Skip to main content

Caring for People with Serious Illness / Search Inside This Book
Return to Search Inside This Book results

1246 matches found for How People Learn Brain,Mind,Experience,and School Expanded Edition. in Proceedings of a Workshop

Select a page to see where your word(s) or phrase(s) are located in the OpenBook. Excerpts from the chapter provide context.


At the bottom of page 1...
... The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a profound impact on health care systems, economies, and societies around the world. In the United States, the pandemic shone a harsh light on existing weaknesses in the health care system, ranging from ... racial and ethnic disparities in care to flaws in our public health system, while creating a new set of challenges related to caring for people of all ages and ... stages of serious illness. The pandemic also offers opportunities to apply important lessons learned to improve care. In an effort to explore the impact of the pandemic on caring for ... with serious illness, the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s Roundtable on Quality Care for People with Serious Illness hosted a three-part virtual public workshop, Caring for People with Serious ... During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Workshop on Lessons Learned and Future Directions. The three webinars were held on November 8, 18, and 30, 2021....
At the bottom of page 1...
... 1 The planning committee’s role was limited to planning the workshop, and the Proceedings of a Workshop has been prepared by the workshop rapporteurs as a factual summary of what occurred at the workshop. Statements, ... , and opinions expressed are those of individual presenters and participants, are not necessarily endorsed or verified by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, and should not be construed ...
In the middle of page 2...
... The first webinar explored the initial response to the pandemic on the part of public health and the health care teams providing care to people with serious illness in hospitals and the community. The second webinar focused on the impact of the ... on the health care workforce and the use of telehealth. The third webinar examined the issue of communicating with the public about health emergencies, with a particular eye to ... populations, such as pediatrics and minority populations. The final session explored the lessons learned from the perspective of policy opportunities to improve care for people with ...
At the bottom of page 2...
... This Proceedings of a Workshop summarizes the workshop’s presentations and discussions. The speakers, panelists, and workshop participants presented a broad range of views and ideas. Box 1 provides a summary of lessons learned and suggestions made by individual ... participants based on the experience of providing care to people with serious illness during the COVID-19 pandemic. Appendixes A and B contain the workshop Statement of Task and the workshop agenda, respectively. The speakers’ presentations (as PDF and audio files) have been ...
At the bottom of page 2...
... 2 For additional information, see https://www.nationalacademies.org/event/11-08-2021/impact-of-and-response-to-the-pandemic-webinar-1; https://www.nationalacademies.org/event/11-18-2021/recovery-and-resilience-webinar-2; and https://www.nationalacademies.org/event/11- ... -2021/prevention-and-preparedness-webinar-3....
In the middle of page 3...
... Suggestions Made by Individual Workshop Participants to Improve Care of People with Serious Illness in Light of Lessons Learned during the COVID-19 Pandemica...
In the middle of page 3...
... General Lessons and Suggestions...
In the middle of page 3...
... To prepare for future health emergencies, focus on the key elements of a successful response: leadership; science; public trust, understanding, and action; a sound strategy; adequate resources to enact the strategy; and the ability to implement the strategy on the ground. (Fineberg)...
In the middle of page 3...
... Remember that learning and keeping an open mindset while doing can be empowering in circumstances that can sometimes seem overwhelming. (Fineberg)...
In the middle of page 3...
... Continue to innovate and systematically scale up what was working before the pandemic, particularly expanded access to palliative care in all settings. (Bowman)...
In the middle of page 3...
... Integrate the best of palliative care innovations and adaptations from COVID across all care settings for people with serious illness. (Bowman)...
At the bottom of page 3...
... Ensure that the health care system does not regress to the mean as the nation emerges from the pandemic. (Bowman)...
At the bottom of page 3...
... Remember that the acronym CHANGE—communication, hope and health, advocacy for the aging and seriously ill, nurturing the health care team, focus on the greater good, and equity and empowerment—can be used to summarize the essential aspects ... caring for people with serious illness during the pandemic. (Carrol)...
At the bottom of page 3...
... Have established research networks in place that are prepared to implement protocols, collaborate on data sharing, and produce results to inform policy with science as opposed to speculation. (Fineberg)...
At the bottom of page 3...
... Recall that key elements of successful leadership in a crisis include transparency, leading with vulnerability, and “over-communicating” with staff. (Davis, Fowler)...
At the bottom of page 3...
... Establish relationships and collaborative partnerships between palliative care teams and other departments, such as the ICU and ED; preexisting relationships were critical to the success of innovative programs launched during the pandemic. (Ankuda, Cohen)...
In the middle of page 4...
... that lessons learned include the value of team-based care, need for interprofessional training, critical role of palliative care as a specialty and a skill set for all clinicians, and attention to social determinants of health to address inequities. (Wang)...
In the middle of page 4...
... Navigate uncertainty and gain trust despite uncertainty, which was critical during the pandemic. (DeBiasi, Fineberg, Fowler, Jha, Lamas, Webb Hooper)...
In the middle of page 4...
... Caring for People with Serious Illness...
In the middle of page 4...
... members are not just visitors for loved ones in the hospital but an essential aspect of care delivery, helping staff know their patients better and often identifying subtle and potentially meaningful clinical changes. (Lamas)...
In the middle of page 4...
... Recognize that surviving serious illness is not the same as recovering; public understanding is growing that quality of life is also an important outcome. In critical care, the focus has been on mortality, with research paying less ...
In the middle of page 4...
... Critically, have the patient and their family members prepare an advance directive and a medical power of attorney or health care proxy regardless of their age or health status. (Lamas)...
At the bottom of page 4...
... Focus on involving people with shared lived experience who can be empathetic and flexible to address a range of the challenges people face that affect their health. (Kangovi)...
At the bottom of page 4...
... Rely on community health workers (CHWs), who can establish the relationships needed to address social determinants; relieve workforce strain and reduce health care spending; and, perhaps most importantly, improve health for people with serious illness and even prevent serious illness. (Kangovi)...
At the bottom of page 4...
... Consider telehealth as a complement to in-person care; it can engage patients in a reinforcing and comforting manner, while allowing clinicians to see patients where they are...
In the middle of page 5...
... and understand their needs in the context of their everyday experiences. (Carrol, Fineberg, Strand)...
In the middle of page 5...
... challenging technologically to deliver care via video with a team-based approach, while conference calls are simple to conduct. (Clauser, Justis, Strand)...
In the middle of page 5...
... manner,” which includes ensuring a proper setup for holding a virtual conversation, maintaining a conversational rhythm, responding to emotion, and concluding the visit appropriately. (Clauser)...
In the middle of page 5...
... Ensure that the information exchanged through technology is held to the same standards of confidentiality as in-person interactions. (Clauser)...
In the middle of page 5...
... Treat reimbursement as critical to the sustainability of telehealth as an effective option for care delivery. (Strand)...
At the bottom of page 5...
... Provide wellness debriefings to allow members of the care team the opportunity to see where they are emotionally and help them through their extremely difficult circumstances. (Halsey)...
At the bottom of page 5...
... Provide guardrails to protect clinicians from burnout due to 24/7 accessibility afforded by technology. (Strand)...
At the bottom of page 5...
... all members of the health care team through a range of strategies, such as flexibility in scheduling, compassionate leave policy, team debriefings and check-ins, and tools such as Code Lavender and the Circle Up framework. (Ankuda, Coyne, Davis, Fowler, Halsey, Tucker)...
At the bottom of page 5...
... Consider the following to support the nursing workforce: enhance staff and patient participation in decision making and scheduling, reimagine delivery models and improve...
In the middle of page 6...
... the organizational climate by leveraging digital tools, adapt care models based on patient and employee preferences, support leadership training programs and mentorship, and build learning networks and coalitions across agencies and systems of ...
In the middle of page 6...
... Use wellness coordinators and coaches, respite rooms, and other wellness activities for health care team members; this is critical to address stress resulting from patient surge during a pandemic. (Cohen, ...
In the middle of page 6...
... Have the health care system address the challenges staff face in terms of paperwork, the electronic health record, and other bureaucratic responsibilities that have increased over the years, in addition to addressing clinician well-being. (Ankuda)...
In the middle of page 6...
