGANIZATION (NICAO) FOR COMMUNITY TRANSPORTATION. WHILE THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC DRASTICALLY CHANGED THE NEED FOR TRANSPORTATION, NICAO PROVIDED CASE MANAGEMENT, MEANS TESTING FOR SUBSIDIZED RIDES AND HELP FOR THOSE WITH TRANSPORTATION BENEFITS TO NAVIGATE THE SYSTEM. THEY PROVIDED 41 RIDES IN FY22. DESPITE MERCYONE NORTH IOWA'S ROBUST RECRUITMENT ACTIVITIES, WE SAW VACANCIES ESCALATE IN FY22. CONTRIBUTING FACTORS INCLUDE THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, FEAR OF THE VIRUS, EARLY RETIREMENT, AND ATTRITION. IN FY22, MERCYONE NORTH IOWA RECRUITED 37 NEW PROVIDERS.MERCYONE NORTH IOWA CONTINUED TO ADVOCATE FOR, AND PARTICIPATE IN, THE 340B PROGRAM, SERVING A 10% INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF PATIENTS SEEKING ASSISTANCE. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA CONTINUED TO SUPPORT MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE RECOVERY PROGRAMS VIA THE 340B PROGRAM IN THE COMMUNITY PARTNERING WITH THE COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER OF MASON CITY, BEJE CLARK, SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT PROBATION/PAROLE AND PRAIRIE RIDGE INTEGRATED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE. HOUSING:MERCYONE NORTH IOWA ADDRESSED HOMELESSNESS BY SUPPORTING THE ALLIANCE FOR THE HOMELESS SHELTERS (MEN/WOMEN AND CHILDREN). MERCYONE NORTH IOWA PARTICIPATED IN COMMUNITY WIDE IMPACT MEETINGS CONCERNING DEVELOPMENT OF COMMUNITY LOW BARRIER WARMING SHELTER. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA DID NOT DIRECTLY ADDRESS THE FOLLOWING NEED IN THIS CHNA CYCLE DUE TO COMPETING PRIORITIES, LACK OF RESOURCES, AND BECAUSE OTHER AGENCIES ARE ALREADY ADDRESSING THESE ISSUES.EARLY CHILDHOOD ISSUES:THOUGH IT WAS NOT A DIRECT FOCUS IN FY22, MERCYONE NORTH IOWA CONTINUED ITS COLLABORATION WITH THE NORTH IOWA FOOD COALITION IN SUPPORT OF HEALTHY HARVEST OF NORTH IOWA, TO INCREASE THE AVAILABILITY OF FRESH, WHOLE, HEALTHY FOODS AND ASSISTING FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN AND THEIR NUTRITIONAL NEEDS. PARTNERSHIPS FURTHER DEVELOPED WITH CG PUBLIC HEALTH, FMC DECAT (DHS) AND FLOYD COUNTY CULTURAL EQUITY BOARD TO EXTEND THE VEGGIE VOUCHER PROJECT INTO FLOYD AND CERRO GORDO COUNTIES. THE PROGRAM DISTRIBUTED VOUCHERS AND CSA BOXES IN CERRO GORDO AND IN FLOYD COUNTY. HEALTHY HARVEST OF NORTH IOWA PROVIDED COMMUNITY EDUCATION VIA THEIR WEBSITE, FACEBOOK AND IN PERSON DEMONSTRATIONS WITH SAMPLES AND RECIPE CARDS. THEY SAFELY HOSTED 30 IN-PERSON DEMONSTRATIONS IN ELEVEN DIFFERENT COMMUNITIES WITH 1,600 SAMPLES AND 54 ADDITIONAL RECIPE CARDS DISTRIBUTED. DOUBLE UP FOOD BUCKS REDEEMED AT TWO LOCAL FARMERS MARKETS TOTALED $4,366 WHILE $3,887 WAS REDEEMED AT FARWAY/HYVEE. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA WILL FURTHER INVESTIGATE HOW IT CAN PARTNER WITH OTHER COMMUNITY AGENCIES CURRENTLY ADDRESSING EARLY CHILDHOOD ISSUES IN FISCAL YEAR 2023. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA CONTINUED PARTICIPATION WITH PARTNERS 4 CHILDREN DECATEGORIZATION PROJECT AND EYES (EMPOWERING YOUTH WITH EDUCATION AND SUPPORT) COALITIONS.
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 11: THE FOLLOWING FOUR NEEDS WERE IDENTIFIED IN THE 2022 CHNA FOR THE SIOUXLAND AREA: MENTAL HEALTH, PHYSICAL HEALTH, PREVENTATIVE CARE, AND SUBSTANCE MISUSE. MENTAL HEALTH: IN FY22, RECRUITMENT CONTINUED FOR ADDITIONAL MENTAL HEALTH PROVIDERS FOR THE SIOUXLAND AREA. TELEMEDICINE WAS USED AT MERCYONE SIOUXLAND TO IMPROVE ACCESS FOR MENTAL HEALTH CARE. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND ALSO OPENED A SECOND INPATIENT MENTAL HEALTH UNIT DURING THIS YEAR TO BETTER SERVE THE NEEDS OF THE COMMUNITY. CONTINUED MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES WERE PROVIDED AT THE MERCYONE CHILD ADVOCACY CENTER TO CHILDREN WHO HAD BEEN ABUSED. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND FINANCIALLY SUPPORTED MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES PROVIDED AT CATHOLIC CHARITIES TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS. IN ADDITION, THE BOYS AND GIRLS HOME AND FAMILY SERVICES AND THE WARMING SHELTER WERE SUPPORTED TO ASSIST IN AIDING THOSE WITH MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND CONTINUED TO COLLABORATE WITH OTHER MENTAL HEALTH PROVIDERS TO COORDINATE MENTAL HEALTH CARE. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PARTICIPATED IN THE MENTAL HEALTH ROUNDTABLE WHICH WAS COMPRISED OF 18 MENTAL HEALTH COMMUNITY PARTNERS AND PROVIDING ORGANIZATIONS. IN ADDITION, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PROVIDERS CONTINUED TO SCREEN AND EDUCATE COMMUNITY MEMBERS ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH, AND MADE REFERRALS TO MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS AS NEEDED. PHYSICAL HEALTH:IN FY22, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND CONTINUED TO PROVIDE HEALTH COACHING, EDUCATION ON HEALTHY CHOICES, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF MAINTAINING A HEALTHY WEIGHT. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PROVIDERS CONTINUED TO MEASURE BMIS FOR HEALTHY WEIGHT MONITORING AND COUNSELING. IN ADDITION, THE MERCYONE SIOUXLAND DIETITIANS COMPLETED EDUCATION TO PROMOTE HEALTHY FOOD CHOICES. PHYSICIAN RESIDENTS IN THE COMMUNITY WERE EDUCATED BY THE MERCYONE SIOUXLAND DIETITIANS TO INCREASE FUTURE PHYSICIAN SUPPORT FOR THE COMMUNITY IN THE AREA OF PHYSICAL HEALTH. THE CARDIAC PROGRAM ALSO PROVIDED VASCULAR AND CHOLESTEROL SCREENINGS TO PROMOTE HEALTHY LIFESTYLE CHOICES. IN AN EFFORT TO CURB THE PREVALENCE OF OBESITY IN FY22, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND CONTINUED COLLABORATING WITH THE SIOUXLAND YMCA BY REFERRING PRE-DIABETIC PERSONS TO THE DIABETES PREVENTION PROGRAM (DPP). DPP COURSES WERE HELD, AND PARTICIPANTS DEMONSTRATED SUCCESS IN COMBATING OBESITY. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND ALSO PROVIDED SUPPORT FOR THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AT THE FOOD BANK OF SIOUXLAND, A SOURCE OF HEALTHY FOODS FOR THE VULNERABLE POPULATION IN THE COMMUNITY.PREVENTATIVE CARE:MERCYONE SIOUXLAND AIDED COMMUNITY MEMBERS WHO WERE UNABLE TO OBTAIN PRESCRIPTIONS NECESSARY TO MAINTAIN THEIR HEALTH STATUS AND AVOID HOSPITALIZATIONS. TRANSPORTATION WAS ALSO PROVIDED WHEN COMMUNITY MEMBERS WERE UNABLE TO AFFORD BUS OR TAXI SERVICES TO ACCESS HEALTH MAINTENANCE SERVICES. DURING THE PANDEMIC, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PROVIDED INFECTION CONTROL SUPPLIES TO THE LOCAL HOMELESS SHELTER. ENROLLMENT ASSISTANCE FOR MEDICAID WAS ALSO PROVIDED TO ASSIST THOSE IN LOW-INCOME CATEGORIES. IN ADDITION, THE LOCAL HOMELESS SHELTER WAS FINANCIALLY SUPPORTED TO OFFER SHELTERED HOUSING DURING THE WINTER MONTHS AND DAY SHELTER SERVICES THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND ALSO CONTINUED THEIR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM TO ASSIST WITH ACCESS TO NECESSARY PREVENTATIVE CARE FOR THOSE WHO QUALIFY. PREVENTATIVE TELEMONITORING WAS PROVIDED FOR THE VULNERABLE CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURE POPULATION. SUBSTANCE MISUSE:MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PROVIDED SUPPORT TO THE HOPE STREET SOBER LIVING FACILITY. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PARTICIPATED IN COMMUNITY EFFORTS OF THE SMOKEFREE SIOUXLAND COALITION. ADDITIONAL SMOKE-FREE AREAS WERE ACHIEVED. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND PROVIDERS AND HEALTH COACHES CONTINUED TO EDUCATE COMMUNITY MEMBERS ON HEALTHY LIFESTYLE CHOICES, INCLUDING THE CESSATION OF SMOKING AND ELIMINATING SUBSTANCE MISUSE. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND, THROUGH MERCYONE SIOUXLAND BUSINESS HEALTH, CONTINUED TO PROVIDE HEALTH COACHING FOR TOBACCO CESSATION.
