Articles

Clinical Baseline and Early-Warning Monitoring in IDD Transitions: Building a “New Baseline” Without Missing Deterioration
Transitions change routines, sleep, diet, and stress—exactly the factors that can trigger clinical deterioration that looks like “behavior.” This article sets a practical early-warning model for IDD transitions: baseline capture, escalation thresholds, and review rhythms that prevent missed constipation, pain, infection, seizure risk, and medication side effects. Read more...
Authorization and Funding Continuity in IDD Transitions: Medicaid Waiver Controls That Prevent Service Interruptions
Many IDD transitions fail for reasons that never show up in the care plan: authorizations lapse, service units are mis-coded, EVV workflows break, and providers cannot bill for what they delivered. This article sets a practical “no-interruption” funding continuity model—roles, checklists, and verification routines that protect service access during high-risk handovers. Read more...
Safeguarding Continuity in IDD Transitions: Incident Controls, Allegation Pathways, and “No Drop” Reporting
Safeguarding risk spikes during transitions because the person, staff team, and oversight relationships all change at once. This article sets out a safeguarding continuity model: incident taxonomy, allegation handling workflows, and reporting controls that prevent “dropped” safeguarding events and protect rights without over-restricting. Read more...
Medication Continuity in IDD Transitions: Reconciliation, MAR Integrity, and Pharmacy Controls That Prevent Harm
Medication errors during IDD transitions are rarely about a single missed dose—they’re usually system failures in reconciliation, authorization, and handover verification. This article sets out a practical medication continuity model: who reconciles what, how MAR integrity is protected across shifts, and how pharmacy coordination is governed in the first two weeks. Read more...
The IDD Transition Assurance Pack: What Must Transfer, How It’s Verified, and Who Signs Off
Most IDD transitions fail because critical controls don’t travel with the person. This article defines a practical “Transition Assurance Pack”—the minimum deliverable set, verification steps, and sign-off roles that prove the receiving team can deliver the plan across shifts. Read more...
The First 72 Hours of an IDD Transition: Stabilization Command, Escalation Rules, and “No Surprises” Coverage
The first 72 hours after an IDD transition often determine whether the placement stabilizes or spirals into crisis. This article sets out a practical “stabilization command” model—clear escalation rules, on-call coverage design, and verification routines that prevent avoidable 911 use and restrictive drift. Read more...
Preventing Provider-to-Provider Breakdown: Contract, Data, and Accountability Controls in IDD Handover
Provider-to-provider IDD transitions often fail at the contract and data layer, not the frontline. This article explains the governance controls—information standards, accountability mapping, and post-handover verification—that prevent breakdown when responsibility transfers between organizations. Read more...
IDD High-Risk Transition Triage: When to Pause, Phase, or Proceed Under Funding and Capacity Pressure
Not every IDD transition should proceed on schedule. This article sets out a practical triage model for deciding when to pause, phase, or proceed with a move—balancing rights, waiver timelines, provider capacity, and real-world risk signals under pressure. Read more...
IDD Transition Learning Loops: The 72-Hour Debrief and 30-Day Review That Stops Repeat Breakdowns
Most transition failures create the same pattern again in the next move because systems do not learn fast enough. This article explains a 72-hour debrief and 30-day review workflow for IDD transitions—how to capture facts, assign owners, and evidence corrective action without creating reporting overload. Read more...
IDD Transition Readiness Conferences: The Pre-Move Case Review Model That Prevents Day-One Service Failure
Transitions fail when the receiving team inherits paperwork but not operational control. This article sets out a practical pre-move readiness conference model—roles, evidence, and gating decisions—that prevents day-one breakdowns and protects rights while working within real waiver funding and capacity pressure. Read more...
Staffing Continuity in IDD Transitions: Competency Transfer, Shadowing Design, and Safe Onboarding Under Pressure
Even with perfect paperwork, transitions fail when staff are not ready to deliver the plan in real time. This article sets a practical staffing continuity model for IDD transitions—how to transfer competency, design shadowing that actually teaches, and prevent early incidents caused by onboarding gaps. It focuses on governance and measurable readiness, not “orientation completed” tick boxes. Read more...
Information Transfer That Actually Works: IDD Transition Records, Data Integrity, and “No Surprises” Handover
Transitions fail when the receiving team cannot see what matters quickly: risk signals, triggers, medication realities, and what “good support” looks like day-to-day. This article sets a practical handover records model for IDD transitions—what must transfer, how to validate accuracy, and how to prevent gaps becoming incidents. It is designed for real provider operations and audit scrutiny. Read more...