... Expand the Triple Aim to the Quintuple Aim—better outcomes, better experiences, and lower costs sustained by thriving clinicians who deliver more equitable care. (Rotella)...
In the middle of page 6...
... Inequities and the Social Determinants of Health...
At the bottom of page 6...
... Remember that the inequity story is the pandemic story, given that individuals from historically underserved communities shouldered much more of the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Boulware, ...
At the bottom of page 6...
... Monitor changes in communities affected by COVID-19 over the course of the pandemic, as they relate to inequities in illness and care. (Boulware)...
At the bottom of page 6...
... order to reduce inequities in care. It is also important to think about the arc of health care as everything it requires for an individual to show up and be able to get what they need out of the health care system. (Boulware, Webb Hooper)...
At the bottom of page 6...
... that telehealth interventions that hold promise for reducing disparities emphasize patient-centered design, ensure that the interface is engaging and meaningful to patients who experience disparities, and deliver a culturally sensitive message that reflects the patient’s views and values. (...
At the bottom of page 6...
... Understand that disparities in COVID-19 are not occurring because racially and ethnically minority groups are inherently more susceptible to the virus but rather because of...
In the middle of page 7...
... social inequities that have given rise to more preexisting conditions, such as heart disease, diabetes, and HIV. (Webb Hooper)...
In the middle of page 7...
... Work consistently to earn trust among underserved communities—not by providing evidence-based information and assuming people will believe it but by having a dialog to understand people’s concerns, affirm and acknowledge what has happened previously, and ...
In the middle of page 7...
... Learn the key lesson from the pandemic that we cannot focus solely on addressing medical needs but must also address the nonmedical determinants—housing, employment, and the rest of ...
In the middle of page 7...
... Consider that a key attribute of CHWs is that they do not think in terms of disease or domain silos but rather work across domains and conditions. They can intervene at all stages of the health inequity trajectory and are ideally suited to address the root causes of poor health and ... inequities. They can coach about behaviors and address unmet social needs. (Kangovi)...
In the middle of page 7...
... Recognize that trust is an underappreciated social determinant of health. It is a complicated cognitive, behavioral, and emotional construct, and once it has been lost, it is difficult to regain. (Webb Hooper)...
At the bottom of page 7...
... Remember that the pandemic reinforced the value of interprofessional education and its role in making care more effective. (Fineberg)...
At the bottom of page 7...
... Find individuals trained in medicine who will devote their intellectual and professional lives to urban planning, community organizing, housing, and economic policy to be the bridge builders between the social and policy ... and the...
In the middle of page 8...
... clinical and patient care worlds as a means of addressing the social determinants of health. (Fineberg)...
In the middle of page 8...
... Include health inequities and their relationship to the social determinants of health in medical education. (Carrol)...
In the middle of page 8...
... establishing a successful CHW program include providing training at all levels—not just a certification for CHWs but also training for supervisors and program directors—and fair compensation, supportive supervision, manageable caseloads, and permission for CHWs to take a person-centered approach. (...
In the middle of page 8...
... Implement national training requirements for frontline nursing staff based on core competency standards that would strengthen talent pipelines and build skills for the future. (Larson)...
In the middle of page 8...
... Pass the Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act, which would expand training at both the specialist and generalist levels, which is critical to addressing palliative care workforce shortages. (Rotella)...
At the bottom of page 8...
... Remember that facts, evidence, science, and data are not enough to change people’s behavior; understanding and addressing the things that they value and find meaningful are also needed. (Jha)...
At the bottom of page 8...
... When explaining science to the public, connect through personal experiences. (DeBiasi, Jha)...
At the bottom of page 8...
... Ensure that the public understands that the knowledge of the scientific community evolves over time, which may alter policies and protocols. A critical part of communicating science to the public during uncertainty is explaining what evidence is needed to address that ...
At the bottom of page 8...
... Recall that misinformation thrives in uncertainty and an information vacuum; those who promote misinformation have become very adept at identifying those moments and offering up information and ideas ...
At the bottom of page 8...
... Counter misinformation with good information, which requires everyone in the science, medical, and public health communities to take a role in its dissemination. (Jha)...
In the middle of page 9...
... Turn policies into action by clearly explaining to the public what the underlying issues are and why they need to live with these policies. (Jha)...
In the middle of page 9...
... Work consistently to earn trust, not merely providing evidence-based information and assuming people will believe it just because it is coming from a scientist or physician but having a dialog to understand the sources of their ... , affirm and acknowledge what has happened, and convey why this time might be different. Perhaps most importantly, accept that attitudinal change and building trust take time. (Webb Hooper)...
In the middle of page 9...
... Consider developing a mandatory accountable care organization path to help health care organizations commit to value-based payments. (Gilfillan)...
In the middle of page 9...
... Limit granting of additional waivers and continuation of the waivers that have been put in place through the COVID-19 pandemic to providers who accept accountability for providing value-based care. (Gilfillan)...
In the middle of page 9...
... Consider ways to better align payment with care for people with serious illness, given the shortcomings of the fee-for-service payment system. (Bowman, Carrol, Fineberg)...
At the bottom of page 9...
... Impact of long COVID, including how to address symptoms, and identify the most effective approaches to support patients and their families. (Bowman)...
In the middle of page 10...
... Wellness needs of the workforce to deal with the crises of high staff turnover rates and increased feelings of anger, irritability, disengagement, and burnout. (Cohen)...
In the middle of page 10...
... Strategies to tackle health disparities that are guided by the science of community-engaged intervention development, implementation, and evaluation and that consider the nuances of populations, communities, families, and individual differences. (Webb Hooper)...
At the bottom of page 10...
... a This list is the rapporteurs’ summary of points made by the individual speakers identified, and the statements have not been endorsed or verified by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. They are not intended to reflect ...
At the bottom of page 10...
... James Tulsky, of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and co-Chair of the Roundtable, opened the first webinar by noting that the world turned upside down in the spring of 2020, and for those who work ...
At the bottom of page 10...
... In response to an inadequate supply of personal protective equipment (PPE) for staff, Tulsky recalled ordering baby monitors online so that he and his colleagues could monitor patients in the COVID-19 palliative care unit remotely. He also remembered the frantic family meetings and the pain of ...
In the middle of page 11...
... ones were going through. “I will also never forget celebrating Marge, the 96-year-old woman who was admitted to our COVID palliative care unit and survived her bout with the virus,” Tulsky shared. “Marge left the hospital to a cheering crowd,” he added....
In the middle of page 11...
... Tulsky pointed out that the pandemic has upended all aspects of how he and his colleagues do their work. It has exacerbated the challenge of dealing with patients with new chronic conditions and those who had existing ... and missed the care they would have normally received. The pandemic, he added, amplified the tremendous disparities that exist in the care that health systems provide. As a final note, Tulsky remarked that he is ... that the broader health care workforce now values and appreciates the work of the palliative care team, but he wished it had not taken a pandemic to make that happen....
In the middle of page 11...
... the SAR-CoV-2 virus,3 up to one-quarter of those affected have sought care for “long COVID” symptoms4 that include memory loss, breathlessness, and fatigue. She added, “We recognize that people without COVID also require care for advanced illness, and the pandemic’s strain on our health ...
In the middle of page 11...
... this national tragedy does not exist, observed Wang. Health disparities are prevalent, with Indigenous American, Black/African American, Hispanic, and Pacific Islander individuals having a death rate of double or more than that of white and Asian American individuals.5 Older adults and people with ... illness suffer increased complications, and regional variation has been substantial. People living in rural areas have had a much higher mortality rate than people in urban areas. Because of ... disparities, health equity became a necessary priority in planning the workshop, as did focusing on novel programming, workforce, telehealth, and policy levers that will help the nation prepare for a better future....
At the bottom of page 11...
... 4 Additional information about long COVID and its symptoms is available at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/long-term-effects/index.html (accessed March 10, 2022)....
In the middle of page 12...
... Wang said that one of the many important lessons she has learned in living through the pandemic as a physician is that people create recovery. “Communities recover when people choose to commit, to reconnect, and rebuild,” Wang observed. ... focus on some of the many innovative responses to the immediate impact of COVID-19, Wang characterized the workshop as “our call to reflection and shared learning to improve the lives of people with serious illness and those who care for them.”...
In the middle of page 12...
