Mission Statement
NAHC is the largest and most respected professional association
representing the interests of Americans who need home care (including
acute, long-term, and terminal care) and the caregivers that
provide them with in-home health and supportive services.
NAHC is a unique trade association for several reasons. First,
it reflects its membership inputting the interests of the infirm
and dying before its institutional or corporate interests. It
represents the interests of those Americans described as being
on the "fringes of life"--the elderly and terminally ill facing
compound problems of illness in the twilight of life, millions
of fragile children with major health problems in the dawn of
life, and the disabled and sick, who are too often relegated
to the shadows of life. Second, it aspires to excellence in every
respect. Third, it goes to extraordinary lengths to support the
specific needs of its member organizations. Fourth, it understands
that its specific mission must be achieved in cooperation with
other organizations and individuals. Toward this end, NAHC is
committed to improving the quality of life for all Americans.
NAHC is committed to a series of values from which its specific
objectives follow. These values are the following:
NAHC is committed to the development of a more caring society
in the belief that the solution of most human problems lies
in the love and understanding of one human being for another.
NAHC is committed to preserving the solidarity of families,
the fundamental building block of society.
NAHC is committed to preserving the rights of the underprivileged,
ill, and disabled.
NAHC is committed to the protection of the environment.
NAHC is committed to promotion of honesty, integrity, and
quality in all aspects of society.
NAHC is committed to the promotion of wellness and health
and the universal right of access to the highest quality of
health care and supportive services for all.
NAHC is committed to justice--social, economic, and political
for all citizens.
NAHC's specific mission involves the following 15 purposes,
to:
a. Serve as the unified voice for the home
care and hospice community;
b. Provide direct needed service to the members;
c. Heighten the political viability of home
care and hospice interests;
d. Influence the legislative, judicial, and
regulatory processes with respect to issues of importance to
hospice and home care;
e. Sponsor research, gather and disseminate
home care and hospice data;
f. Promote home care and hospice as a viable
component of the health delivery system;
g. Foster, develop, and promote high standards
of patient care in home care and hospice services;
h. Provide expert business advice and assistance
to members with respect to management, legal, or operational
issues, and help connect them with consumers;
i. Disseminate information to the media and
the general public to promote the acceptance of home care and
hospice services and to support family/informal caregivers;
j. Expand private health insurance and other
third party sources for financing hospice and home care services;
k. Promote collaboration among national,
state, and local organizations relating to home care and hospice
services and issues;
l. Initiate, sponsor, and promote educational
programs;
m. Represent the interests of caregivers
(nurses, homemaker-home health aides, physicians, and therapists)
who work in the home care field and to encourage individuals
to choose a career in home care and hospice services;
n. Protect the legal rights of hospice and
home care beneficiaries and those of the organizations and
their employees who provide consumers with such services; and
o. Promote independence and contribution
by potential home care clients, thereby shattering the myth
that dependence is a necessary state for the aged and disabled
in America.
NAHC's mission can be summarized in one line: "We are bringing
health care back home where it belongs."
In a 1995 survey of key Senators and staff members by the respected
international marketing firm, Fleishman Hillard & Associates,
NAHC was selected as the best and most respected trade association
in the health care field. NAHC's goal is to advance and build
on this achievement and to be the best example of a trade association
in Washington, DC. NAHC currently represents some 6,000 members
that include home care agencies, hospices and the professionals
such as home care nurses and aides who are employed by these
agencies.
NAHC has many specific goals that are enumerated within this
programmatic budget. However, its top priorities remain helping
people who depend on home care by protecting Medicare and Medicaid
and other government programs from erosion; moving to expand
these programs and private health insurance to provide greater
coverage including assistance with long-term care; helping to
increase the numbers and the qualifications of people seeking
employment in the home care field; and to support and inspire
those who are currently in the field. |