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 11: THE SIGNIFICANT NEEDS THAT WERE ADDRESSED IN FY22 WERE ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE, OBESITY, AND BRAIN HEALTH.MERCYONE DUBUQUE WAS INVOLVED IN THE FOLLOWING PROJECTS DURING FY22 TO ADDRESS ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE:MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE PURCHASED A 31-FOOT WINNEBAGO AND HIRED A VENDOR TO CUSTOMIZE THE UNIT WITH A WAITING ROOM, INTAKE AREA, TWO EXAM ROOMS AND A HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE LIFT. THE UNIT LAUNCHED IN NOVEMBER 2022 WITH THE VISION OF REACHING ANYONE EXPERIENCING A BARRIER TO HEALTH CARE ACCESS. INITIAL FOCUS WAS ON ADULT, ADOLESCENT, AND PEDIATRIC COVID-19 VACCINE DISTRIBUTION.THROUGH THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT, THE FOLLOWING OUTREACH EVENTS WERE HELD: - TWENTY-THREE VACCINE CLINICS, RESULTING IN 1,425 COVID-19 VACCINATIONS AND BOOSTER SHOTS GIVEN TO COMMUNITY MEMBERS. THE CLINICS WERE HELD IN STRATEGIC LOCATIONS, INCLUDING ELEMENTARY, MIDDLE, AND HIGH SCHOOLS IN HIGH PRIORITY ZIP CODES, TO ASSIST IN DECREASING BARRIERS TO ACCESSING THE VACCINES. VACCINE FAQS WERE TRANSLATED INTO MARSHALLESE AND SPANISH TO ASSIST WITH LANGUAGE BARRIERS RELATED TO VACCINE HESITANCY. -TUBERCULOSIS SCREENINGS (BLOOD DRAWS) TO MARSHALLESE POPULATION, AT VARIOUS LOCATIONS, IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE IOWA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT, TO MAKE IT MORE ACCESSIBLE. THE TUBERCULOSIS SCREENINGS YIELDED 16 POSITIVE RESULTS REQUIRING X-RAYS AND PHYSICIAN FOLLOW UP. -OUTREACH TO THOSE EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS INCLUDING BLOOD PRESSURES, A1C'S, BRAIN HEALTH SCREENINGS, IMMUNIZATIONS, VACCINATIONS, AND CONNECTION TO MEDICATIONS. THE TEAM ALSO PROVIDED HYGIENE PRODUCTS, NUTRIENT DENSE FOOD, HYDRATION, BLANKETS, CLOTHING, COATS, AND GLOVES. -PREVENTIVE CARE AND VACCINATIONS TO ACTIVE MILITARY, VETERANS, AND FAMILIES AT THE VETERANS FREEDOM CENTER AND TO RURAL COMMUNITIES IN THE SURROUNDING AREA. -HEAD INJURY PREVENTION EDUCATION TO 47 CHILDREN AND THEIR FAMILIES AT A LOCAL SKI RESORT. -PARTNERED WITH CRESCENT COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER TO PROVIDE SCHOOL REQUIRED IMMUNIZATIONS TO 4 AND 5 YEAR OLD AND 7TH GRADE STUDENTS IN HIGH PRIORITY POVERTY ZIP CODES.MERCYONE DUBUQUE WAS INVOLVED IN THE FOLLOWING PROJECT DURING FY22 TO ADDRESS OBESITY:- MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONTINUED TO WORK IN PARTNERSHIP WITH RIVERBEND FOOD BANK AND OUR LADY OF THE MISSISSIPPI ABBEY SISTERS TO MAINTAIN A FOOD PANTRY ONSITE AT MERCYONE DUBUQUE TO HELP ALLEVIATE FOOD INSECURITY. THE FOOD PANTRY STOCKED 50,662 POUNDS OF FOOD IN FY22, THE EQUIVALENT OF 42,219 MEALS, SERVING 3,855 COLLEAGUES AND PATIENTS (1,272 CHILDREN AND 382 SENIORS). -THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT WAS PRESENT AT FARMERS MARKETS IN DUBUQUE AND DYERSVILLE TO PROMOTE HEALTHY EATING. DIETICIANS JOINED THE INTERDISCIPLINARY MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT TEAM TO MEET WITH COMMUNITY MEMBERS AND PROVIDE TEACHING ON NUTRIENT DENSE FOOD CHOICES AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.MERCYONE DUBUQUE WAS INVOLVED IN THE FOLLOWING PROJECTS DURING FY22 TO ADDRESS BRAIN HEALTH:- PARTICIPATED IN A MONTHLY BRAIN HEALTH STAKEHOLDERS TEAM TO ASSIST IN COORDINATING AND LEVERAGING BRAIN HEALTH SPECIFIC RESOURCES WITHIN THE COMMUNITY.-PARTICIPATED IN A LOCAL BRAIN HEALTH SUMMIT PROMOTING BRAIN HEALTH LANGUAGE AND PARTNERING TO IMPROVE TIMELY ACCESS FOR CHILDREN, ADOLESCENTS, AND ADULTS IN OUR COMMUNITIES RELATED TO BRAIN HEALTH. - MERCYONE DUBUQUE PHARMACY CONTINUED TO STOCK NALOXONE (NARCAN) AND EDUCATED COMMUNITY MEMBERS WHO PRESENTED FOR A NARCAN KIT. THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT PROVIDED THREE NARCAN TRAININGS TO THE COMMUNITY.- MAINTAINED A COLLEAGUE CARE CIRCLE TO ASSIST IN FOSTERING COLLEAGUE MENTAL WELL-BEING SECONDARY TO PANDEMIC IMPACT. DEVELOPED A COLLEAGUE CARE SUSTAINMENT MODEL USING CHAPLAINS, THERAPISTS, AND A MISSION LEADER TO ASSURE A SKILLED EMBEDDED PRESENCE THROUGHOUT DUBUQUE & DYERSVILLE ORGANIZATIONS. PROVIDED WEEKLY COLLEAGUE CARE ROUNDING DURING ALL SHIFTS.
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 11: THE FOLLOWING FOUR NEEDS WERE IDENTIFIED IN THE 2022 CHNA FOR THE SIOUXLAND AREA: MENTAL HEALTH, PHYSICAL HEALTH, PREVENTATIVE CARE, AND SUBSTANCE MISUSE. SUBSTANCE MISUSE:THE PROVIDERS AT THE DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL (DUNES) CONTINUED TO EDUCATE PATIENTS ON THE HEALTH RISKS OF SMOKING AND USING ALCOHOL. WRITTEN MATERIALS ON SMOKING/VAPING CESSATION WERE DISSEMINATED TO THE COMMUNITY THROUGH DUNES. PHYSICAL HEALTH:DUNES CONTINUED TO PROVIDE PATIENT EDUCATION ON HEALTHY CHOICES, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF MAINTAINING A HEALTHY WEIGHT. THE PROVIDERS AT DUNES CONTINUED TO MEASURE PATIENT'S HEALTH RISK USING BODY MASS INDEX (BMI) FOR HEALTHY WEIGHT MONITORING. POST-SURGICAL EDUCATION WAS PROVIDED TO PATIENTS EMPHASIZING THE IMPORTANCE OF PHYSICAL EXERCISE AND PROPER NUTRITION. ADDITIONALLY, A FOOD DRIVE WAS HELD AT THE HOSPITAL FOR THE VULNERABLE POPULATION IN THE COMMUNITY.MENTAL HEALTH:DUNES PROVIDERS CONTINUED TO SCREEN AND EDUCATE COMMUNITY MEMBERS ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH. REFERRALS WERE MADE TO MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS AS NEEDED. RECRUITMENT CONTINUED FOR ADDITIONAL MENTAL HEALTH PROVIDERS FOR THE SIOUXLAND AREA. PREVENTATIVE CARE:DUNES INCREASED ACCESS TO CARE WITHIN THE COMMUNITY DURING FY22 BY CONTINUING TO OFFER A FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM, WHICH ALLOWED THOSE WHO MET THE FINANCIAL NEED CRITERIA TO RECEIVE ASSISTANCE FOR NECESSARY SERVICES. SUCCESS WAS ACHIEVED IN REDUCING THE PERCENT OF UNINSURED ADULTS IN ALL SIX COUNTIES WITHIN THE PRIMARY SERVICE AREA (WOODBURY IA, PLYMOUTH IA, UNION SD, DAKOTA NE, DIXON NE, AND THURSTON NE). AT THE TIME OF PATIENTS' DISMISSAL, THE HOSPITAL STAFF MADE FOLLOW UP APPOINTMENTS WITH PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS TO AID IN THE MAINTENANCE OR IMPROVEMENT OF OVERALL HEALTH STATUS.
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 11: MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON RESOURCES, AND OVERALL ALIGNMENT WITH THE HOSPITAL'S MISSION, GOALS AND STRATEGIC PRIORITIES WERE TAKEN INTO CONSIDERATION OF THE SIGNIFICANT HEALTH NEEDS IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE MOST RECENT CHNA PROCESS. IN FY22, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON DEVELOPED AND/OR SUPPORTED INITIATIVES AND MEASURED THEIR EFFECTIVENESS, TO IMPROVE THE FOLLOWING HEALTH NEEDS:ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE - MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON IDENTIFIED THAT AREA RESIDENTS WOULD DESIRE MORE LOCAL ACCESS TO SPECIALISTS, TREATMENTS/PROCEDURES, AND FAMILY PHYSICIANS. IN FY22, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON FAMILY MEDICINE WORKED WITH OPION TO PROVIDE ONLINE REGISTRATION FOR APPOINTMENTS, WHICH LAUNCHED IN FALL 2022. EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES - IN FY22, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON COLLABORATED WITH CHICKASAW COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, CHICKASAW COUNTY AMBULANCE COUNCIL AND CHICKASAW EMS ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO ASSIST WITH THE ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW COUNTY OWNED AND OPERATED EMS, IN RESPONSE TO THE RECENT LOSS OF THE ONLY LOCAL EMS PROVIDER. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON'S EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT NURSE LEADER CONTINUES TO SERVE ON THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON'S CEO AND PUBLIC RELATIONS MANAGER PARTICIPATED AND OFFERED ASSISTANCE WITH DATA COLLECTION, EDUCATING THE PUBLIC, MARKETING, AND RECRUITMENT. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON DEVELOPED A PARTNERSHIP WITH NORTHEAST IOWA COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND NEW HAMPTON COMMUNITY SCHOOLS TO OFFER EMT EDUCATION TO SENIORS IN HIGH SCHOOL. OVER THE NEXT 3 YEARS, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON WILL CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE NEW EMS MODEL AND WORK TO DECREASE WAIT TIME FOR PARAMEDIC TRANSFERS OUT OF THE ER AND INCREASE AMBULANCE TRANSFER ACCESS FOR MEDICAID PATIENTS AND OTHER UNDER-INSURED PATIENTS. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON ACKNOWLEDGES THE WIDE RANGE OF PRIORITY HEALTH ISSUES THAT EMERGED FROM THE CHNA PROCESS AND DETERMINED THAT IT COULD EFFECTIVELY FOCUS ON ONLY THOSE HEALTH NEEDS WHICH ARE THE MOST PRESSING, UNDER- ADDRESSED AND WITHIN ITS ABILITY TO INFLUENCE. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON DOES NOT INTEND TO ADDRESS THE FOLLOWING HEALTH NEEDS:KNOWLEDGE OF HEALTH CARE RESOURCES/SERVICES AVAILABLE LOCALLY, WHILE NOT INCLUDED FOR INTERVENTION IN THE IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON WILL CONTINUE TO PROMOTE AND EDUCATE OUR COMMUNITY ABOUT RESOURCES AVAILABLE THROUGH MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON, COUNTY AND STATE AGENCIES. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON LAUNCHED AN ONLINE COMMUNITY RESOURCE DIRECTORY WHICH WILL HELP PEOPLE FIND LOCAL PROGRAMS, RESOURCES, AND SUPPORT. AGING POPULATION, WHILE NOT ADDRESSED IN FY22, STRATEGIES WERE DETERMINED, AND WILL BE IMPLEMENTED OVER THE NEXT 3 YEARS. PARTNERSHIPS WITH CHICKASAW COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH, SENIOR LIFE SOLUTIONS, NORTHEAST IOWA AREA AGENCY ON AGING, AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, HOSPICE AGENCIES AND CHICKASAW COUNTY MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION HAVE BEEN ESTABLISHED TO ASSIST MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON WITH OUR STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION.
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 11: THE SIGNIFICANT NEEDS THAT WERE ADDRESSED IN FY22 WERE ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE, OBESITY, AND BRAIN HEALTH.MERCYONE DYERSVILLE WAS INVOLVED IN THE FOLLOWING PROJECT DURING FY22 TO ADDRESS ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE:- MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE PURCHASED A 31-FOOT WINNEBAGO AND HIRED A VENDOR TO CUSTOMIZE THE UNIT WITH A WAITING ROOM, INTAKE AREA, TWO EXAM ROOMS AND A HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE LIFT. THE UNIT LAUNCHED IN NOVEMBER 2022 WITH THE VISION OF REACHING ANYONE EXPERIENCING A BARRIER TO HEALTH CARE ACCESS. WITH INITIAL FOCUS ON ADULT, ADOLESCENT, AND PEDIATRIC COVID-19 VACCINE DISTRIBUTION.MERCYONE DYERSVILLE WAS INVOLVED IN THE FOLLOWING PROJECT DURING FY22 TO ADDRESS OBESITY:-THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT WAS PRESENT AT FARMERS MARKETS IN DUBUQUE AND DYERSVILLE TO PROMOTE HEALTHY EATING. DIETICIANS JOINED THE INTERDISCIPLINARY MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT TEAM TO MEET WITH COMMUNITY MEMBERS AND PROVIDE TEACHING ON NUTRIENT DENSE FOOD CHOICES.MERCYONE DYERSVILLE WAS INVOLVED IN THE FOLLOWING PROJECTS DURING FY22 TO ADDRESS BRAIN HEALTH:- PARTICIPATED IN A MONTHLY BRAIN HEALTH STAKEHOLDERS TEAM TO ASSIST IN COORDINATING AND LEVERAGING BRAIN HEALTH SPECIFIC RESOURCES WITHIN THE COMMUNITY.- MAINTAINED A COLLEAGUE CARE CIRCLE TO ASSIST IN FOSTERING COLLEAGUE MENTAL WELL-BEING SECONDARY TO PANDEMIC IMPACT. DEVELOPED A COLLEAGUE CARE SUSTAINMENT MODEL USING CHAPLAINS, THERAPISTS, AND A MISSION LEADER TO ASSURE A SKILLED EMBEDDED PRESENCE THROUGHOUT DUBUQUE & DYERSVILLE ORGANIZATIONS. PROVIDED WEEKLY COLLEAGUE CARE ROUNDING DURING ALL SHIFTS.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 13H: THE HOSPITAL RECOGNIZES THAT NOT ALL PATIENTS ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE COMPLETE FINANCIAL AND/OR SOCIAL INFORMATION. THEREFORE, APPROVAL FOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT MAY BE DETERMINED BASED ON AVAILABLE INFORMATION. EXAMPLES OF PRESUMPTIVE CASES INCLUDE: DECEASED PATIENTS WITH NO KNOWN ESTATE, THE HOMELESS, UNEMPLOYED PATIENTS, NON-COVERED MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENTS QUALIFYING FOR PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, PATIENT BANKRUPTCIES, AND MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE TAKEN A VOW OF POVERTY AND HAVE NO RESOURCES INDIVIDUALLY OR THROUGH THE RELIGIOUS ORDER.FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS, A THIRD PARTY IS UTILIZED TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF PATIENT INFORMATION TO ASSESS FINANCIAL NEED. THIS REVIEW UTILIZES A HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT IS BASED ON PUBLIC RECORD DATABASES. THESE PUBLIC RECORDS ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO ASSESS WHETHER THE PATIENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF OTHER PATIENTS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY QUALIFIED FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE UNDER THE TRADITIONAL APPLICATION PROCESS. IN CASES WHERE THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF INFORMATION PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY THE PATIENT, AND AFTER EFFORTS TO CONFIRM COVERAGE AVAILABILITY, THE PREDICTIVE MODEL PROVIDES A SYSTEMATIC METHOD TO GRANT PRESUMPTIVE ELIGIBILITY TO FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS.