... The Immediate Impact of the Pandemic...
In the middle of page 12...
... The first webinar began with a keynote address by Harvey Fineberg, president of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Fineberg drew on his experience as chair of the National Academies Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and ...
At the bottom of page 12...
... Fineberg began by pointing out that pandemics have occurred historically at irregular intervals, from decades to a century or more. Because they are so infrequent relative to a human ... to study them but a long time to think about them after the fact. That infrequent nature tends to encourage overconfidence in terms of understanding, anticipation, and the ability to respond. In addition, Fineberg pointed out that the long interval between recent pandemics promoted neglect of ... public health infrastructure that is so crucial to pandemic response....
At the bottom of page 12...
... While emerging zoonotic infections (diseases that are transmitted between species) often cause pandemics, whether they do so depends on the specific infectious agent and the particular setting in which they emerge. For example, the first SARS ... early in the twenty-first century affected various places and caused severe illness, but if it had emerged in extremely densely populated areas, such as New Delhi and Kinshasa, instead of Toronto and Singapore, ... impact would have been very different. Noting the high degree of uncertainty surrounding any pandemic, Fineberg asked a series of questions: “Who among us could state with absolute confidence what the course of the pandemic we are now ... will be throughout the winter that we are about to face? Will the immunizations and other measures lead to a suppression of disease, and how effective will our new...
In the middle of page 13...
... out already as much as it is going to, or is this virus not quite done with all the tricks, metaphorically, it has up its sleeve in terms of variants and other developments?”6 All of this uncertainty, layered on top of the infrequency of a pandemic, makes coping with it an ongoing challenge, ...
In the middle of page 13...
... six required elements for a successful response to a public health emergency. The first is leadership. Any crisis, includes both the demeanor and content of leadership. The public looks to leaders for confident, calm, and clear communication and accurate assessments that help everyone ... where things stand and how the nation is responding. In Fineberg’s view, leadership should take advantage of the best available evidence, make sound decisions, account ... fairness, and, most of all, always keep the welfare of the entire population in mind....
In the middle of page 13...
... element is the significant role of science, which provides the evidence that represents the soundest basis for decision making in the face of a pandemic. Fineberg noted that early in the pandemic, U.S. leadership played down its seriousness, dismissed the likely consequences, provided false ... , and touted treatments that proved to be ineffectual....
At the bottom of page 13...
... Leadership and science are two important foundations for the third element, which is public trust, understanding and action. Public trust has eroded over time, he explained, which has contributed to the lower proportion of the U.S. adult population receiving the ... , as compared to other nations such as Canada and Australia....
At the bottom of page 13...
... Fineberg identified the fourth key element as a sound pandemic response strategy. Good leadership that relies on science and has the public’s trust has to translate those assets into a strategic response that encompasses ways to care for those who are ill, interrupts the ... at which an illness spreads, and puts in place the conditions that will minimize the consequences over time. Strategically, it is difficult to accomplish a national response in a ... like the United States, where sovereignty has never fully been resolved between the national government and the individual states, explained Fineberg. This caused questions as to where the authority rested when the nation needed to respond with urgency and ... , and states were forced to compete with one another for the limited initial supplies of PPE and ventilators. Managing this foundational challenge...
At the bottom of page 13...
... 6 Within a month of Fineberg’s remarks, the Omicron variant emerged and swept across the globe....
In the middle of page 14...
... became even more difficult given the global impact of the pandemic and the competing interests and strategies among the world’s nation-states....
In the middle of page 14...
... The fifth element is adequate resources to enact the strategy, and this was a serious shortcoming in the initial U.S. response to the pandemic. “I need not remind any of you who were caring for patients in the first months of the pandemic how stressful it was in the absence of adequate ... equipment and basic supplies,” said Fineberg. In contrast, the nation spent billions of dollars on developing vaccines and additional billions developing effective, convenient, and rapid home-based testing....
In the middle of page 14...
... which takes a different type of leadership. The United States, Fineberg said, benefited tremendously from its long history of individual volunteerism and readiness to pitch in during an emergency. The health care system, designed for routine conditions and pulse emergencies, was overwhelmed and ... by the pandemic’s long-term, emergent, and severe conditions....
In the middle of page 14...
... Fineberg identified five consequences of not having those six elements in place during the COVID-19 pandemic:...
In the middle of page 14...
... the substantial number of patients experiencing the acute and long-term consequences of infection;...
In the middle of page 14...
... the disruption in care affecting patients who had existing serious illnesses and the adaptation required to manage the care of all patients during the pandemic;...
At the bottom of page 14...
... the stress on health care providers, health care institutions, and the health care system and the strain for continuous obligation and uncertainty;...
At the bottom of page 14...
... the disparities in care that the pandemic has exacerbated and revealed as a severe deficiency in the nation’s health care system; and...
At the bottom of page 14...
... the disruption of the larger social context, economic system, and capacity to provide necessary social services and support systems for families and the ability of communities to function, all of which complicate the ability of the health care system and health professionals to provide the care ...
At the bottom of page 14...
... Together, these make the workshop discussions so important for taking stock of lessons from the pandemic, concluded Fineberg. “How can we take those lessons and apply them in a consistent and effective way to improve the care of patients with ...
In the middle of page 15...
... The Lived Experience...
In the middle of page 15...
... A. Carrol, a geriatrician with Kaiser Permanente, offered his perspective on what it was like to care for people with serious illness during the pandemic. Carrol explained that COVID-19 presented an unrelenting challenge that forced changes in how he went about his daily routine, saw his patients, ... interacted with their families. Carrol offered the word “change” as an acronym for what he learned during the pandemic....
In the middle of page 15...
... “C,” he said, stands for communication, which the pandemic affected significantly. Beginning in early 2020, COVID-19 quickly paralyzed the normal routes of communication, affecting the daily routine and ... in the clinic in which he works. Changing communication techniques, he noted, was no easy task for this patient population or their families. He and his colleagues launched a proactive outreach initiative, led by the clinic’s social worker and case manager, to reach out to patients and their ...
At the bottom of page 15...
... virus containment efforts, his work shifted from the clinic to the nursing home setting, where he witnessed even more of the detrimental effects the pandemic was having on communication. The resulting lockdowns that closed nursing facilities to visitors affected his patients physically, mentally, and ... the measures that we were taking,” said Carrol. “I do not think he quite understood it that first day, but over time, I think he grew to understand we were committed to his health.”...
At the bottom of page 15...
... the interim, families were waiting anxiously to receive updated information about their loved ones. Families also had to participate in care planning and life-and-death decisions via telephone, even in instances where COVID-19 was not the primary concern. One shortcoming of the virtual platform, Carrol ... out, was losing nonverbal communication and the ability for family members to stand by their loved ones and hold their hands during these discussions. As a result, he had to function as the critical communication link to the families....
At the bottom of page 15...
... Carrol explained that the “H” represents hope and health—the hope that as the spread and impact of the virus continued, there would be eventual containment, a vaccine, and a return to health. Over time, the conversation...
In the middle of page 16...
... shifted from when the pandemic would end to hope that vaccine would lead to health and healing. Thinking about hope and health, he said, reminds him of an encounter in which he had to convince a patient who needed kidney dialysis and her family that she needed to go to ...
In the middle of page 16...
... The “A” in “change,” said Carrol, stands for advocacy for the aging and seriously ill, which became even more important during the pandemic given its disproportionate effect on older adults and those with chronic illness. This vulnerable population faced a double risk from the virus ... the effects of isolation on their physical and mental health. “Tying back to communication, many patients in nursing homes lost their bedside advocate, so we had to be their advocate even more ... usual,” said Carrol. Advocacy also included proactive outreach programs that many clinics, including his, employed to help monitor chronic disease and even conduct home visits. In addition, he and his colleagues realized that many of those with serious illness are somewhat tucked away in their homes ... �� said Carrol. He developed a list of homebound patients to make sure they received the vaccine when their time came. “It was important for us to stand as advocates for the patient and continue to grow the patient, doctor, and family relationship,” he added....
At the bottom of page 16...
... particularly important to him on a personal level, because it calls out the importance of nurturing the health care team. He recounted how, as the pandemic continued, and he and his colleagues focused on caring for their patients, they often neglected caring for themselves. “If we did not take care ...
