In home care, operations rarely collapse overnight – they slowly drift into risk.
It starts small. A missed documentation detail here. A new hire who isn’t fully trained. A workflow that “mostly works,” until it doesn’t. These gaps often go unnoticed because day-to-day operations continue to move. Clients are served, shifts are filled, and revenue still comes in. On the surface, everything looks stable.
But beneath that stability, a different reality builds. Small inconsistencies turn into compliance gaps. Delayed documentation impacts reimbursement. Undertrained teams struggle during audits. What feels like “almost right” operations begins to create very real financial and regulatory exposure.
In today’s environment – where EVV, audits, and payer scrutiny are tighter than ever – there’s far less room for approximation. Agencies are no longer judged on intent, but on execution.
This is where many agencies fall short. Not because they lack effort, but because they underestimate the cost of getting it almost right.
To shed some light on the same, we interviewed a home care industry expert to bring his perspective on getting it “almost right” in home care operations.
John Kublank is a mission-driven healthcare executive and serial entrepreneur with over 13 years of experience in hospice and home health. He has led statewide operations, restructured organizations, and built scalable systems that improve compliance, efficiency, and growth.
Known for blending operational discipline with innovation, John focuses on using data to strengthen care delivery and outcomes. He is also the founder of multiple ventures, including Hygienic Helper, a patented personal care product designed to simplify everyday care.
Let us now delve into what he has to say about getting it “almost right” in home care operations:
The most significant blind spot I see is an under-investment in employee knowledge. Many agencies have scaled back on continuous training and robust orientation to save short-term costs.
This creates a “competency debt” that leads to compliance failures. I’ve seen agencies with inadequate office expertise effectively forced into closure because they lacked the clinical and administrative backbone to navigate a survey or an audit.
When stepping into a struggling agency, I focus on three levers in this order:
We must move away from the myth of “forever” staff and focus on operational readiness. If we accept that field staff turnover is a reality, our systems must focus on a “Plug and Play” model: world-class orientation that ensures any new hire can be successful immediately.
Additionally, staying lean in the office allows us to reallocate funds toward competitive pay and tangible appreciation for the field.
My philosophy is simple: High-touch stays local; back-office goes central. If a patient or family member needs a face-to-face conversation or an immediate response, that position must remain in the community.
Conversely, functions like billing, HR, and high-level admin can be centralized for efficiency. I feel like Centralized intake has to be evaluated on a case by case basis. Mainly, does the top 3 referral sources you have depend on speed? If so, centralized intake will ruin your relationships.
Regulatory bodies are already using AI to flag non-compliance. To stay competitive, agencies must return to the ‘Clinical Triple Threat’: Excellent Care, Proactive Communication, and Timely Documentation.
We must also be vigilant about legal compliance with third-party tech; for example, in Texas, I advise clients to send certification letters regarding the new 2026 Texas Law SB 1188 to ensure they aren’t inadvertently violating state-specific privacy laws. This law specifically looks at AI, and how we need to handle data.
AI won’t replace clinicians, but it will “supercharge” them. I believe the traditional “point-and-click” EMR will be obsolete by 2030, replaced by sensory EMRs that use audio, video, and wearables to automate documentation in real-time.
In the short term, the biggest “win” is in QA and QAPI—using algorithms to catch documentation errors before they become revenue or compliance liabilities.
What this conversation makes clear is simple: in home care, success isn’t defined by effort; it’s defined by precision. The difference between “almost right” and truly operationally sound is where compliance is protected, revenue is secured, and teams can scale with confidence.
As agencies move into 2026, with tighter audits, evolving regulations, and AI-driven oversight, the margin for error continues to shrink. Those that invest in training, tighten execution, and build systems designed for consistency – not just activity – will be the ones that stay ahead. Because in today’s landscape, getting it right isn’t optional, it’s what keeps agencies in business.
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