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 13H: THE HOSPITAL RECOGNIZES THAT NOT ALL PATIENTS ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE COMPLETE FINANCIAL AND/OR SOCIAL INFORMATION. THEREFORE, APPROVAL FOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT MAY BE DETERMINED BASED ON AVAILABLE INFORMATION. EXAMPLES OF PRESUMPTIVE CASES INCLUDE: DECEASED PATIENTS WITH NO KNOWN ESTATE, THE HOMELESS, UNEMPLOYED PATIENTS, NON-COVERED MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENTS QUALIFYING FOR PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, PATIENT BANKRUPTCIES, AND MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE TAKEN A VOW OF POVERTY AND HAVE NO RESOURCES INDIVIDUALLY OR THROUGH THE RELIGIOUS ORDER.FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS, A THIRD PARTY IS UTILIZED TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF PATIENT INFORMATION TO ASSESS FINANCIAL NEED. THIS REVIEW UTILIZES A HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT IS BASED ON PUBLIC RECORD DATABASES. THESE PUBLIC RECORDS ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO ASSESS WHETHER THE PATIENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF OTHER PATIENTS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY QUALIFIED FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE UNDER THE TRADITIONAL APPLICATION PROCESS. IN CASES WHERE THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF INFORMATION PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY THE PATIENT, AND AFTER EFFORTS TO CONFIRM COVERAGE AVAILABILITY, THE PREDICTIVE MODEL PROVIDES A SYSTEMATIC METHOD TO GRANT PRESUMPTIVE ELIGIBILITY TO FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS.
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 13H: THE HOSPITAL RECOGNIZES THAT NOT ALL PATIENTS ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE COMPLETE FINANCIAL AND/OR SOCIAL INFORMATION. THEREFORE, APPROVAL FOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT MAY BE DETERMINED BASED ON AVAILABLE INFORMATION. EXAMPLES OF PRESUMPTIVE CASES INCLUDE: DECEASED PATIENTS WITH NO KNOWN ESTATE, THE HOMELESS, UNEMPLOYED PATIENTS, NON-COVERED MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENTS QUALIFYING FOR PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, PATIENT BANKRUPTCIES, AND MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE TAKEN A VOW OF POVERTY AND HAVE NO RESOURCES INDIVIDUALLY OR THROUGH THE RELIGIOUS ORDER.FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS, A THIRD PARTY IS UTILIZED TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF PATIENT INFORMATION TO ASSESS FINANCIAL NEED. THIS REVIEW UTILIZES A HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT IS BASED ON PUBLIC RECORD DATABASES. THESE PUBLIC RECORDS ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO ASSESS WHETHER THE PATIENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF OTHER PATIENTS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY QUALIFIED FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE UNDER THE TRADITIONAL APPLICATION PROCESS. IN CASES WHERE THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF INFORMATION PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY THE PATIENT, AND AFTER EFFORTS TO CONFIRM COVERAGE AVAILABILITY, THE PREDICTIVE MODEL PROVIDES A SYSTEMATIC METHOD TO GRANT PRESUMPTIVE ELIGIBILITY TO FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS.
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 13H: THE HOSPITAL RECOGNIZES THAT NOT ALL PATIENTS ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE COMPLETE FINANCIAL AND/OR SOCIAL INFORMATION. THEREFORE, APPROVAL FOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT MAY BE DETERMINED BASED ON AVAILABLE INFORMATION. EXAMPLES OF PRESUMPTIVE CASES INCLUDE: DECEASED PATIENTS WITH NO KNOWN ESTATE, THE HOMELESS, UNEMPLOYED PATIENTS, NON-COVERED MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENTS QUALIFYING FOR PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, PATIENT BANKRUPTCIES, AND MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE TAKEN A VOW OF POVERTY AND HAVE NO RESOURCES INDIVIDUALLY OR THROUGH THE RELIGIOUS ORDER.FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS, A THIRD PARTY IS UTILIZED TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF PATIENT INFORMATION TO ASSESS FINANCIAL NEED. THIS REVIEW UTILIZES A HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT IS BASED ON PUBLIC RECORD DATABASES. THESE PUBLIC RECORDS ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO ASSESS WHETHER THE PATIENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF OTHER PATIENTS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY QUALIFIED FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE UNDER THE TRADITIONAL APPLICATION PROCESS. IN CASES WHERE THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF INFORMATION PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY THE PATIENT, AND AFTER EFFORTS TO CONFIRM COVERAGE AVAILABILITY, THE PREDICTIVE MODEL PROVIDES A SYSTEMATIC METHOD TO GRANT PRESUMPTIVE ELIGIBILITY TO FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS.
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 13H: THE HOSPITAL RECOGNIZES THAT NOT ALL PATIENTS ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE COMPLETE FINANCIAL AND/OR SOCIAL INFORMATION. THEREFORE, APPROVAL FOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT MAY BE DETERMINED BASED ON AVAILABLE INFORMATION. EXAMPLES OF PRESUMPTIVE CASES INCLUDE: DECEASED PATIENTS WITH NO KNOWN ESTATE, THE HOMELESS, UNEMPLOYED PATIENTS, NON-COVERED MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENTS QUALIFYING FOR PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, PATIENT BANKRUPTCIES, AND MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE TAKEN A VOW OF POVERTY AND HAVE NO RESOURCES INDIVIDUALLY OR THROUGH THE RELIGIOUS ORDER.FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS, A THIRD PARTY IS UTILIZED TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF PATIENT INFORMATION TO ASSESS FINANCIAL NEED. THIS REVIEW UTILIZES A HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT IS BASED ON PUBLIC RECORD DATABASES. THESE PUBLIC RECORDS ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO ASSESS WHETHER THE PATIENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF OTHER PATIENTS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY QUALIFIED FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE UNDER THE TRADITIONAL APPLICATION PROCESS. IN CASES WHERE THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF INFORMATION PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY THE PATIENT, AND AFTER EFFORTS TO CONFIRM COVERAGE AVAILABILITY, THE PREDICTIVE MODEL PROVIDES A SYSTEMATIC METHOD TO GRANT PRESUMPTIVE ELIGIBILITY TO FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS.
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER
      PART V, SECTION B, LINE 13H: THE HOSPITAL RECOGNIZES THAT NOT ALL PATIENTS ARE ABLE TO PROVIDE COMPLETE FINANCIAL AND/OR SOCIAL INFORMATION. THEREFORE, APPROVAL FOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT MAY BE DETERMINED BASED ON AVAILABLE INFORMATION. EXAMPLES OF PRESUMPTIVE CASES INCLUDE: DECEASED PATIENTS WITH NO KNOWN ESTATE, THE HOMELESS, UNEMPLOYED PATIENTS, NON-COVERED MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENTS QUALIFYING FOR PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, PATIENT BANKRUPTCIES, AND MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE TAKEN A VOW OF POVERTY AND HAVE NO RESOURCES INDIVIDUALLY OR THROUGH THE RELIGIOUS ORDER.FOR THE PURPOSE OF HELPING FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS, A THIRD PARTY IS UTILIZED TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF PATIENT INFORMATION TO ASSESS FINANCIAL NEED. THIS REVIEW UTILIZES A HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT IS BASED ON PUBLIC RECORD DATABASES. THESE PUBLIC RECORDS ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO ASSESS WHETHER THE PATIENT IS CHARACTERISTIC OF OTHER PATIENTS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY QUALIFIED FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE UNDER THE TRADITIONAL APPLICATION PROCESS. IN CASES WHERE THERE IS AN ABSENCE OF INFORMATION PROVIDED DIRECTLY BY THE PATIENT, AND AFTER EFFORTS TO CONFIRM COVERAGE AVAILABILITY, THE PREDICTIVE MODEL PROVIDES A SYSTEMATIC METHOD TO GRANT PRESUMPTIVE ELIGIBILITY TO FINANCIALLY NEEDY PATIENTS.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 10A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 10A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 10A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7A
      WWW.DUNESSURGICALHOSPITAL.COM/COMMUNITY-BENEFIT
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 10A
      WWW.DUNESSURGICALHOSPITAL.COM/COMMUNITY-BENEFIT
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 10A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 10A
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 9
      AS PERMITTED IN THE FINAL SECTION 501(R) REGULATIONS, THE HOSPITAL'S IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY WAS ADOPTED WITHIN 4 1/2 MONTHS AFTER THE FISCAL YEAR END THAT THE CHNA WAS COMPLETED AND MADE WIDELY AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 9
      AS PERMITTED IN THE FINAL SECTION 501(R) REGULATIONS, THE HOSPITAL'S IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY WAS ADOPTED WITHIN 4 1/2 MONTHS AFTER THE FISCAL YEAR END THAT THE CHNA WAS COMPLETED AND MADE WIDELY AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC.
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7B
      WWW.DUNESSURGICALHOSPITAL.COM/COMMUNITY-BENEFITWWW.SIOUXLANDDISTRICTHEALTH.ORG/COMMUNITY/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-NEEDS-ASSESSMENT-AND-STATISTICSWWW.UNITYPOINT.ORG/SIOUXCITY/ABOUT-COMMUNITY-BENEFIT.ASPX
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 7B
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/ABOUT-US/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-AND-WELL-BEING/WWW.SIOUXLANDDISTRICTHEALTH.ORG/COMMUNITY/COMMUNITY-HEALTH-NEEDS-ASSESSMENT-AND-STATISTICSWWW.UNITYPOINT.ORG/SIOUXCITY/ABOUT-COMMUNITY-BENEFIT.ASPX
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 9
      AS PERMITTED IN THE FINAL SECTION 501(R) REGULATIONS, THE HOSPITAL'S IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY WAS ADOPTED WITHIN 4 1/2 MONTHS AFTER THE FISCAL YEAR END THAT THE CHNA WAS COMPLETED AND MADE WIDELY AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC.
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER - PART V, SECTION B, LINE 9
      AS PERMITTED IN THE FINAL SECTION 501(R) REGULATIONS, THE HOSPITAL'S IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY WAS ADOPTED WITHIN 4 1/2 MONTHS AFTER THE FISCAL YEAR END THAT THE CHNA WAS COMPLETED AND MADE WIDELY AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC.
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16A, FAP WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/NORTHIOWA/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16A, FAP WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/DUBUQUE/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL, PART V, LINE 16A, FAP WEBSITE:
      WWW.DUNESSURGICALHOSPITAL.COM/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE-AND-CHARITY-CARE
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16A, FAP WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/DUBUQUE/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CTR, PART V, LINE 16B, FAP APPLICATION WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/NORTHIOWA/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16B, FAP APPLICATION WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/DUBUQUE/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL, PART V, LINE 16B, FAP APPLICATION WEBSITE:
      WWW.DUNESSURGICALHOSPITAL.COM/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE-AND-CHARITY-CARE
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE, PART V, LINE 16B, FAP APPLICATION WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/DUBUQUE/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16C,
      FAP PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY WEBSITE:WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/NORTHIOWA/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16C,
      FAP PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY WEBSITE:WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/SIOUXLAND/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16C,
      FAP PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY WEBSITE:WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/DUBUQUE/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL, PART V, LINE 16C,
      FAP PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY WEBSITE:WWW.DUNESSURGICALHOSPITAL.COM/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE-AND-CHARITY-CARE
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16C,
      FAP PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY WEBSITE:WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/NEWHAMPTON/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/
      MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16C,
      FAP PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY WEBSITE:WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/DUBUQUE/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16A, FAP WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/NEWHAMPTON/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/
      MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CTR, PART V, LINE 16B, FAP APPLICATION WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/NEWHAMPTON/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER, PART V, LINE 16A, FAP WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/SIOUXLAND/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CTR, PART V, LINE 16B, FAP APPLICATION WEBSITE:
      WWW.MERCYONE.ORG/SIOUXLAND/FOR-PATIENTS/BILLING-AND-FINANCIAL-INFORMATION/FINANCIAL-ASSISTANCE
      Supplemental Information
      Schedule H (Form 990) Part VI
      PART I, LINE 3C:
      IN ADDITION TO LOOKING AT A MULTIPLE OF THE FEDERAL POVERTY GUIDELINES, OTHER FACTORS ARE CONSIDERED SUCH AS THE PATIENT'S FINANCIAL STATUS AND/OR ABILITY TO PAY AS DETERMINED THROUGH THE ASSESSMENT PROCESS.