At the bottom of page 16...
... The “G,” he continued, stands for the greater good. What most people thought initially to be short-term changes eventually became a prolonged and huge task that weighed heavily on everyone, even with the knowledge that protective measures were saving lives. “We had to focus on the fact that ... is no ‘I’ in ‘team,’ ‘we,’ or ‘success.’ We had to cooperate and focus on the greater good by modeling what we wanted our patients and their families to follow,” said Carrol....
At the bottom of page 16...
... The “E” stands for equity and empowerment. As Fineberg emphasized in his presentation, the pandemic further exposed existing inequities and highlighted that health equity is still not a reality. Addressing those ineq-...
In the middle of page 17...
... uities requires empowerment, one aspect of which included using virtual platforms to connect with patients, families, and caregiver groups throughout the country in an effort to address concerns such as vaccine hesitancy. Carrol concluded that change is the only constant ...
At the bottom of page 17...
... moderator Judy Salerno, president of the New York Academy of Medicine, opened the discussion session, which included the two previous speakers and Brynn Bowman, chief executive officer of the Center to Advance Palliative Care. Salerno reflected on the many disruptions the pandemic triggered, ... considering the ongoing need to be disruptive in health care. She asked Fineberg and Carrol to identify some of the durable changes in health care that may result from these disruptions. Fineberg commented that health care needs ... that are thoughtful, important, and intentional, yet the pandemic-triggered disruptions were none of those. Perhaps one disruption to consider is the widespread adoption of telemedicine and telehealth and their ... not a substitute for face-to-face interaction, telehealth proved to be an important complement to care that can engage patients in a reinforcing and comforting manner....
At the bottom of page 17...
... Brynn Bowman observed that there was a rapid evolution and a great deal of creativity around how to best use telehealth to extend the scarce resources that many palliative care teams deal with regularly. For ... , palliative care specialists were able to use virtual platforms to talk to patients in the emergency department (ED) and nursing homes, extending their reach beyond their local institution or clinic. Bowman pointed out that she expects that palliative care will adapt ... integrate telehealth for long-term use. She also hoped that the pandemic will disrupt how health care systems think about staff members’ emotional well-being, since business-as-usual solutions and resourcing are not ... to be sufficient. Bowman shared her optimism that the new clinical partnerships developed during the pandemic would endure, particularly those that led to what appears to be a lasting increase in consults requested of specialty palliative care teams. The ...
In the middle of page 18...
... and view their everyday experiences. “When we utilize this opportunity to see patients where they are, we actually learn so much more about them and understand obstacles that may be present in the home setting,” said Carrol. He also agreed with Bowman about the huge growth in attention paid to ... mental and physical well-being of caregivers and providers....
In the middle of page 18...
... Regarding lessons learned from COVID-19 that might influence health professional education, Fineberg said that the pandemic has reinforced the value of interprofessional education and the role it can play to make care more effective. Carrol commented that at his ... , the pandemic experience has renewed interest in wellness and taking care of the medical students and fellows. In addition, it has highlighted the importance of incorporating a focus on health inequities and their relationship to the social ... , then they will not be truly empathetic providers to take care of those patients,” said Carrol. “We have to be able to listen to the patient and know where they are in order to truly be able to provide care.”...
At the bottom of page 18...
... Fineberg commented that the pandemic has also emphasized the importance of pre-positioning protocols and networks to enable real-time clinical and public health research that produces evidence in a scientifically reliable way about what does and does not work in an emergency. Fineberg noted that ... calls out the difference between plans and preparedness. Preparedness, he said, requires a significant degree of readiness, on-the-ground resources, adequate equipment, real tests through ... experience to identify the weaknesses in the system, and pre-positioning networks for both public health and community-based investigation....
At the bottom of page 18...
... Bowman for the operational definition of serious illness. Bowman replied that it is a life-limiting illness that negatively affects quality of life and function or excessively burdens caregivers (Kelley and Bollens-Lund, 2017). Bowman addressed another participant question about fee-for-service ... and the delivery of care for complex and persistent episodes of illness, including long COVID. “Fee-for-service is poorly matched to the needs of patients who have medical illness and ...
At the bottom of page 18...
... or community service agencies to address the social determinants of health that Carrol discussed. “When you look at examples of organizations and entities that are leaning more into value-based care or have capitated arrangements for the care of patients with serious illness … we start to see ...
In the middle of page 19...
... tive clinical relationships with very sick patients over time,” said Bowman. Carrol agreed with Bowman and noted a likely increase in the number of patients with serious illness because a large majority of individuals delayed important medical screenings ... the pandemic. Fee-for-service care, he noted, does not appear to be appropriately resourced to address the resulting need for repeat visits associated with ...
In the middle of page 19...
... Fineberg pointed out that the deficiencies of a fee-for-service system did not originate during the COVID-19 pandemic, but they were more visibly exposed by the heightened demand for care of patients who are seriously ill and need long-term, comprehensive care. ... also noted that fee-for-service payment models work contrary to the ideal of putting the patient first in providing compassionate, continuous, and comprehensive care. From a practical point of view, one potential approach to rectifying what has proven to be a difficult system to change may be to ...
In the middle of page 19...
... providers being able to quickly get patients’ buy-in based on their close relationships. “It highlights the importance of having a medical home and of having a medical director that is truly connected to the patients and their families, because if we get that buy-in, they will model our behavior,�...
At the bottom of page 19...
... Salerno then asked Bowman to talk about how palliative care teams functioned when they had to talk to patients and families about goals of care in such a profoundly disjointed manner. Bowman said that her organization conducted surveys of palliative care programs ... asked the teams how they were adapting their service delivery in response to the pandemic and the impact on patients and families, colleagues, and organizations; almost every palliative care program had rapidly scaled its use of telehealth.7...
At the bottom of page 19...
... or services to address the emotional well-being of their non-palliative-care colleagues. “That was work that palliative care teams were owning and innovating around,” she said. About the same...
In the middle of page 20...
... that they were also leading the efforts within their organizations to ensure that COVID-19 patients were able to talk about their goals of care, and some palliative care teams quickly began teaching other clinical colleagues to have these conversations. The fact that this was occurring, she added, ...
At the bottom of page 20...
... Bowman noted that the surveys also revealed that palliative care teams expanded their presence in the ED and intensive care units (ICUs). More than half of the programs reported that they had worked with their organizational ...
At the bottom of page 20...
... care could help address the needs of patients dealing with long COVID. Bowman replied that this is an area that needs more research to understand what these patients are grappling with, how long those symptoms will last, and what the best ways to support families will be. Carrol, who is now ... in the memory clinic, said he is seeing many changes in his patients because of the neurological effects of COVID-19 and its impact on memory. Carrol then pointed to the importance of checking in with patients and families who have lost loved ones to COVID-19. He ... that neglecting to address their mental and emotional decline would lead to more long-term effects on COVID-19 patients and those who experienced loss during the pandemic....
At the bottom of page 20...
... Returning to the issue of social determinants of health and health equity, a workshop participant asked if there is an opportunity to train a substantial number of leaders in each clinical area on topics such ... urban planning, community organizing, housing, and economic policy as a means of addressing the social determinants of health. Fineberg called out the need for individuals trained in medicine who will ... their intellectual and professional lives to doing exactly that, namely to serve as bridge builders between the social and policy worlds and the clinical and patient care worlds. He added that he believes that leadership emerges not from a role but from action. “It is not the formal ... brings to a situation that signifies their leadership,” he said. “It is what they do in any role to bring others to do things that are necessary and require working together and inspire people to do more than they would otherwise do.”...
In the middle of page 21...
... Asked for concluding thoughts, Carrol said while it appears the nation is turning the corner, we still have much to learn and understand about how the health system can adapt to address the changes wrought by the pandemic so that when the next one arises, the next generation of ... , nor were the treating clinicians able to lean on their palliative care colleagues. “We have to think about what that variability in access and preparedness means coming out of COVID-19,” she said. Fineberg concluded the discussion by observing that learning and keeping an open mindset ...
In the middle of page 21...
... Innovative Early Responses to the Pandemic...
In the middle of page 21...
... began with a brief video montage showcasing five examples of innovative approaches that facilitated high-quality care for people with serious illness and their families during the early days of the pandemic....
