NURS FPX 4065 Assessment 4 Care Coordination Presentation to Colleagues Student name Capella University NURS-FPX4065 Patient-Centered Care Coordination Professor’s Name Submission Date Care Coordination Presentation to Colleagues High-quality healthcare in behavioral health and detox settings deals with an efficient purpose of care coordination. The concepts of patient-centered care, ethical, and culturally sensitive care would play an important role at Immersion Residential to support people in the recovery process. The key aspects of coordinated care, which include collaboration with patients and families, making ethical decisions, and the influence of healthcare policies, are discussed in the current paper (Karam et al., 2021). It also examines how change management affects patient experience and proposes a significant role of a nurse in ensuring continuity of care. This is all contributing to safer and more humane care provision that is outcome-oriented.Top of FormBottom of Form Effective Strategies for Collaborating with Patients and Families In the context of Immersion Residential, the fusion of patients and their relatives is a key to offering the maximum health results, and it should be a trauma-sensitive, culturally competent attitude, depending on the particularities of the detoxification and behavioral health care. The drug-specific education of patients and families that enables them to know the purpose of any drug (naltrexone, buprenorphine, or benzodiazepine tapers), side effects, and the advantages in the long-term is one of the most effective methods (Bhattad and Pacifico, 2022). Nurses use pictorial aids, which are written in a simplified language that can be comprehended by anyone, considering the level of literacy. As an illustration, when providing naltrexone treatment to families, the personnel will educate them on the ability of the therapy to avoid opioid cravings and delay relapse, and when opioid withdrawal might be required to prevent the onset of withdrawal symptoms (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2025). With that, as families actively participate in such an educational process, the rate of treatment adherence will increase, and the patients will feel more supported in the framework of the recovery process. Introduction of the concept of culturally competent and family-centered care to the communication processes and discharge planning is another efficient strategy. In order to engage in a respectful discussion with various families, the staff of Immersion Residential will follow models, such as the Listening, Explaining, Acknowledging, Recommending, and Negotiating (LEARN) (Office of Geriatrics and Gerontology, 2025). This assists in reducing the stigma, trust, and shared decision-making. The discharge planning events also involve the families so that they can know about the following care, indications of relapses, and the resources available in the community. It was discovered that the emotional support and reduced number of relapses are significantly higher in the case of a family as part of substance use treatment (Hogue et al., 2021). Paying attention to the inclusive communication and family interactions, the nurses at Immersion Residential encourage the collaborative care experience that enhances the rate of patient safety, patient experience, and long-term outcomes. The Impact of Change Management on Patient Experience and Quality of Care At Immersion residential, where the patients get to receive a detox and behavioral health stabilization experience, patient experience, particularly the ones that concern the communication domain, transitions of care, and patient engagement, are significantly influenced by change management aspects. One of the significant change initiatives was a new EHR system that had to enhance the interdisciplinary communication process and reduce the number of medication errors (Ebbers et al., 2024). Though such changes can positively impact the long-term perspective, there might be temporary disturbances in the workplace and confusion between the employees and patients in the meantime. The leadership strived to mitigate the negative impact through the use of the Kotter change model by creating an urgency, communicating a clear vision, and involving the front-line workers during the transition process (Carreno, 2024). This included a strategy that allowed the employees to be conscious and powerful, thereby improving customer satisfaction in terms of continuity and protection throughout their care. The process of transitions of care, between outpatient services or recovery programs and detox services, should also involve change management in the community. Such transitions can be handled best to ensure that patients do not feel dumped once discharged. As an example, the aftercare plan of every patient has been aligned through the implementation of a structured discharge coordination, which improved the experience of patients with the coordination of the nursing, counseling, and case management services. In addition, the involvement of patients in the process of care decision-making and goal-setting (so-called patient engagement) has proved to enhance satisfaction with treatment and its compliance (Hickmann et al., 2022). All in all, a change in the leadership, through effective communication, patient-centered planning, and active involvement, will ensure that the change in the clinical processes is transformed into high-quality experiences of care delivery and compassion to the members of the community in which we serve. Ethical Foundations and Rationale for Coordinated Care Plans The ethical grounds that led to the implementation of coordinated care plans at Immersion Residential can be linked to ethical foundations, which consist of beneficence, nonmaleficence, and autonomy, as well as justice (Varkey, 2020). Through coordinated care, the medical, psychological, and social requirements of all patients are resolved holistically and not fracturing or compartmentalizing their needs within the detox and behavioral health facilities, where patients are the most vulnerable, face relapses, or medical crises. Morally, this may cause harm, e.g., not informing the detox team about the changes in medications between the detox and outpatient teams, which would be a violation of the principle of nonmaleficence (Jara et al., 2021). Under a coordinated care model, shared decision-making is facilitated, and the autonomy of the patient is respected, and, at the same time, it would ensure fair access to the services following the discharge, which is also consistent with the principle of justice. There are also implications of an ethical approach towards care coordination. Collaborative care teams that develop a shared plan in which nurses are free to perform generate more trust in patients towards the