      PART I, LINE 6A:
      MERCY HEALTH SERVICES-IOWA (MHS-IA) REPORTS ITS COMMUNITY BENEFIT INFORMATION AS PART OF THE CONSOLIDATED COMMUNITY BENEFIT INFORMATION REPORTED BY TRINITY HEALTH (EIN 35-1443425) IN ITS AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, AVAILABLE AT WWW.TRINITY-HEALTH.ORG.IN ADDITION, THE HOSPITAL DIVISIONS OF MHS-IA INCLUDE A COPY OF THEIR MOST RECENT SCHEDULE H ON THEIR RESPECTIVE WEBSITES. TRINITY HEALTH ALSO INCLUDES MHS-IA'S MOST RECENTLY FILED SCHEDULE H ON ITS WEBSITE.
      PART I, LINE 7:
      THE BEST AVAILABLE DATA WAS USED TO CALCULATE THE COST AMOUNTS REPORTED IN ITEM 7. FOR CERTAIN CATEGORIES, PRIMARILY TOTAL CHARITY CARE AND MEANS-TESTED GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS, SPECIFIC COST-TO-CHARGE RATIOS WERE CALCULATED AND APPLIED TO THOSE CATEGORIES. THE COST-TO-CHARGE RATIO WAS DERIVED FROM WORKSHEET 2, RATIO OF PATIENT CARE COST-TO-CHARGES. IN OTHER CATEGORIES, THE BEST AVAILABLE DATA WAS DERIVED FROM THE HOSPITALS' COST ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS.
      PART I, LN 7 COL(F):
      THE FOLLOWING NUMBER, $18,098,216, REPRESENTS THE AMOUNT OF BAD DEBT EXPENSE INCLUDED IN TOTAL FUNCTIONAL EXPENSES IN FORM 990, PART IX, LINE 25. PER IRS INSTRUCTIONS, THIS AMOUNT WAS EXCLUDED FROM THE DENOMINATOR WHEN CALCULATING THE PERCENT OF TOTAL EXPENSE FOR SCHEDULE H, PART I, LINE 7, COLUMN (F).
      PART II, COMMUNITY BUILDING ACTIVITIES:
      MERCYONE NORTH IOWA MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE NORTH IOWA) SPONSORED THE NORTH IOWA FOOD COALITION, A COALITION AIMING TO HELP CITIZENS OBTAIN AFFORDABLE FRESH, WHOLE, HEALTHY FOODS WITHIN OUR COMMUNITY.MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE DUBUQUE) PROVIDED COMMUNITY SUPPORT BY PROVIDING EMS TRAINING, WHICH INCLUDED VARIOUS ACTIVITIES THAT SUPPORT THE EDUCATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICE PERSONNEL IN THE TRI-STATE AREA. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON):ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: AS ONE OF THE LARGEST EMPLOYERS IN THE AREA, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON TAKES ITS CIVIC RESPONSIBILITY VERY SERIOUSLY. SUPPORT OF, AND CONTRIBUTIONS TO, COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS, EVENTS, AND PROGRAMS, SUCH AS NEW HORIZONS-CHAMBER, AND THE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION HELP IMPROVE THE ECONOMY OF MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON'S CATCHMENT COUNTIES. BY PROMOTING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON HELPS CREATE A COMMUNITY THAT CONTINUES TO BUILD ITSELF THROUGH THE LEADERS WHO WORK AND VOLUNTEER AT THE HOSPITAL. ECONOMIC STABILITY IS INTRINSICALLY LINKED TO THE PREVENTION OF HEALTH PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH POVERTY, HOMELESSNESS, AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES, AND IS CRUCIAL IF THE COMMUNITY HOPES TO MAINTAIN A VIABLE HOSPITAL COMPLEX WITH A BROAD SPECTRUM OF ESSENTIAL SERVICES. IN FISCAL YEAR 2022 (FY22), MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON SUPPORTED THE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION WITH THE EXPANSION OF A LOCAL NON-PROFIT DAYCARE TO DOUBLE THEIR CAPACITY. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON'S INVOLVEMENT INCLUDED DONATIONS OF IN-KIND PRODUCTS FOR OPEN HOUSES, WORKDAYS, AND FUNDRAISERS. WE ALSO WROTE LETTERS OF SUPPORT FOR GRANTS.COMMUNITY SUPPORT: FY22 BROUGHT MANY CHALLENGES TO OUR COMMUNITY AS WE FACED LOSING THE ONLY EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES PROVIDER. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON, WITH THE SUPPORT OF TWO MEMBERS OF THE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, WORKED TO RESEARCH OPTIONS FOR EMS AND SUPPORTED THE CREATION OF A COUNTY OWNED AND OPERATED AMBULANCE SERVICE. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON ADMINISTRATORS WERE ACTIVE PARTICIPANTS IN DISCUSSIONS WITH THE CHICKASAW AMBULANCE COUNCIL, CITY COUNCILS AND CHICKASAW COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON ADVOCATED FOR AN AMBULANCE SERVICE THAT WOULD ACCEPT MEDICAID, AS THE PREVIOUS SERVICE DID NOT. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON HAS A COMMITMENT TO THOSE WHO ARE POOR, AND IT WAS IMPORTANT THAT OUR MOST VULNERABLE PATIENTS HAVE ACCESS TO TIMELY AMBULANCE TRANSFERS WHEN A HIGHER LEVEL OF CARE IS NEEDED.ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENTS: MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON CONTINUES TO ADDRESS THE NEED FOR MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY TO SAFELY DISPOSE OF THEIR SHARPS AND CONTAINERS TO REDUCE ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS. THE HOSPITAL COLLABORATES WITH PHARMACIES IN NEW HAMPTON TO COLLECT THEIR CONTAINERS AS WELL.ADVOCACY FOR COMMUNITY HEALTH IMPROVEMENT: IN SEPTEMBER 2021, AN INITIATIVE WAS STARTED TO RENOVATE A CURRENT, RUN-DOWN PARK INTO AN INCLUSIVE PLAYGROUND. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON HAS THREE COLLEAGUES ON THE PLANNING AND FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE. AS WE ALL KNOW, PLAY IS A VITAL PART OF CHILDREN'S DEVELOPMENT, NOT JUST PHYSICALLY BUT SOCIALLY AND EMOTIONALLY. THE INCLUSIVE PLAYGROUND WILL BRING TOGETHER CHILDREN AND FAMILIES IN PLAY. THE PLAYGROUND WILL HELP THOSE WITH DISABILITIES HAVE FUN PLAYING ALONGSIDE THEIR FRIENDS, FURTHERING THEIR DEVELOPMENT AND SENSE OF BELONGING. FOR OTHER CHILDREN, IT WILL TEACH THEM TO EMBRACE DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION OF CHILDREN DIFFERENT FROM THEM.WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT: MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON SUCCESSFULLY RECRUITED TWO PHYSICIANS IN FY22 WITH ONE STARTING IMMEDIATELY AND THE OTHER BEGINNING AFTER THEIR RESIDENCY IS COMPLETE IN THE SUMMER OF 2023.MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON PARTNERS WITH NORTHEAST IOWA COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND AREA SCHOOLS TO PROMOTE CAREER EXPLORATION. CAREER EXPLORATION IS AN IMPORTANT STEP IN HELPING STUDENTS FULFILL LONG TERM EMPLOYMENT GOALS. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON WELCOMES JOB SHADOW STUDENTS AND HOLDS AN ANNUAL HEALTH CARE CAREER DAY FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS. ALL AREA 8TH GRADE STUDENTS TOUR MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON TO LEARN ABOUT HEALTH CARE CAREERS AND PARTICIPATE IN MOCK INTERVIEWS. MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON ADMINISTRATION IS ALSO A MEMBER OF THE NORTHEAST IOWA REGIONAL CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION PLANNING PARTNERSHIP.
      PART III, LINE 2:
      METHODOLOGY USED FOR LINE 2 - ANY DISCOUNTS PROVIDED OR PAYMENTS MADE TO A PARTICULAR PATIENT ACCOUNT ARE APPLIED TO THAT PATIENT ACCOUNT PRIOR TO ANY BAD DEBT WRITE-OFF AND ARE THUS NOT INCLUDED IN BAD DEBT EXPENSE. AS A RESULT OF THE PAYMENT AND ADJUSTMENT ACTIVITY BEING POSTED TO BAD DEBT ACCOUNTS, WE ARE ABLE TO REPORT BAD DEBT EXPENSE NET OF THESE TRANSACTIONS.
      PART III, LINE 3:
      MHS-IA USES A PREDICTIVE MODEL THAT INCORPORATES THREE DISTINCT VARIABLES IN COMBINATION TO PREDICT WHETHER A PATIENT QUALIFIES FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE: (1) SOCIO-ECONOMIC SCORE, (2) ESTIMATED FEDERAL POVERTY LEVEL (FPL), AND (3) HOMEOWNERSHIP. BASED ON THE MODEL, CHARITY CARE CAN STILL BE EXTENDED TO PATIENTS EVEN IF THEY HAVE NOT RESPONDED TO FINANCIAL COUNSELING EFFORTS AND ALL OTHER FUNDING SOURCES HAVE BEEN EXHAUSTED. FOR FINANCIAL STATEMENT PURPOSES, MHS-IA IS RECORDING AMOUNTS AS CHARITY CARE (INSTEAD OF BAD DEBT EXPENSE) BASED ON THE RESULTS OF THE PREDICTIVE MODEL. THEREFORE, MHS-IA IS REPORTING ZERO ON LINE 3, SINCE THEORETICALLY ANY POTENTIAL CHARITY CARE SHOULD HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED THROUGH THE PREDICTIVE MODEL.
      PART III, LINE 9B:
      MHS-IA'S FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE POLICY CONTAINS PROVISIONS ON THE COLLECTION PRACTICES TO BE FOLLOWED FOR PATIENTS WHO ARE KNOWN TO QUALIFY FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE. CHARITY DISCOUNTS ARE APPLIED TO THE AMOUNTS THAT QUALIFY FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE. COLLECTION PRACTICES FOR THE REMAINING BALANCES ARE CLEARLY OUTLINED IN EACH HOSPITAL'S FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE POLICY. THE HOSPITALS HAVE IMPLEMENTED BILLING AND COLLECTION PRACTICES FOR PATIENT PAYMENT OBLIGATIONS THAT ARE FAIR, CONSISTENT AND COMPLIANT WITH STATE AND FEDERAL REGULATIONS.
      PART III, LINE 4:
      "MHS-IA IS IS INCLUDED IN THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF TRINITY HEALTH. THE FOLLOWING IS THE TEXT OF THE PATIENT ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE, ESTIMATED RECEIVABLES FROM AND PAYABLES TO THIRD-PARTY PAYERS FOOTNOTE FROM PAGE 13 OF THOSE STATEMENTS: ""AN UNCONDITIONAL RIGHT TO PAYMENT, SUBJECT ONLY TO THE PASSAGE OF TIME IS TREATED AS A RECEIVABLE. PATIENT ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE, INCLUDING BILLED ACCOUNTS AND UNBILLED ACCOUNTS FOR WHICH THERE IS AN UNCONDITIONAL RIGHT TO PAYMENT, AND ESTIMATED AMOUNTS DUE FROM THIRD-PARTY PAYERS FOR RETROACTIVE ADJUSTMENTS, ARE RECEIVABLES IF THE RIGHT TO CONSIDERATION IS UNCONDITIONAL AND ONLY THE PASSAGE OF TIME IS REQUIRED BEFORE PAYMENT OF THAT CONSIDERATION IS DUE. FOR PATIENT ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE, THE ESTIMATED UNCOLLECTABLE AMOUNTS ARE GENERALLY CONSIDERED IMPLICIT PRICE CONCESSIONS THAT ARE A DIRECT REDUCTION TO PATIENT SERVICE REVENUE AND ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE.THE CORPORATION HAS AGREEMENTS WITH THIRD-PARTY PAYERS THAT PROVIDE FOR PAYMENTS TO THE CORPORATION'S HEALTH MINISTRIES AT AMOUNTS DIFFERENT FROM ESTABLISHED RATES. ESTIMATED RETROACTIVE ADJUSTMENTS UNDER REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENTS WITH THIRD-PARTY PAYERS AND OTHER CHANGES IN ESTIMATES ARE INCLUDED IN NET PATIENT SERVICE REVENUE AND ESTIMATED RECEIVABLES FROM AND PAYABLES TO THIRD-PARTY PAYERS. RETROACTIVE ADJUSTMENTS ARE ACCRUED ON AN ESTIMATED BASIS IN THE PERIOD THE RELATED SERVICES ARE RENDERED AND ADJUSTED IN FUTURE PERIODS, AS FINAL SETTLEMENTS ARE DETERMINED.""PART III, LINE 5:TOTAL MEDICARE REVENUE REPORTED IN PART III, LINE 5 HAS BEEN REDUCED BY THE ONE PERCENT SEQUESTRATION REDUCTION FOR THE PERIOD APRIL 1, 2022 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2022."