At the bottom of page 21...
... Terri Maxwell, from Turn-Key Health, spoke about the organization’s use of Zoom meetings to bring together patients, family members, and clinicians to discuss goals of care using the serious illness conversation guide to develop an advance care plan....
At the bottom of page 21...
... Tara Floyd and Simmy King, from Children’s National Hospital, discussed how the hospital expanded its care population to include young adults with COVID-19 to relieve pressure on other hospitals in the Washington, DC, area. This required the ...
At the bottom of page 21...
... Meaghann Weaver, from Children’s Hospital and Medical Center and the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, noted that it serves a primarily rural population and had already implemented telehealth ... prior to the pandemic to offer longitudinal care for patients in hospice. It supported home hospice...
In the middle of page 22...
... teams caring for not only children but also adults. During the pandemic, health care teams were able to leverage existing telehealth capabilities to ensure continuity in care for children with complex needs. The ... also collaborated with colleagues in New York City to provide additional telehealth training for adult and pediatric palliative care at the height of the pandemic....
In the middle of page 22...
... Hannah Coyne and Patrick Coyne, from the Medical University of South Carolina, discussed Code Lavender, a program they used to provide peer support for team members.8 ... included a virtual debriefing where staff members could speak with chaplains, therapists, and the bereavement coordinator about their experiences. On the patient care side, the institution provided iPhones so that patients could FaceTime with ...
In the middle of page 22...
... Breanna Burke, a community health worker (CHW) in Bristol, TN; Nubia Armenta, a community health specialist in Huntington Beach, CA; and Claude Clements, a CHW in Philadelphia, PA, discussed how the COVID-19 pandemic affected their communities and how they were able to continue working ... their patients to meet their needs. Clements noted that he had four relatives on ventilators and three who died from COVID-19. Armenta pointed out that one of the most significant impacts on her community and family was unemployment. Burke ... that her organization provided masks and gloves to the local food pantry so that it could reopen and help patients and the community. Armenta noted that the pandemic triggered a widespread increase in depression and anxiety, which added to their existing patient load. ... her view, the most effective resource CHWs provided was someone to talk with about the issues and fears community members were facing....
At the bottom of page 22...
... The Role of Hospice during the Pandemic...
At the bottom of page 22...
... The session opened with remarks by Carla Davis, chief executive officer of Heart of Hospice during the pandemic and currently senior vice president of hospice operations at LHC Group, which recently acquired...
At the bottom of page 22...
... 8 See https://consultqd.clevelandclinic.org/code-lavender-offering-emotional-support-holistic-rapid-response (accessed March 10, 2022)....
In the middle of page 23...
... Heart of Hospice.9 Davis explained that Heart of Hospice’s mission was to serve every dying patient regardless of the complexity and cost of that care. “We try to knock down barriers to people getting the care they need and deserve,” she explained. When COVID-19 arrived, it ... sense that her organization would serve as many COVID-19 patients as needed to help its communities and its health care systems....
In the middle of page 23...
... During the pandemic’s first year, Heart of Hospice served over 780 COVID-19 patients, including 7 percent of all those who died of COVID-19 in Louisiana.10 Davis ... out that New Orleans was particularly hard hit and patients were in hallways, parking lots, the convention center, and even in three of the city’s parks. During that time, the organization’s medical director proposed creating an inpatient hospice unit (for COVID- ... patients), something that normally takes 2–3 years to set up. While acknowledging that this was a “completely insane idea,” Davis said she and her colleagues set out to make it a reality, receiving strong support from the state that included granting regulatory approval a day after receiving ... a 90-day approval, so Heart of Hospice relied solely on volunteers for the first 90 days. Although people were scared in the early days of the pandemic, staff from its locations nationwide volunteered and came to New Orleans....
In the middle of page 23...
... from action. Leadership during a crisis, she noted, requires the same skills as leadership outside of a crisis, except that it is more intense and needs to be more intentional and more focused. For her, the most important part of leadership was making sure that her team was going to be safe....
At the bottom of page 23...
... Another lesson Davis learned about leadership was the importance of transparency and leading with vulnerability. “There were times when I was scared,” she said, noting that she contracted COVID-19 from her 84-year-old mother. Part ... effectively, she added, so she ensured there was an established approach for communicating often with staff, including weekly virtual town halls and weekly e-mails. She also learned that improbable does not mean impossible when the team comes together to support a vision and that, in chaos, it is ... to keep or establish a routine and structure that can provide comfort in the storm....
In the middle of page 24...
... Claire Ankuda, assistant professor of geriatrics and palliative medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, described the model of rapid telephonic and in-person ED palliative care outreach that she and her colleague, Christopher ...
In the middle of page 24...
... During the day, medical students operated PATCH-24. They would send a group text to a primary geriatric fellow and attending physician to see if they could take a call. If neither was available, the medical student would reach out to a backup pool comprising ... , nurse practitioners, and on occasion, volunteers nationwide. If none of them were available, the students would contact Ankuda or Woodrell. Between two to four outpatient ... and palliative care fellows helped cover the PATCH-24 hotline at any given time (Chopra et al., 2021)....
In the middle of page 24...
... Ankuda described how the volume of cases rose dramatically between March and April of 2020, and PATCH-24 was able to accommodate that increase11 (see Figure 1). Overall, PATCH-24 handled nearly 1,000 patients over that time period (Ankuda et al.,...
At the bottom of page 24...
... pointed out that it was important to have people who could help to identify patients for whom the service was appropriate. In addition, while she and her colleagues could certainly speak to families in a one-time context, these conversations often needed to be longitudinal. “We needed to be able ... hand the communication back to our primary consult service if needed,” explained Ankuda....
At the bottom of page 24...
... Ankuda pointed out that the experience underscores the importance of having an in-person presence and local champions. Ankuda noted that some other institutions that started similar call lines did not get calls, and she hypothesized that the reason ...
In the middle of page 25...
... FIGURE 1 Daily volume of the PATCH-24 telephonic palliative support line and associated emergency department (ED) consults during the COVID-19 pandemic....
At the bottom of page 25...
... early in the pandemic, the call line went quiet even though the hospitals were overwhelmed. “Our clinical chief, in talking to the emergency room, soon realized they ... did not have time to pick up the phone,” she explained, “so we started sending one of our physicians and a fellow into the emergency rooms from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.”...
At the bottom of page 25...
... with palliative care, Ankuda’s team sent palliative care physicians to build a bridge to PATCH-24. They helped coach other clinicians to understand when it was appropriate to use the call line, while also building familiarity with palliative care....
At the bottom of page 25...
... has a substantial palliative care service. PATCH-24 relied predominantly on physicians, including people like herself, who normally focus on research and those who usually work in outpatient or inpatient services that closed during the pandemic and could...
In the middle of page 26...
... be redeployed. PATCH-24 also relied on a large volunteer base, which was possible because New York State enacted emergency laws and the hospital had protocols that allowed her team to rapidly onboard people nationwide, which was not possible in other states....
At the bottom of page 26...
... to voicemail during the extreme surge in COVID-19 patients, a much simpler model with one or two physicians or nurse practitioners would be able to handle a substantial call volume. Ankuda explained that her team learned to be creative about using available health care and social service professionals. ... social workers to create a training module where they all learned about New York State’s surrogate decision-making laws, which are a bit complex, and also learned how to have conversations with patients about health care proxies,” said Ankuda. Once trained, the program deployed these residents to ... capacity to make decisions, the residents asked them who they wanted to be their health care proxy, helped them complete the appropriate paperwork, and placed it in their chart. If the patient was not capable, the resident would search for someone who could serve in that role, identify the ... person, and document their contact information....
At the bottom of page 26...
.... Her health system’s communication team developed communication scripts for talking about COVID decision making in low-acute, medium-acute, and high-acute situations. The scripts would then be available for the fellows while they were on the phone with family members, while the attending ... listen and provide coaching in real time via text or chat on the computer. This approach proved to be a good model for receiving feedback, said Ankuda, and the ... reported that the autonomy this approach allowed them to step outside their comfort zone and was beneficial for their learning. “They really appreciated that opportunity, and we could not have done this without our fellows,” she said....
At the bottom of page 26...