      PART III, LINE 8:
      MHS-IA DOES NOT BELIEVE ANY MEDICARE SHORTFALL SHOULD BE TREATED AS COMMUNITY BENEFIT. THIS IS SIMILAR TO CATHOLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION RECOMMENDATIONS, WHICH STATE THAT SERVING MEDICARE PATIENTS IS NOT A DIFFERENTIATING FEATURE OF TAX-EXEMPT HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATIONS AND THAT THE EXISTING COMMUNITY BENEFIT FRAMEWORK ALLOWS COMMUNITY BENEFIT PROGRAMS THAT SERVE THE MEDICARE POPULATION TO BE COUNTED IN OTHER COMMUNITY BENEFIT CATEGORIES.PART III, LINE 8: COSTING METHODOLOGY FOR LINE 6 - MEDICARE COSTS WERE OBTAINED FROM THE FILED MEDICARE COST REPORT. THE COSTS ARE BASED ON MEDICARE ALLOWABLE COSTS AS REPORTED ON WORKSHEET B, COLUMN 27, WHICH EXCLUDE DIRECT MEDICAL EDUCATION COSTS. INPATIENT MEDICARE COSTS ARE CALCULATED BASED ON A COMBINATION OF ALLOWABLE COST PER DAY TIMES MEDICARE DAYS FOR ROUTINE SERVICES AND COST TO CHARGE RATIO TIMES MEDICARE CHARGES FOR ANCILLARY SERVICES. OUTPATIENT MEDICARE COSTS ARE CALCULATED BASED ON COST TO CHARGE RATIO TIMES MEDICARE CHARGES BY ANCILLARY DEPARTMENT.
      PART VI, LINE 2:
      NEEDS ASSESSMENT - MHS-IA HOSPITALS ASSESS THE HEALTH STATUS OF THEIR COMMUNITIES, IN PARTNERSHIP WITH COMMUNITY COALITIONS, AS PART OF THE NORMAL COURSE OF OPERATIONS AND IN THE CONTINUOUS EFFORT TO IMPROVE PATIENT CARE AND THE HEALTH OF THE OVERALL COMMUNITY. TO ASSESS THE HEALTH OF THEIR COMMUNITIES, OUR HOSPITALS MAY USE PATIENT DATA, PUBLIC HEALTH DATA, ANNUAL COUNTY HEALTH RANKINGS, MARKET STUDIES AND GEOGRAPHICAL MAPS SHOWING AREAS OF HIGH AREAS OF UTILIZATION FOR EMERGENCY SERVICES AND INPATIENT CARE, WHICH MAY INDICATE POPULATIONS OF INDIVIDUALS WHO DO NOT HAVE ACCESS TO PREVENTATIVE SERVICES OR ARE UNINSURED.MERCYONE NORTH IOWA AND MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON EACH HAVE A LOCAL BOARD OF GOVERNANCE COMPOSED OF AREA RESIDENTS, EMPLOYERS, AND REPRESENTATIVES OF DEMOGRAPHIC GROUPS. THESE HOSPITALS ALSO COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER AGENCIES ABOUT WHAT SERVICES ARE NEEDED LOCALLY. IN PARTICULAR OUR PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS HAVE A STRONG AWARENESS OF PATIENT NEEDS. A COMMITTEE MEETS QUARTERLY THAT IS COMPRISED OF COMMUNITY MEMBERS AND HOSPITAL PERSONNEL THAT WORK DIRECTLY WITH THE UNINSURED, UNDERINSURED AND UNDERSERVED. THE COMMUNITY BENEFIT MINISTRY OFFICER INTERFACES REGULARLY WITH COMMUNITY HUMAN SERVICE AGENCIES AND COALITIONS.THE STAFF OF MERCYONE SIOUXLAND MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE SIOUXLAND) ROUTINELY MET WITH VARIOUS COMMUNITY AGENCIES AND SCHOOLS IN SEARCH OF OPPORTUNITIES TO FURTHER COLLABORATE TO ADDRESS PHYSICAL HEALTH, SUBSTANCE MISUSE, MENTAL HEALTH, AND PREVENTATIVE CARE.
      PART VI, LINE 3:
      PATIENT EDUCATION OF ELIGIBILITY FOR ASSISTANCE - MHS-IA HOSPITALS COMMUNICATE EFFECTIVELY WITH PATIENTS REGARDING PATIENT PAYMENT OBLIGATIONS. FINANCIAL COUNSELING IS PROVIDED TO PATIENTS ABOUT THEIR PAYMENT OBLIGATIONS AND HOSPITAL BILLS. INFORMATION ON HOSPITAL-BASED FINANCIAL SUPPORT POLICIES, FEDERAL, STATE, AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS, AND OTHER COMMUNITY-BASED CHARITABLE PROGRAMS THAT PROVIDE COVERAGE FOR SERVICES ARE MADE AVAILABLE TO PATIENTS DURING THE PRE-REGISTRATION AND REGISTRATION PROCESSES AND/OR THROUGH COMMUNICATIONS WITH PATIENTS SEEKING FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE. FINANCIAL COUNSELORS MAKE AFFIRMATIVE EFFORTS TO HELP PATIENTS APPLY FOR PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PROGRAMS FOR WHICH THEY MAY QUALIFY AND THAT MAY ASSIST THEM IN OBTAINING AND PAYING FOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES. EVERY EFFORT IS MADE TO DETERMINE A PATIENT'S ELIGIBILITY PRIOR TO OR AT THE TIME OF ADMISSION OR SERVICE. THE HOSPITALS OFFER FINANCIAL SUPPORT TO PATIENTS WITH LIMITED MEANS. THIS SUPPORT IS AVAILABLE TO UNINSURED AND UNDERINSURED PATIENTS WHO DO NOT QUALIFY FOR PUBLIC PROGRAMS OR OTHER ASSISTANCE. NOTIFICATION ABOUT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE, INCLUDING CONTACT INFORMATION, IS AVAILABLE THROUGH PATIENT BROCHURES, MESSAGES ON PATIENT BILLS, POSTED NOTICES IN PUBLIC REGISTRATION AREAS INCLUDING EMERGENCY ROOMS, ADMITTING AND REGISTRATION DEPARTMENTS, AND OTHER PATIENT FINANCIAL SERVICES OFFICES. SUMMARIES OF HOSPITAL PROGRAMS ARE MADE AVAILABLE TO APPROPRIATE COMMUNITY HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES AGENCIES AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS THAT ASSIST PEOPLE IN NEED. INFORMATION REGARDING FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON HOSPITAL WEBSITES. IN ADDITION TO ENGLISH, THIS INFORMATION IS ALSO AVAILABLE IN OTHER LANGUAGES AS REQUIRED BY INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 501(R), REFLECTING OTHER PRIMARY LANGUAGES SPOKEN BY THE POPULATION SERVICED BY OUR HOSPITALS. THE HOSPITALS HAVE ESTABLISHED WRITTEN POLICIES FOR THE BILLING, COLLECTION AND SUPPORT FOR PATIENTS WITH PAYMENT OBLIGATIONS. THE HOSPITALS MAKES EVERY EFFORT TO ADHERE TO THE POLICY AND ARE COMMITTED TO IMPLEMENTING AND APPLYING THE POLICY FOR ASSISTING PATIENTS WITH LIMITED MEANS IN A PROFESSIONAL, CONSISTENT MANNER.
      PART VI, LINE 4:
      COMMUNITY INFORMATION -MERCYONE NORTH IOWA'S SERVICE AREA IS COMPRISED OF 15 COUNTIES IN NORTH-CENTRAL IOWA AND SOUTHERN MINNESOTA. THE PRIMARY SERVICE AREA INCLUDES CERRO GORDO AND WORTH COUNTIES, AND THE SECONDARY SERVICE AREA INCLUDES BUTLER, CHICKASAW, FLOYD, FRANKLIN, FREEBORN, HANCOCK, HARDIN, HOWARD, KOSSUTH, MITCHELL, PALO ALTO, WINNEBAGO, AND WRIGHT COUNTIES. THE NORTH-CENTRAL IOWA REGION HAS A POPULATION OF APPROXIMATELY 200,000, INCLUDING ABOUT 42,600 RESIDENTS WHO LIVE WITHIN CERRO GORDO, THE LARGEST COUNTY AND 7,500 RESIDENTS WHO LIVE WITHIN WORTH, THE SMALLEST COUNTY, AS WELL AS ONE FEDERALLY QUALIFIED HEALTH CENTER. REGIONALLY, THE POPULATION IS APPROXIMATELY 96% WHITE ALONE, 1.8% BLACK ALONE AND 4.6% LATINO (STATE AVERAGES ARE: 90.7%, 4%, AND 6.2% RESPECTIVELY). THIS AREA IS AMONG THE LEAST DIVERSE NATIONALLY; HOWEVER, IN IOWA, RACIAL AND ETHNIC MINORITY POPULATIONS ARE INCREASING. THIS POPULATION COMPRISES 2.1% OF THE POPULATION IN BUTLER COUNTY (THE LOWEST) TO 12.6% IN FRANKLIN COUNTY (THE HIGHEST). IOWA HAS AN OLDER POPULATION THAT IS AMONG THE HIGHEST IN THE NATION. REGIONALLY, INDIVIDUALS AGED 65 YEARS AND OLDER ACCOUNT FOR 21.8% OF THE POPULATION AND PERSONS UNDER AGE 18 YEARS ACCOUNT FOR 22.5% OF THE POPULATION. STATEWIDE, THE AVERAGES ARE 17.1% AND 23.2% RESPECTIVELY. IN DUBUQUE COUNTY, ONE OTHER HOSPITAL IS PRESENT AND ONE FEDERALLY QUALIFIED COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER. THE PRIMARY SERVICE AREA OF MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE MEDICAL CENTER (MERCYONE DYERSVILLE) IS DUBUQUE COUNTY, IOWA, WHICH IS A FEDERALLY DESIGNATED MEDICALLY UNDERSERVED AREA.THE MAJOR SERVICE AREA FOR MERCYONE DUBUQUE IS DUBUQUE COUNTY, BUT ALSO INCLUDES JACKSON, CLAYTON, LAFAYETTE, AND DELAWARE COUNTIES IN IOWA, GRANT COUNTY, WISCONSIN, AND JO DAVIESS COUNTY, ILLINOIS. THE SERVICE AREA IS RELATIVELY HOMOGENOUS, WITH A WHITE NON-HISPANIC POPULATION OF 92.5% AND VERY LOW OVERALL POPULATION GROWTH. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND AND DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL: SIOUX CITY, IOWA SERVES AS THE REGIONAL HUB FOR BUSINESS, EMPLOYMENT, INDUSTRY, RETAIL TRADE, MEDICAL CARE, AND EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES. SIX COUNTIES IN THE TRI-STATE AREA OF NORTHWESTERN IOWA, NORTHEASTERN NEBRASKA, AND SOUTHWESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA WERE INCLUDED IN THE SIOUXLAND COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. INDIVIDUALS RESIDING IN THESE COUNTIES LIVED WITHIN A 40-MILE RADIUS OF SIOUX CITY. THE AREA INCLUDED THE IOWA COUNTIES OF WOODBURY AND PLYMOUTH; THE NEBRASKA COUNTIES OF DAKOTA, DIXON, AND THURSTON; AND THE SOUTH DAKOTA COUNTY OF UNION. THE TOTAL AREA FOR THESE COUNTIES IS 3,355 SQUARE MILES, WITH WOODBURY AND PLYMOUTH REPRESENTING 52% OF THE TOTAL AREA. THE SIOUXLAND REGION HAS A TOTAL CURRENT POPULATION OF 177,000. ABOUT 26% OF THE POPULATION WAS UNDER THE AGE OF 18 YEARS AND 16% OF THE POPULATION WAS OVER THE AGE OF 65 YEARS. THE RACE/ETHNICITY DISTRIBUTION IN THE AREA WAS 84% WHITE, 4% AMERICAN INDIAN, 3% BLACK, 2% ASIAN, 3% TWO OR MORE RACES, AND 4% OTHER. EIGHTY FOUR PERCENT ARE NON-HISPANIC WHILE 16% WERE HISPANIC/LATINO.IN THE AREA, OVERALL POVERTY RATE IS 13%, WITH AMERICAN INDIAN/ALASKA NATIVE AND BLACK OR AFRICAN AMERICAN POPULATIONS HAVING THE HIGHEST POVERTY RATE. THIRTY PERCENT OF HOUSEHOLDS FALL UNDER THE 200% POVERTY RATE AND THE MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME FOR THE AREA IS $61,393.THE REGIONAL ECONOMY IS BASED ON FOOD MANUFACTURING/PROCESSING, AGRICULTURE, HEALTH CARE AND SOCIAL ASSISTANCE, EDUCATION, AND THE FOOD SERVICE INDUSTRIES. THE JUNE 2021 UNEMPLOYMENT RATE FOR THE LARGEST COUNTIES IN THE REGION WOODBURY, PLYMOUTH, AND DAKOTA WAS 4.9%, 3.5%, AND 3.4%, RESPECTIVELY.WOODBURY COUNTY, IA HAS A POPULATION OF 103,107, WHICH REPRESENTS 58% OF THE SIOUXLAND REGIONAL TOTAL. THE RESIDENTS OF SIOUX CITY AND SERGEANT BLUFF REPRESENT NEARLY 90% OF THE WOODBURY COUNTY POPULATION. PLYMOUTH COUNTY, IA HAS A POPULATION OF 25,177, OR 14% OF THE SIOUXLAND REGIONAL TOTAL. THE LARGEST COMMUNITY IN THE COUNTY IS LE MARS WITH A POPULATION OF 10,081. DAKOTA COUNTY, NE HAS A POPULATION OF 20,026. SOUTH SIOUX CITY AND DAKOTA CITY TOTAL RESIDENTS REPRESENT 73% OF THE COUNTY POPULATION. UNION COUNTY, SD HAS A POPULATION OF 15,932 WHICH REPRESENTS 9% OF THE REGIONAL TOTAL. NORTH SIOUX CITY AND DAKOTA DUNES' TOTAL RESIDENTS REPRESENT 34% OF THE COUNTY POPULATION. THURSTON COUNTY, NE HAS A POPULATION OF 7,224. DIXON COUNTY, NE HAS A POPULATION OF 5,636, REPRESENTING 7% OF THE REGIONAL TOTAL.MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON SERVES THE CHICKASAW AREA AND SURROUNDING COUNTIES WITHIN A 20-MILE RADIUS STRETCHING IN EVERY DIRECTION FROM NEW HAMPTON. THE PRIMARY SERVICE AREA CONSISTS OF THE TOWNS OF NEW HAMPTON, FREDERICKSBURG, ALTA VISTA, IONIA, ELMA, WAUCOMA, LAWLER AND NASHUA. THE ESTIMATED POPULATION OF THIS AREA IS 13,000. ACCORDING TO THE U.S. CENSUS BUREAU, CHICKASAW COUNTY HAD AN ESTIMATED POPULATION OF 12,012 IN 2020. CHICKASAW COUNTY EXPERIENCED AN ESTIMATED 3.5% DECLINE IN POPULATION FROM 2010 TO 2020. THE STRESS THAT THIS TREND PLACES ON THE PROVISION OF SERVICES IS COMPOUNDED BY THE HIGHER-THAN-AVERAGE PROPORTION OF ELDERLY INDIVIDUALS IN THE AREA. OF THE CHICKASAW POPULATION, 21.4% WERE OVER AGE 65 IN 2020, COMPARED TO 17.7% FOR THE STATE AND 16.8% FOR THE NATION. THIS LARGE PERCENTAGE FOR THIS AGE GROUP PRESENTS SPECIAL CHALLENGES TO HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, BECAUSE THIS AGE GROUP HAS THE HIGHEST INCIDENCE OF DISEASE AND MORTALITY IN MOST CATEGORIES, AND CORRESPONDINGLY, REPRESENTS THE BIGGEST USERS OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES. IN ADDITION, MEDICARE PAYMENT SHORTFALLS PRESENT AN ADDITIONAL BURDEN FOR RURAL HEALTH PROVIDERS. APPROXIMATELY 53% OF MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON'S REVENUES (HOSPITAL INPATIENT AND OUTPATIENT) WERE GENERATED FROM MEDICARE PATIENTS. THE MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME IN CHICKASAW COUNTY WAS ESTIMATED AT $61,239 IN 2020. PERSONS IN POVERTY COMPRISE 8.3% OF THE POPULATION. THE FISCAL YEAR 2020 PAYER MIX AT POINT OF REGISTRATION INCLUDES 53% COVERED BY MEDICARE, 11.8% COVERED BY MEDICAID AND 1.5% SELF-PAY.
      PART VI, LINE 5:
      OTHER INFORMATION -MERCYONE NORTH IOWA HAS PROVIDED MANAGEMENT SERVICES FOR RURAL HOSPITALS SINCE 1978. THESE COMMUNITY HOSPITALS OFFER QUALITY HEALTH CARE AND YET ARE STILL ABLE TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ALL THE RESOURCES WE HAVE TO OFFER AS A MAJOR REFERRAL CENTER. WE EXTEND MEDICAL STAFF PRIVILEGES TO ALL QUALIFIED COMMUNITY HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS TO MEET THE NEEDS OF THOSE WHO LIVE IN OUR COMMUNITIES. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA IS INTENTIONAL IN DEVELOPING TRIPLE-AIM ACCOUNTABLE CARE ORGANIZATION RELATIONSHIPS AND COLLABORATING WITH COMMUNITY HEALTH PROVIDERS AND SOCIAL SERVICE AGENCIES, IN CREATING A SYSTEM OF CARE COORDINATION PROCESSES. AS A TEACHING HOSPITAL, WE HOST A THREE-YEAR FAMILY PRACTICE RESIDENCY PROGRAM, PHARMACY RESIDENCY, INTERNAL MEDICINE RESIDENCY, CARDIOLOGY FELLOWSHIP, HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE CARE FELLOWSHIP, NURSE RESIDENCY, AND A SCHOOL OF RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGY. THE HOSPITAL SERVES AS A CLINICAL SITE FOR MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDENTS. AS A COMMUNITY PROVIDER, SPECIALIZED SERVICES INCLUDE A HEART & VASCULAR INSTITUTE, CANCER, DIABETES, STROKE, BARIATRIC, VASCULAR, AND WOUND, LEVEL II BIRTH, AND LEVEL II EMERGENCY CENTERS. EMERGENCY SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE TO ALL REGARDLESS OF THEIR ABILITY TO PAY. MERCYONE NORTH IOWA FURTHER INVESTS IN THE COMMUNITY TO ENHANCE THE HEALTH OF RESIDENTS BY:-PROVIDING NO COST MEDICATION NAVIGATION ASSISTANCE TO THOSE WHO HAVE NON-COVERED LONG-TERM MEDICATIONS-PARTICIPATING WITH THE AGING SERVICES COALITION TO ADVOCATE AND CONNECT ELDERLY TO COMMUNITY RESOURCES-PARTICIPATING WITH THE NCI COMMUNITY COLLABORATIONS HOUSING COALITION -PARTICIPATING WITH NORTH IOWA ADDICTION PREVENTION ALLIANCE TO ADDRESS UNDERAGE DRINKING, TOBACCO & NICOTINE PREVENTION, PRESCRIPTION & OPIOID MISUSE PREVENTION-OFFERING SOCIAL CARE OUTREACH FOR FOOD, EMERGENCY SUPPLIES, AND CONNECTION TO COMMUNITY -PROVIDING SUPPORT FOR THOSE WHO ARE HOMELESS -PROVIDING THE MERCY FAMILY HEALTH LINE, A 24-HOUR/7-DAY A WEEK TELEPHONE MEDICAL TRIAGE/COVID-19 EMERGENT TESTING AND RESOURCES AND SOCIAL SUPPORT SERVICE-PARTICIPATING AND ASSISTING IN DELIVERY OF MEALS ON WHEELS, INCLUDING TO THOSE IN COVID-19 QUARANTINE-PARTICIPATED IN LOCAL BLOOD DRIVES-PARTICIPATED IN HEALTHY YOU RESOURCE FAIR WITH NUMEROUS COMMUNITY-BASED AGENCIES ON EXERCISE, STRESS REDUCTION, NICOTINE CESSATION, EMPLOYMENT, MENTAL HEALTH, PREGNANCY, CHILDCARE RESOURCES, EDUCATION, FOOD AND NUTRITION, GENERAL HEALTH, HOUSING ASSISTANCE, PARENTING RESOURCES AND SEXUAL HEALTH-COLLABORATING AND PARTICIPATING WITH COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS LOCAL BUILD AND LAUNCH OF AUNT BERTHA COMMUNITY RESOURCE DIRECTORY FOR FREE REDUCED PROGRAMING -COLLABORATING WITH HEALTHY HARVEST, CERRO GORDO PUBLIC HEALTH, HY-VEE, FARMERS MARKET MASON CITY AND CLEAR LAKE, COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS FOR PROTECTING CHILDREN, AND UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN IOWA TO EXTEND VEGGIE VOUCHER PROGRAM WITH COMMUNITY SUPPORTED AGRICULTURE BOXES-SCREENING INDIVIDUALS FOR SOCIAL INFLUENCERS OF HEALTH IN THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT, INPATIENT UNITS, AND CLINICS, AND CONNECTING THOSE IDENTIFIED WITH SOCIAL NEEDS TO COMMUNITY RESOURCES -FACILITATE A WEEKLY VIRTUAL COMMUNITY HUDDLE TO INCLUDE THE CERRO GORDO DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH, NORTH IOWA COMMUNITY ACTION ORGANIZATION, LUTHERAN SERVICES IOWA, COUNTY SOCIAL SERVICES, VA CLINIC, AND CICS, PRAIRIE RIDGE INTEGRATED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE, TO ENABLE THE SHARING OF COMMUNITY RESOURCES, EVENTS AND EDUCATION -BABY FRIENDLY INITIATIVES INCLUDED IMPLEMENTING INFANT FEEDING POLICY, PROVIDING EDUCATION TO ALL NEW STAFF AND ANNUALLY THEREAFTER, PROMOTING 10 STEPS TO SUCCESSFUL BREASTFEEDING, PROVIDING A SECURE LACTATION AREA INCLUSIVE OF A HOSPITAL GRADE PUMP FOR ALL STAFF TO USE, INITIATING OUTPATIENT BREASTFEEDING APPOINTMENTS WITH OUR CLC STAFF, AND PROVIDING DONOR MILK FOR ALL NICU BABIES, AS WELL AS OTHER NEWBORNS NEEDING DONOR'S MILK IN FY22, MERCYONE NORTH IOWA COLLABORATED ON ADVOCACY EFFORTS WITH OUR MERCYONE AND TRINITY HEALTH COLLEAGUES TO SUPPORT POLICIES SUCH AS FUNDING FOR PUBLIC HEALTH AND PREVENTION EFFORTS, HOUSING, RACIAL DISPARITIES, EXPANSION OF HEALTH CARE ACCESS, MEDICAID EXPANSION, 340B, AND INCREASED FUNDING FOR BEHAVIORAL/MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES. IN 1879, THE SISTERS OF MERCY ARRIVED IN DUBUQUE AT THE REQUEST OF BISHOP JOHN HENNESSY TO LAUNCH A HEALING MINISTRY NOW KNOWN AS MERCYONE DUBUQUE MEDICAL CENTER. TODAY, MERCYONE DUBUQUE IS THE LEADING HOSPITAL IN THE TRI-STATES, WITH THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE CARDIOLOGY CENTER IN THE AREA AND THE ONLY LEVEL II REGIONAL NEONATAL INTENSIVE CARE UNIT. OTHER SERVICES INCLUDE A TRAUMA CENTER, A CARF-ACCREDITED INPATIENT REHABILITATION UNIT, HOME HEALTH CARE, ORTHOPEDICS, CANCER CARE, RETAIL PHARMACIES, PALLIATIVE CARE, AND A WIDE RANGE OF OUTPATIENT AND COMMUNITY SERVICES. MERCYONE DUBUQUE OPERATES TWO HOSPITAL-BASED SKILLED NURSING UNITS AND A 40-BED NURSING HOME. IN RECOGNITION OF THE STRENGTH OF ITS NURSING SERVICE AND THE OVERALL QUALITY OF PATIENT CARE, MERCYONE DUBUQUE HAS BEEN DESIGNATED A MAGNET HOSPITAL FOUR CONSECUTIVE TIMES - THE NATION'S MOST PRESTIGIOUS AWARD FOR NURSING EXCELLENCE.MERCYONE DYERSVILLE IS A 20-BED CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITAL SERVING 17 RURAL COMMUNITIES IN WESTERN DUBUQUE COUNTY, OFFERING THE FOLLOWING SERVICES: EMERGENCY/TRAUMA, ACUTE AND SKILLED CARE, REHABILITATION SERVICES (PT/OT/SPEECH), AMBULATORY SURGERY, HOME CARE, AND A SPECIALTY CLINIC.MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE ARE ADVISED BY LOCAL BOARDS AND OPERATE EMERGENCY ROOMS, WHICH ARE AVAILABLE TO ALL REGARDLESS OF ABILITY TO PAY. MERCYONE DUBUQUE ALSO PROVIDED SEVERAL SERVICES THAT WERE UNIQUE TO THE COMMUNITY, INCLUDING OPEN-HEART SURGERY, NEONATAL INTENSIVE CARE, AND INPATIENT COMMUNITY PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES. THROUGHOUT FY22, MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE CONTINUED INCIDENT COMMAND MEETINGS TO MITIGATE THE SURGE RISK OF COVID-19 PATIENTS WITHIN THE HOSPITALS AND THE COMMUNITIES. INCIDENT COMMAND MEETINGS WERE FACILITATED TO ENHANCE COMMUNICATION AND OVERALL EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS TOWARDS ADDRESSING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC. THE WEEKLY INCIDENT COMMAND MEETINGS INCLUDED SECTION CHIEFS FOR OPERATIONS, LOGISTICS/SUPPLIES, DIGITAL SUPPORT, VISITOR/STAFF SCREENING, TESTING, VACCINE, PLANNING, FINANCE, HOSPITAL LIAISON, SAFETY, PUBLIC INFORMATION, EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS/ED, MISSION/SPIRITUAL CARE, AND BUSINESS RECOVERY, AS WELL AS OTHER MEDICAL CENTER LEADERS. INCIDENT COMMAND MEMBERS COLLABORATED WITH LOCAL ENTITIES TO INFORM OUR DECISION MAKING, SUCH AS OTHER HOSPITALS, FEDERAL QUALIFIED COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, DUBUQUE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT, CITY OF DUBUQUE PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE SPECIALIST, DUBUQUE COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT, LONG TERM CARE FACILITIES, AND LOCAL COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES. INCIDENT COMMAND MEETINGS STARTED IN MARCH 2020 AND CONTINUED THROUGH 2022 (BUT WITH LESS FREQUENCY IN 2022).SCREENING STATIONS CONTINUED AT MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE ENTRANCES TO SCREEN COLLEAGUES, PATIENTS, AND VISITORS FOR FEVER AND COVID-19 SYMPTOMS. ALL ENTERING BOTH MEDICAL CENTERS WERE PROVIDED A FACE MASK. AT TIMES OF HIGH COMMUNITY PREVALENCE, WITH VISITOR RESTRICTIONS IN PLACE, MISSION LEADER ASSISTED FAMILIES OF PATIENTS TO CONNECT VIA PHONE AND VIDEO CONFERENCING. ...CONTINUED AFTER PART VI, LINE 6.