... Ankuda explained that overcommunication played a vital role in the adaptation process. Her team held twice-daily huddles at 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., often for just 15 minutes, to talk about what happened during the day, discuss any glitches and brainstorm solutions, and disseminate any new ...
In the middle of page 27...
... pitals. She noted that the overall amount of meeting time has diminished since then, and she and many of her colleagues miss meeting so frequently....
In the middle of page 27...
... PATCH-24 relied heavily on physicians because they were available; chaplains and social workers were consumed with their expanded roles on the palliative care consult teams embedded in ICUs. Ankuda believes that incorporating the full interdisciplinary team in such programs ...
At the bottom of page 27...
... Kristopher Halsey, a clinical chaplain and bereavement support specialist in Philadelphia, PA, explained that at the time of the initial COVID-19 outbreak, he was working as a chaplain for a ... , but at the time of the workshop was working as a hospice specialist. He pointed out the significant challenges of supporting patients, families, and staff given pandemic restrictions. For example, the lockdown of long-term care facilities made it extremely difficult to provide hospice services ... would support the end-of-life needs of both patients and family members. Personally, Halsey experienced the weight of what families were dealing with when his aunt, who lived in a long-term care facility, ... COVID-19 and passed away. “Closure was not there, which led to what is now labeled as pandemic grief,” he said....
At the bottom of page 27...
... Halsey recalled when he was working in the hospital and one of the ICU patients died of COVID-19, the ICU nurse had to bring the body to the hospital morgue. Seeing the the bodies of all the other people ...
At the bottom of page 27...
... Halsey also recounted how the hospital passed out Chromebooks to patients so that he could deliver Sunday services virtually and provide spiritual care and support. Patients were still struggling, however, because they could not receive the one-on-one, in-person care they ...
In the middle of page 28...
... to supporting patients, Halsey added, he and his fellow chaplains ministered to staff, instituted partnerships with the local Department of Health to provide testing for the community, and ... churches and faith leaders continue to provide support to their congregations....
In the middle of page 28...
... One lesson Halsey learned was the importance of working together in times of crisis and respecting one another’s roles in providing support. Halsey observed that it was equally important to reinforce the message that staff needed to ... care of themselves along with their patients. Wellness debriefings were one way to provide virtual support to both staff and patients....
In the middle of page 28...
... In closing, Halsey pointed to the need to be present for people even after the pandemic. “Studies have shown there will be a bereavement crisis that is going to come on,” he said. Given this looming crisis, continuing to partner ...
At the bottom of page 28...
... Bellevue and NYC Health + Hospitals’ Response to the Patient Surge...
At the bottom of page 28...
... To put her institution’s experience during the pandemic’s early days in context, Susan Cohen, medical director of the palliative care program at NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue, noted that Bellevue ... . It is part of an 11-hospital, 5-nursing-home system that makes up the largest U.S. safety net system. Bellevue has a history of responding to pandemics, epidemics, and large-scale disasters dating back to the days of yellow fever, cholera, small pox, and tuberculosis and continuing through the ... /AIDS epidemic, hurricane Sandy, and the outbreak of the Ebola virus. She also pointed out that many of Bellevue’s patients have histories of trauma, poor access to care, and cultural ...
At the bottom of page 28...
... Cohen emphasized the importance of remembering the fear and emotion that hospital staff experienced in the spring of 2020. PPE was in short supply, and staff were concerned the hospital would run out. Tests took 4–5 days to produce results and were only available for hospitalized patients. Hospital ... mandates did not exist until May 2020, when the surge was already waning, and staff only wore masks when entering rooms of patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19, to ration PPE. Cohen recalled how she had to walk past a ... refrigerated trucks every day, which served as makeshift morgues and represented just one of the many facets of the trauma she and the rest of staff were experiencing....
At the bottom of page 28...
... Cohen explained that when she thinks about pandemic planning and preparedness, she uses a tsunami analogy; people in the know recognize that water recedes far into the ocean before the tsunami hits land. “That is ... I felt during the preparation stages,” she said. “I knew what was coming, and...
In the middle of page 29...
... spoke to colleagues in Seattle, where the first COVID-19 wave struck. In the end, she went with a learning-by-doing approach, because while planning and preparedness were helpful, she had to be adaptable when the reality of the pandemic struck New York....
In the middle of page 29...
... As Cohen and her colleagues were upscaling their ability to care for patients from a palliative care perspective, they decided that they would ensure that staff ... real-time information when communicating with family members. “We heard of a story where someone got an update and a death call within minutes of each other because the information that the caller was using was not accurate and up to date in real time,” said ... . To prevent that, the palliative care team embedded itself in the ICU and paired up with the ICU teams, which established solid, relational communication. They only made calls after contacting the ICU. “We did utilize ...
In the middle of page 29...
... By incorporating in-person volunteers, Cohen could increase capacity rapidly from one team to three teams. The volunteers—most from child and adolescent psychiatry and community-based psychiatry practices—received brief trainings using materials from the Center to Advance Palliative Care ... with a team that included one of her unit’s experienced practitioners. During the first wave, her unit’s patient census increased fourfold, and fellows took on leadership roles because it had only two palliative care providers and an internist. Despite the limited supply of palliative care ...
At the bottom of page 29...
... Palliative care team members’ roles included providing medical updates to family members, supporting care teams through ethical issues, and engaging in care planning and discussions of patient goals and values. Since many of the patients were young and previously healthy, the palliative ... every other week during the COVID-19 surge. Her team also took advantage of Bellevue’s existing Helping Healers Heal program,13 respite rooms, and other wellness activities....
At the bottom of page 29...
... 13 See https://www.nychealthandhospitals.org/pressrelease/employee-wellness-program-to-address-emotional-stress-and-burnout (accessed June 8, 2022)....
In the middle of page 30...
... Cohen pointed to the importance of remembering that each team member has a different trajectory for their fear, grief, anger, and gratitude. She also noted that the tragedy of George Floyd’s murder came right after the surge, had a huge impact on her team, their patients, and ... health system, and served as a repeat trauma that further affected the team’s wellness. In closing, Cohen noted that the history and culture of Bellevue and NYC Health + Hospitals helped prepare staff for the surge. The ability to adapt and her team’s prior wellness and ...
In the middle of page 30...
... L. Ebony Boulware, chief of the division of general internal medicine at Duke University School of Medicine, began by stating that “the inequity story is the pandemic story,” given that individuals from historically underserved communities ...
At the bottom of page 30...
... In addition, the pandemic had a more severe economic impact on underserved and historically disadvantaged communities, as they were more likely to work in vulnerable jobs or in positions on the frontlines of the pandemic with ... the virus, explained Boulware. While job loss affected all communities, there was a large racial inequity in loss of employment (see Figure 4) (Saenz and Sparks, 2020). This exacerbated disparities given the link between employment and health insurance coverage. The combination of loss of health ... and economic instability meant that many Black/African American and Hispanic/Latinx individuals were 1.5- to 2-fold more likely to delay or avoid urgent or emergency care compared to white individuals. Those delays, ...
In the middle of page 31...
... FIGURE 2 Age-adjusted COVID-19–associated hospitalization rates by race and ethnicity....
In the middle of page 32...
... SOURCE: Presented by L. Ebony Boulware on November 8, 2021; content adapted from Saenz and Sparks, 2020. https://carsey.unh.edu/publication/inequities-job-loss-recovery-amid-COVID-pandemic (accessed June 8, 2022)....
At the bottom of page 32...
... addition, individuals in Black/African American and Hispanic/Latinx communities experienced more stress, anxiety, and great sadness that they found difficult to cope with, as did women compared to men and all individuals with below-average income compared to those ...
At the bottom of page 32...
... Boulware pointed to the increased use of alternative methods of connection, primarily telehealth, as one bright spot during the pandemic. She noted that one study found that Black/African American and Hispanic/Latinx individuals were more likely to report using telehealth to ... with physicians or other medical professionals (Campos-Castillo and Anthony, 2021). However, two studies found that timely access to care was a key contributor to inequitable outcomes during the pandemic (Price- ... several reasons people may have delayed care, including workplace conditions, structural barriers such as difficulty arranging transportation, and economic barriers. Once people were in the hospital, race was not associated with prevalence of in-hospital death. “They show up sicker, but once ...