      PART VI, LINE 6:
      MHS-IA IS A MEMBER OF TRINITY HEALTH, ONE OF THE LARGEST CATHOLIC HEALTH CARE DELIVERY SYSTEMS IN THE COUNTRY. TRINITY HEALTH'S COMMUNITY HEALTH AND WELL-BEING (CHWB) STRATEGY PROMOTES OPTIMAL HEALTH FOR PEOPLE EXPERIENCING POVERTY AND OTHER VULNERABILITIES IN THE COMMUNITIES WE SERVE BY CONNECTING SOCIAL AND CLINICAL CARE, ADDRESSING SOCIAL NEEDS, DISMANTLING SYSTEMIC RACISM, AND REDUCING HEALTH INEQUITIES. WE DO THIS BY: 1. INVESTING IN OUR COMMUNITIES, 2. ADVANCING SOCIAL CARE, AND 3. IMPACTING SOCIAL INFLUENCERS OF HEALTH.TO FURTHER OUR STRATEGY IN FISCAL YEAR 2022 (FY22), CHWB LAUNCHED TWO TRAINING SERIES TO ADVANCE HEALTH AND RACIAL EQUITY IN OUR COMMUNITIES.1. CHWB LEADER SERIES TO ADVANCE HEALTH AND RACIAL EQUITY: A YEAR-LONG PEER LEARNING SERIES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF OUR CHWB LEADERS TO DELIVER ON OUR CHWB STRATEGY WITH A FOCUS ON COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP AND ENGAGEMENT, AND THE USE OF A RACIAL EQUITY LENS IN ALL OF OUR DECISION MAKING. 2. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT TO ADVANCE RACIAL JUSTICE - PREPARING FOR IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY: A FOUR-PART SERIES ON ENGAGING OUR COMMUNITIES IN MEANINGFUL WAYS USING A HEALTH EQUITY AND RACIAL EQUITY LENS TO BUILD LASTING PARTNERSHIPS AND IMPACTFUL IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES.INVESTING IN OUR COMMUNITIES - TRINITY HEALTH AND ITS MEMBER HOSPITALS ARE COMMITTED TO THE DELIVERY OF PEOPLE-CENTERED CARE AND SERVING AS A COMPASSIONATE AND TRANSFORMING HEALING PRESENCE WITHIN THE COMMUNITIES THEY SERVE. AS A NOT-FOR-PROFIT HEALTH SYSTEM, TRINITY HEALTH REINVESTS ITS PROFITS BACK INTO THE COMMUNITIES AND IS COMMITTED TO ADDRESSING THE UNIQUE NEEDS OF EACH COMMUNITY. IN FY22, TRINITY HEALTH CONTRIBUTED $1.37 BILLION IN COMMUNITY BENEFIT SPENDING TO AID THOSE WHO ARE VULNERABLE AND LIVING IN POVERTY, AND TO IMPROVE THE HEALTH STATUS OF THE COMMUNITIES IN WHICH WE SERVE. SOME EXAMPLES OF THESE INVESTMENTS INCLUDE: TRINITY HEALTH AWARDED OVER $1.6 MILLION IN COMMUNITY GRANTS THAT DIRECTLY ALIGN WITH INTERVENTIONS AND LOCAL PARTNERSHIPS IDENTIFIED IN ITS MEMBER HOSPITALS' COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT (CHNA) IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES, INCLUDING ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE, MENTAL HEALTH, TRANSPORTATION, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT, FOOD ACCESS, AND HOUSING SUPPORTS. WITH A $1.2 MILLION INITIAL INVESTMENT, TRINITY HEALTH LAUNCHED ROUND 2 OF THE TRANSFORMING COMMUNITIES INITIATIVE (TCI), A FIVE-YEAR, INNOVATIVE FUNDING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE INITIATIVE, PARTNERING WITH COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS AND RESIDENTS TO ADVANCE HEALTH AND RACIAL EQUITY IN NINE OF OUR COMMUNITIES EXPERIENCING HIGH POVERTY AND OTHER VULNERABILITIES. HEALTH MINISTRIES RECEIVING TCI FUNDING ARE COLLABORATING WITH A LOCAL MULTI-SECTOR COLLABORATIVE TO DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT EVIDENCE-BASED STRATEGIES THAT ADVANCE HEALTH AND RACIAL EQUITY THROUGH ADDRESSING AT LEAST ONE ROOT CAUSE OF POOR HEALTH IDENTIFIED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THEIR MOST RECENT CHNA IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY. TRINITY HEALTH AWARDED OVER $1 MILLION IN COVID-19 FUNDING TO SUPPORT NEW AND ONGOING COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND MOBILIZATION EFFORTS AROUND MAKING THE COVID-19 VACCINATION ACCESSIBLE TO ALL ELIGIBLE POPULATIONS. THIS FUNDING WAS DESIGNED TO SUPPORT ALL COMMUNITIES TO ENSURE EASY AND EQUITABLE ACCESS TO THE VACCINE BY REMOVING BARRIERS FOR ALL PEOPLE TO RECEIVE THE VACCINE, ESPECIALLY COMMUNITIES THAT HAVE LESS THAN A 75% VACCINATION RATE. WITH THIS FUNDING, HEALTH MINISTRIES FACILITATED 3,200 COVID-19 VACCINE EVENTS, ADMINISTERED 80,000 COVID-19 VACCINE DOSES, AND REACHED 874,000 PEOPLE WITH EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS ON COVID-19 AND THE BENEFITS OF VACCINATION.IN ADDITION TO THE $1.37 BILLION IN COMMUNITY BENEFIT SPENDING, OUR COMMUNITY INVESTING PROGRAM HAD THE MOST ROBUST YEAR OF LENDING SINCE THE PROGRAM'S INCEPTION OVER 20 YEARS AGO: $17.8 MILLION IN NEW LOANS AND $8.3 MILLION IN LOAN RENEWALS WERE APPROVED, FOCUSING ON BUILDING AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND INCREASING ACCESS TO EDUCATION IN PARTNERSHIP WITH OUR HEALTH MINISTRIES. ADVANCING SOCIAL CARE - TRINITY HEALTH'S SOCIAL CARE PROGRAM WAS DEVELOPED TO ADDRESS SOCIAL NEEDS, SUCH AS ACCESS TO TRANSPORTATION, CHILDCARE, OR AFFORDABLE MEDICATIONS BY FACILITATING CONNECTIONS BETWEEN OUR PATIENTS, HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT PROMOTE HEALTHY BEHAVIORS. HIGHLIGHTS FROM FY22 INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING SUCCESSES:- LAUNCHED TRINITY HEALTH COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER (CHW) CERTIFICATION PROGRAM, TRAINING 86 CHWS WITH 40+ HOURS OF TRAINING, AND INCREASED CHW STAFF ACROSS MOST HEALTH MINISTRIES- LAUNCHED A SYSTEM-WIDE ASSESSMENT OF LANGUAGE ACCESS SERVICES TO RECOMMEND SYSTEM STANDARDS THAT ENSURE CULTURALLY AND LINGUISTICALLY APPROPRIATE SERVICES FOR ALL OF OUR PATIENTS, THEIR COMPANIONS, AND CAREGIVERS- ENGAGED OVER 1,100 PARTICIPANTS IN THE NATIONAL DIABETES PREVENTION PROGRAM, EXCEEDING OUR PROGRAM YEAR 5 GOAL- INCREASED THE NUMBER OF ACTIVE COMMUNITY PARTNER ORGANIZATIONS ON THE COMMUNITY RESOURCE DIRECTORY BY 120% FROM FISCAL YEAR 2021- ENGAGED 5,300+ PATIENTS WHO ARE DUALLY ENROLLED IN MEDICARE AND MEDICAID IN A SOCIAL CARE OR MEDICAL CARE ACTIVITY, IN SUPPORT OF REDUCING PREVENTABLE HOSPITALIZATIONS (SUCH AS DIABETES AND ASTHMA)IMPACTING SOCIAL INFLUENCERS OF HEALTH - LEVERAGING INVESTOR POWER TO CATALYZE CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, TRINITY HEALTH'S SHAREHOLDER ADVOCACY WORK FOCUSES ON DISMANTLING RACISM ACROSS FIVE STRATEGIC FOCUS AREAS BY HOLDING CORPORATIONS ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS THOSE COMPANIES PERPETUATE IN THE U.S. AND BEYOND. IN FY22, TRINITY HEALTH FACILITATED OVER 135 SHAREHOLDER ADVOCACY ENGAGEMENTS, WITH GREAT SUCCESS:- FIVE BELOW COMMITTED TO ASSESS AND MANAGE THE RISKS/HAZARDS ASSOCIATED WITH CHEMICALS OF HIGH CONCERN CONTAINED IN THEIR PRIVATE LABEL PRODUCTS- UNILEVER AGREED TO STOP FOOD AND BEVERAGE MARKETING TO CHILDREN UNDER AGE 16, AND WILL ADOPT NEW TARGETS TO REDUCE SALT, ADDED SUGARS AND CALORIES, AND INCREASE SALES OF THEIR HEALTHIER PRODUCTS- PEPSICO SET GOALS TO INCREASE POSITIVE NUTRIENTS IN THEIR PRODUCTS- PDC ENERGY ACCELERATED ITS GOAL TO END ROUTINE FLARING OF METHANE, FROM 2030 TO 2025, THUS REDUCING ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH RISKS AND GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONSADDITIONALLY, TRINITY HEALTH AND OTHER MEMBERS OF THE INTERFAITH CENTER ON CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY GUN SAFETY GROUP SUBMITTED A SHAREHOLDER RESOLUTION ASKING STURM RUGER, ONE OF THE NATION'S LEADING MANUFACTURERS OF FIREARMS, TO CONDUCT AND PUBLISH AN INDEPENDENT HUMAN RIGHTS IMPACT ASSESSMENT OF ITS POLICIES, PRACTICES AND PRODUCTS, AND MAKE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR IMPROVEMENT. THE RESOLUTION RECEIVED A 68.5% VOTE IN FAVOR, WELL ABOVE THE THRESHOLD REQUIRED FOR THE RESOLUTION TO BE RESUBMITTED IN 2023, INDICATING A LARGE MAJORITY OF STURM RUGER INVESTORS BELIEVE THE COMPANY HAS TO ADDRESS ITS HUMAN RIGHTS IMPACTS. TRINITY HEALTH AND TRINITY HEALTH OF NEW ENGLAND ARE CITED AS PART OF THE GROUP WHO MOVED FORWARD THIS RESOLUTION.FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT TRINITY HEALTH, VISIT WWW.TRINITY-HEALTH.ORG.
      PART VI, LINE 5 CONTINUED:
      "MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONTINUED TO SERVE ON A LOCAL PACIFIC ISLANDERS HEALTH ADVISORY TEAM. THE MARSHALLESE POPULATION WAS DISPROPORTIONATELY IMPACTED BY COVID-19 OFTENTIMES DUE TO THEIR COMORBIDITIES AND CONGREGATE LIVING ARRANGEMENTS. THE TEAM GENERATED SOLUTIONS TO ASSIST THIS VULNERABLE POPULATION, INCLUDING INCREASED PUBLIC HEALTH EDUCATION, COVID-19 TESTING, DISTRIBUTION OF MASKS, AND LUNCH AND DINNER DELIVERIES. THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT WAS PRESENT AT THE MARSHALLESE CHURCH AND REPUBLIC OF THE MARSHALL ISLANDS CONSTITUTIONAL DAYS TO PROVIDE COVID-19 EDUCATION AND VACCINATIONS. TO DECREASE VACCINE HESITANCY, VACCINE FAQS WERE TRANSLATED INTO MARSHALLESE.MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONTINUED TO ENDORSE AND PARTICIPATE IN AN #ALLOFUSDUBUQUE CAMPAIGN. MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE WORKED COLLABORATIVELY WITH THE CITY OF DUBUQUE, CLARKE UNIVERSITY, COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF GREATER DUBUQUE, CRESCENT COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER, DIVINE WORD COLLEGE, DOMINICAN SISTERS OF SINSINAWA, DUBUQUE AREA CONGREGATIONS UNITED, DUBUQUE COLLEGE ACCESS NETWORK, DUBUQUE COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, DUBUQUE COMMUNITY YMCA/YWCA, DUBUQUE FOR REFUGEE CHILDREN, THE DUBUQUE PACIFIC ISLANDER HEALTH PROJECT, DUBUQUE PARADISE CHURCH, ASSEMBLY OF GOD, EPIC HEALTH AND WELLNESS, FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH, LORAS COLLEGE, MCGRAW HILL, MEDICAL ASSOCIATES CLINIC AND HEALTH PLANS, THE MULTICULTURAL FAMILY CENTER, NAACP-DUBUQUE CHAPTER, NORTHEAST IOWA COMMUNITY COLLEGE, PRESENTATION LANTERN CENTER (IMMIGRANTS), RADIO DUBUQUE, RIVER BEND FOODBANK, SISTERS OF CHARITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, SISTERS OF ST. FRANCIS, SISTERS OF THE PRESENTATION OF DUBUQUE, THE TELEGRAPH HERALD, TRI-STATE VETS, UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF DUBUQUE, UNITYPOINT HEALTH, AND UNIVERSITY OF DUBUQUE.MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONTINUED SUPPORT OF THE DUBUQUE COMMUNITY QUARANTINE SHELTER BY PROVIDING BLESSING BAGS, THERMAL BLANKETS, AND FOOD AND WATER. THE BLESSING BAGS CONTAINED EATING UTENSILS, TOILETRIES, BATH TOWELS, WASH CLOTHS, FACE MASKS, AND HAND SANITIZER. MERCYONE DUBUQUE CASE MANAGEMENT TEAM AND POPULATION HEALTH SERVICES ORGANIZATION CONTINUED TO FACILITATE CALLS TO PATIENTS AND COLLEAGUES DIAGNOSED WITH COVID-19. THE TEAMS ALSO FOLLOWED UP WITH PERSONS UNDER INVESTIGATION TO ASSURE THEY HAD WHAT THEY NEEDED WHILE QUARANTINING, SUCH AS FOOD, MEDICATIONS, FOLLOW UP, ETC.MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONTINUED TO FACILITATE A TRIAGE TEAM OF NINE ANONYMOUS PHYSICIANS TO TRIAGE SCARCE RESOURCES SUCH AS VENTILATORS, CRITICAL CARE BEDS, AND THERAPEUTICS IN THE EVENT OF A COVID-19 SURGE. MISSION LEADER FACILITATED MULTIPLE ZOOM MEETINGS WITH THIS TEAM TO REVIEW TRIAGE GUIDELINES AND SOLIDIFY PROCESS FOR TRIAGING SCARCE RESOURCES IN THE EVENT OF A COVID-19 SURGE. MERCYONE DUBUQUE AND MERCYONE DYERSVILLE RECOGNIZED THE IMPORTANCE OF SCREENING FOR AND ADDRESSING SOCIAL INFLUENCERS OF HEALTH, SUCH AS AFFORDABLE HOUSING, ACCESS TO EDUCATION, PUBLIC SAFETY, AVAILABILITY OF HEALTHY FOODS, LOCAL EMERGENCY/HEALTH SERVICES, AND ENVIRONMENTS FREE OF LIFE-THREATENING TOXINS.SPECIFIC EFFORTS FOCUSED ON COLLABORATIONS TO BRING SOLUTIONS RELATED TO FOOD INSECURITY NEEDS OF PATIENTS AND COLLEAGUES. MERCYONE DUBUQUE CONTINUED TO WORK IN PARTNERSHIP WITH RIVERBEND FOOD BANK AND OUR LADY OF THE MISSISSIPPI ABBEY SISTERS TO MAINTAIN A FOOD PANTRY ONSITE AT MERCYONE DUBUQUE. IN ADDITION, NUTRIENT DENSE FOOD TOTE BAGS WERE DISTRIBUTED, USING OUR MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT, TO IDENTIFIED FOOD DESERT AREAS.IN FY22, SIGNIFICANT ENERGY WENT INTO PLANNING AND LAUNCHING A MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT WITH THE VISION OF MAKING HEALTH CARE MORE ACCESSIBLE FOR POPULATIONS THAT HAVE BARRIERS SUCH AS NO TRANSPORTATION, NO INSURANCE, AND/OR HAVE HISTORICALLY NOT TRUSTED HEALTH CARE. THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT PLANNING INVOLVED MUCH COLLABORATION WITH COMMUNITY PARTNERS, POLICY WRITING, SECURING SUPPLIES TO OUTFIT THE UNIT, WORKING WITH THE INTERIOR DESIGN TEAM, TRAINING THE TEAM/ASSESSING COMPETENCY, AND DEVELOPING A ROBUST MARKETING STRATEGY HIGHLIGHTING OUR MISSION DRIVEN GROWTH. THE MOBILE MEDICAL UNIT HAS A PHASED IN DELIVERY APPROACH FOR MERCYONE'S EASTERN IOWA REGION; PHASE 1-PREVENTIVE CARE, PHASE 2-PRIMARY CARE, AND PHASE 3-SPECIALTY CARE. A MERCYONE EASTERN IOWA ADVISORY TEAM WAS ESTABLISHED TO FURTHER DEVELOP THE VISION AND CREATE A ""DAY IN THE LIFE OF THE BUS"". MERCYONE SIOUXLAND REMAINS FOCUSED ON IMPROVING THE HEALTH OF OUR COMMUNITY. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND IS HOME TO THE ONLY LEVEL II TRAUMA CENTER IN WESTERN IOWA AND PROVIDES A VITAL, LIFESAVING LINK TO RURAL AREAS VIA HELICOPTER AMBULANCE SERVICE. WE ARE INVOLVED IN SEVERAL COMMUNITY COLLABORATIONS. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND CONTINUES TO HAVE AN OPEN MEDICAL STAFF. IN ADDITION, MERCYONE SIOUXLAND COLLABORATES WITH HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN THE AREA INCLUDING ST. LUKE'S COLLEGE OF NURSING, WESTERN IOWA TECH COMMUNITY COLLEGE SCHOOL OF NURSING, NORTHEAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE, NORTHWESTERN COLLEGE, NORTHWEST IOWA COMMUNITY COLLEGE, AND BRIAR CLIFF UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF NURSING. MERCYONE SIOUXLAND CONTINUES TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY HAVING LEADERS ACTIVELY PARTICIPATE IN LOCAL COMMUNITY BOARDS.IN FY22, EXTENSIVE COMMUNITY EMERGENCY PLANNING CONTINUED RELATED TO COVID-19. CONTINGENCY PLANNING AND PREPARATION REQUIRED RESOURCES WITHIN THE HOSPITAL AND THE COMMUNITY. INCIDENT COMMAND MEETINGS AND DRILLS CONTINUES THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. OTHER EMERGENCY DISASTER PLANNING WITH COMMUNITY PARTNERS WAS ALSO COMPLETED THROUGHOUT FY22. DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL CONTINUED TO SUPPORT THE HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF THE COMMUNITY BY SUPPORTING HEALTH EDUCATION IN THE AREAS OF NURSING AND RESPIRATORY THERAPY IN COLLABORATION WITH BRIAR CLIFF UNIVERSITY, MORNINGSIDE UNIVERSITY, WESTERN IOWA TECH COMMUNITY COLLEGE SCHOOL OF NURSING, AND UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH DAKOTA. IN ADDITION, EXTENSIVE EMERGENCY MEDICAL PREPAREDNESS WORK WAS COMPLETED WITH THE SOUTH DAKOTA HEALTH CARE COALITION. POINT OF DISTRIBUTION PLANNING WAS COMPLETED. THE DUNES SURGICAL HOSPITAL SUPPORTED COMMUNITY COVID-19 EFFORTS.MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON IS THE SOLE COMMUNITY PROVIDER OFFERING A RANGE OF SPECIALIZED SERVICES, FAMILY HEALTH, DIABETES AND NUTRITION EDUCATION, AND AN EMERGENCY CENTER. EMERGENCY SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE TO ALL REGARDLESS OF THEIR ABILITY TO PAY. EMERGENCY SERVICES ARE PROVIDED AT A FINANCIAL LOSS BUT IS A CRITICALLY NEEDED SERVICE. WE COLLABORATE WITH OTHER AGENCIES TO IMPROVE OVERALL COMMUNITY HEALTH AND WELL-BEING. WE EXTEND MEDICAL STAFF PRIVILEGES TO ALL QUALIFIED COMMUNITY HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, TO MEET THE NEEDS OF OUR NORTHEAST IOWA COMMUNITIES.MERCYONE NEW HAMPTON PRIDES ITSELF ON BEING COMMUNITY HEALTH IMPROVEMENT ADVOCATES. OUR COMMUNITY WELLNESS PROGRAM CONTINUES TO EXPAND, AND IN FY22 WAS ACTIVE IN THE WALKING SCHOOL BUS PROGRAM, TOBACCO FREE COALITION, COMMUNITY FOOD & FITNESS INITIATIVE, AND THE LOCAL FARMER'S MARKET. WE PROVIDE SUPPORT AND EXPERTISE TO CHICKASAW CONNECTIONS, A COALITION AGAINST UNDERAGE DRINKING AND DRUG USE. WE WORK CLOSELY WITH NEW HAMPTON COMMUNITY SCHOOLS TO EDUCATE STUDENTS ABOUT HEALTH AND WELLNESS. HANDWASHING LESSONS ARE TAUGHT TO ALL PRE-SCHOOL AND KINDERGARTEN CLASSES."