At the bottom of page 32...
... Describing how COVID-19 inequities changed over time, Boulware pointed out that in the initial phases of the pandemic, Black and Hispanic/-...
In the middle of page 33...
... Latinx individuals had higher rates of morbidity and mortality (Figure 5). By June of 2021, however, Native American, Alaska Native, and Indigenous individuals were experiencing much greater inequities than other groups. “We cannot always think that what we saw in the beginning is ... pattern that is happening over time,” she said. “These patterns are changing and continue to change, and we need to monitor and focus on the groups experiencing inequities at the time.”...
In the middle of page 33...
... “I think the pandemic clearly brings out the weaknesses in our health care safety net and our societal factors that can lead to health inequities,” observed Boulware. She emphasized that a lesson learned from the pandemic is the need to ... beyond a focus on medical needs, to “the nonmedical determinants—housing, employment, and the rest of our social safety net—to deal with inequities. … At the end of the day, what has become clear is that the answers cannot come just ... within the health care and public health sectors. They need to come from across multiple sectors of society to address these inequities,” Boulware concluded....
In the middle of page 33...
... Lori Bishop, vice president of palliative and advanced care at the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, and Karen Bullock, professor and John A. Hartford Scholar at North Carolina State University, co-moderated the discussion session. Bishop asked the speakers about the...
In the middle of page 34...
... state of the partnerships and innovations they developed during the initial phases of the pandemic. Davis replied that during the height of the pandemic, health systems across all 16 of the markets in which her organization operates—not just the hospital where she opened the inpatient unit— ... to appreciate the innovation and responsiveness, as well as the value proposition of hospice and palliative care. She added that the hospital in which the hospice inpatient unit was created shared with her that it was thrilled about the ... that developed and would like to continue it. Davis noted that she would like to see research on the factors that led to the highly variable acceptance of hospice ...
At the bottom of page 34...
... Cohen emphasized that the relationships her team built with the health system’s ICUs were critical to being able to create and upscale her program. At the onset of the pandemic, the ICU units were too busy to reach out, but because of preexisting relationships, ICU staff ... noted that a colleague conducted an informal survey of ED physicians at the end of 2019 to see if they thought palliative care was part of their job, and the majority said no. When this colleague resurveyed ED physicians after the pandemic began, the majority said yes....
At the bottom of page 34...
... Bullock, referring to Carrol’s earlier presentation and reflecting on Halsey’s comments, asked Halsey if the concept of hope and healing resonates with him based on his experiences. Halsey replied that hope and healing are huge, in large part because of the lingering ... about infections, vaccinations, and boosters. Halsey noted that he has learned to continue to offer hope to patients and families. He reminds them that they have to do what is best for them but also discusses, for example, the possible ramifications of not being ... . He collaborates with clinicians to provide educational opportunities for families and provides virtual talks at his local church to help educate that community about the importance of widespread vaccination to enable the community and ... nation to move past the pandemic. Regarding what he does when he needs support, Halsey said he turns to another colleague to debrief and have someone who engages in nonjudgmental listening. He also tries to use the tools he encourages others to use, such as encouraging people to engage ...
In the middle of page 35...
... required in order for an individual to show up and be able to get what they need out of the health care system. This will require addressing structural, economic, and other barriers to accessing ... in the health care system and partnerships that go beyond the current public health infrastructure to include community-based organizations and government agencies. Bullock added that she often hears colleagues say, “if we build it, they will come,” but often-inadequate transportation ...
In the middle of page 35...
... Bishop, posing a question from a participant, asked how the health care system could address the enormous amount of workplace stress and frustration that has built up during the pandemic beyond encouraging self-care. Cohen said that for too long, the responsibility for self-care fell ... on providers, but we now realize that health care systems need to build more resilience and wellness into their operations that goes beyond having a quiet room or providing a voucher for a massage once a month. Cohen said that research is ... because the health care system is already facing another crisis: getting people to enter the workforce, stay in it, and be able to function well in the system without being angry, irritable, burned out, and disengaged....
At the bottom of page 35...
... Ankuda said that one thing she noticed throughout the pandemic was the extraordinary camaraderie and sense of spirit among staff. Some of that, she suspected, was that staff had more energy and thought that the situation would be over soon. However, ... wondered if some of it also was the result of greater freedom to innovate and less paperwork and regulatory burden to shoulder. “We were all working at the top of our license, and we were all driven by intense meaning in what we were doing,” ... said, sentiments with which both Cohen and Davis agreed....
At the bottom of page 35...
... to address clinician wellness issues, Ankuda suggested that it also needs to address staff’s struggles with paperwork, electronic health records, and other bureaucratic responsibilities that have increased over the years. She also noted the gender inequalities that the pandemic highlighted in terms ... caregiving responsibilities and hoped that health system leadership would address this issue....
At the bottom of page 35...
... they have learned regarding any new expectations that employers might have. Cohen said that the leaders of her facility appreciated the camaraderie and spirit of teamwork that developed during the initial stages of the pandemic as well as the innovative approaches developed by staff members. She was ... whether and how leaders will act to sustain those positive developments in more...
In the middle of page 36...
... normal times, and she expressed concern as to whether health system leaders will address staff’s long-term mental health issues. Her hope was that the lessons ... from crisis management and about inequities will inform decisions made by health system leaders in the future....
In the middle of page 36...
... be seen if employers will provide protections for people who suffer lasting effects, known as “long COVID.” Because of the inequities in how the pandemic has played out, she suspects that individuals from historically underserved groups are going to be further disadvantaged by a lack of workplace ... related to long COVID. She called for efforts to promote actions that would support and protect people as they continue to experience the full impact of the pandemic....
In the middle of page 36...
... question, Bullock asked Cohen to elaborate on the trauma of staff she referenced in her presentation. Cohen replied that what she noticed in herself and her team members was that everyone had a unique way of coping with the anxiety related to concern about their health and that of their families. Even ... care clinicians, social workers, and chaplains who deal with death and dying found themselves unprepared. Referring to the sheer volume of patient deaths, she pointed out, “This is not normal, not in health care, not ... , and it was traumatizing.” Cohen described how some staff members were panicked and refused to come to work in the early days of the pandemic, others needed to take time away for their own mental health when the initial surge ended, and still others are now just working through their ...
At the bottom of page 36...
... team realized that the ICU was filled with Hispanic/Latino men whose family members were actually in the same ICU. The families were traumatized, and members of her team were stunned by the multiple losses families were experiencing. All the things palliative care staff normally deal with were ...
At the bottom of page 36...
... Bowman closed out the first webinar by reflecting on what she heard during the sessions. The fear, uncertainty, and chaos of the pandemic’s early days stood out for her, as did the power of teams motivated by love, vocation, and camaraderie to pull off incredible feats. She ...
In the middle of page 37...
... sons learned about what it takes to navigate uncertainty and be resilient as a health system, as teams, and as individuals; how to learn and iterate; and how crucial strong leadership is to enabling that to happen. Bowman also noted how the quick innovation of palliative care and hospice ... made a meaningful difference in the experiences of patients with COVID-19 and their families and how critical it was to their health care organization’s ability to meet the moment....
In the middle of page 37...
... The speakers highlighted the preexisting gaps in care for patients with serious illness, which were exacerbated by the pandemic, said Bowman. Chief among these were the glaring disparities in the experiences and outcomes of Black and Brown communities. She noted that the ... gaps in high-quality serious illness care. She concluded her summary by previewing the two topics that the second webinar would address: telehealth and the health care workforce....
In the middle of page 37...
... Wang took away from the first session’s presentations included Fineberg’s discussions of how leadership, science, public trust, preparedness, and strategic response are required for recovery and Carrol’s acronym for change as a constant. The first session highlighted key issues, including the ... -based care, the need for interprofessional training, the critical role of palliative care as a specialty as well as a skill set for all clinicians, and how virtual platforms helped provide patient-centered care. The session also emphasized the importance of addressing health inequities and ...
At the bottom of page 37...
... In summarizing the key takeaways of the second session, Wang noted that it described several examples of remarkable innovations and the critical role that safety net hospitals serve in the community. She emphasized that “adaptability to crisis demands interdependence of health ... and departments. Routine communication, telehealth, community engagement, creative staffing, intentional inclusion of non-physician team members, [and] hospital partnerships with public health and places of worship” are all beneficial tools to improve care for patients with serious illness, ...
At the bottom of page 37...
... Bowman opened the second webinar in the series with a brief recap of the first webinar and its focus on the innovative responses in the initial...
In the middle of page 38...
... stages of the pandemic. She also noted that the first webinar included discussions about health equity and referred back to Boulware’s comment that the story of the pandemic is also the story about inequity....
In the middle of page 38...
... Workforce Challenges and Innovations...
In the middle of page 38...
... Bowman explained that the second webinar in the series would focus on the workforce that cares for people with serious illness and telehealth. These two topics, she pointed out, are inextricably linked. During the pandemic, many health systems nationwide were able to use ... to extend the reach of a scarce resource, their palliative care teams. Technology also enabled families to connect with loved ones, and the capacity to make those connections helped relieve some of the moral distress that the battered health care workforce was experiencing....
At the bottom of page 38...
... The Lived Experience...
At the bottom of page 38...
... Rodney Tucker, director of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Center for Palliative and Supportive Care, opened the second webinar by sharing his lived experience during the pandemic. Beginning in March 2020, he explained, almost ... was doing everything “right” by shutting down, working remotely, exercising proper hygiene, and wearing masks. From July to December 2020, people largely continued to do everything “right” and were looking forward to a better 2021 with ... 2021, along with the worst surge in COVID-19 cases in Alabama. Though fatigued, people largely continued to do the “right” thing, but by April and May of 2021, people let their guard down slightly, and Tucker became frustrated with the lagging vaccination rate....
At the bottom of page 38...
... Tucker shared that in June, despite being vaccinated, he tested positive for the Delta variant and his spouse developed bilateral pneumonia. Noting that this served as a serious test of his empathy, he shared a diagram to illustrate his emotional ... during this time (see Figure 6) and said he was at the “anniversary reactions” stage with the impact of the Delta variant on his family....
At the bottom of page 38...
... Tucker identified several challenges he and his team felt, both professionally and personally (see Figure 7). These contributed to diminished resiliency and burnout. In looking for measures to reinforce resilience and prevent ... , Tucker and his team measured their well-being index...
In the middle of page 39...
... FIGURE 6 An illustration of the emotional trajectory many individuals experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic....
At the bottom of page 39...
... FIGURE 7 Professional and personal challenges experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic....
At the top of page 40...
... to understand the trajectory of their response during this period. Tucker shared that he encouraged team members to take three simple actions: (1) be flexible in ... of scheduling and being able to help one another; (2) take advantage of the power of the debrief, which is something practiced in palliative care; and (3) have “grace in their sails.”...
In the middle of page 40...
... Tucker explained that his team began applying practices associated with the “Circle Up” framework, which uses briefings, micro check-ins, and debriefs to strengthen resilience, sustain psychological health, and maintain care excellence (Rock et al., 2020). Tucker noted that using these ... to check in, be heard, and listen to one another helped the team work well together. Team members also checked in with each other about how their work affected them personally ... made sure they were feeling all right before they went home. “This seems to be something that we all appreciate and that helps us to regain some of our energy, some of our resilience, and to know that we will be okay, one step at a time, one debrief at a time, one ... at a time as we all strive to look to see what is our next normal,” explained Tucker. The power of Circle Up, he added, is that it helps him and his teammates deal with the uncertainty about the future, and what the next normal would look like....
In the middle of page 40...
....”15 Titled Farewell 2020, the poem is an emotional reflection on his lived experience caring for people with serious illness throughout the pandemic....
At the bottom of page 40...
... Invigoration and frustration,...
At the bottom of page 40...
... Gratefulness and fearfulness....
At the bottom of page 40...
... 2020: You’re coming to a close, and...
In the middle of page 41...
... I still hate podcasts and binge on Netflix....
In the middle of page 41...
... I show grace to myself in how I find resilience;...
In the middle of page 41...
... I don’t tell others how to find it....
In the middle of page 41...
... You left me not knowing how to feel or act....
At the bottom of page 41...
... 2021: For you, I have one intention –Simply stay well and sane....
At the bottom of page 41...
... COVID-19 and the Nursing Workforce...
At the bottom of page 41...
... Elaine Larson, the Anna C. Maxwell Professor of Research Emerita and Special Lecturer at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University and Senior Scholar in Residence at the New York Academy of Medicine, discussed how the pandemic has affected ...
At the bottom of page 41...
... Larson referred to a 2020 survey that found that 22 percent of nurses surveyed indicated they may leave their current positions, and 60 percent...
In the middle of page 42...
... of that group said they were more likely to leave given the added stress of the pandemic.17 Nurses cited insufficient staffing, unsafe workload, and the emotional toll of the pandemic as key reasons for wanting to leave. Other workforce-related problems identified were regional variations and ... , specialized skill gaps, and the need for strategic workforce planning. “Hence, as with inequities in patient access and care, problems with nursing workforce are long-standing and embedded in the system, but COVID exacerbated and highlighted existing conditions,” ...
In the middle of page 42...
... Turning to seriously ill people who are in long-term care or home care settings, Larson said that even prior to the pandemic, infection was a primary cause of morbidity and mortality in long-term care settings. As an example of an infection mitigation effort, Larson ... that the Extension for Community Healthcare (ECHO) project at the University of New Mexico launched in September 2020. Project ECHO, uses a hub-and-spoke, telementoring, knowledge-sharing approach in which expert teams lead virtual clinics to reduce disparities in underserved and remote ... homes participated in 16 weekly sessions that included short lectures, case-based presentations, the development of quality improvement skills, and group discussion. The New York Academy of Medicine’s training center, for example, recruited, planned, and convened weekly sessions for ... 150 nursing homes in New York and Connecticut....
In the middle of page 42...
... homes in the metropolitan New York area, which revealed that frontline caregivers, primarily certified nursing assistants, are often people of color and/or first generation immigrants with little formal training and who are paid minimum wage. Larson said that many hold several jobs to support their ... , increasing the risk of cross transmission between facilities and reducing job satisfaction and staff retention. She added that while improved training is associated with enhanced infection control practices, staff responsible for infection ... tend to have little training in infection control and have multiple responsibilities....
At the bottom of page 42...
... 17 See https://www.trustedhealth.com/the-handoff-podcast/joanne-spetz (accessed March 10, 2022)....
In the middle of page 43...
... Make workforce health and well-being part of the system by providing equitable and adequate wages; recognition, appreciation, and economic rewards commensurate with value; resources for staff mental health and work breaks; and transparent communication to frontline direct care ...
In the middle of page 43...
... Increase workforce flexibility, require less overtime, and enhance staff and patient participation in decision making and scheduling....
In the middle of page 43...
... Reimagine delivery models and improve organizational climate by leveraging digital tools, adapting care models based on patient and employee preferences, supporting leadership training programs and mentorships, and building learning networks and coalitions across agencies and ...
In the middle of page 43...
... Strengthen talent pipelines and build skills for the future by implementing national training requirements for frontline staff based on core competency standards, supporting ... when needed, and bolstering recruitment pipelines for clinical roles....
At the bottom of page 43...
... In particular, Larson stressed the need to support leadership training programs and mentorship given the strong correlation between leadership, and job satisfaction and staff retention. In closing, she acknowledged that implementing these four improvement approaches would require major change in ... structure of the nation’s acute and chronic care systems....
At the bottom of page 43...
... Hospice and Home- and Community-Based Care in the Pandemic...
At the bottom of page 43...
... Liz Fowler, president and chief executive officer of Bluegrass Care Navigators, opened by noting that her organization is a Joint-Commission-accredited provider of hospice and ... - and community-based services, including home-based primary care, for thousands of frail and seriously ill individuals each year. Bluegrass Care Navigators, headquartered in Lexington, KY, has 750 team members operating out of seven regional ... serving both urban and rural communities throughout the state. Some of its clients live in counties with the highest poverty levels in the nation, and some even live in homes that lack adequate electricity or clean water....
At the bottom of page 43...
... Fowler noted that Kentucky was spared the initial waves of the pandemic, but she and the rest of the staff were watching what was happening in Oregon, New York, and other parts of the country. Her colleagues shared stories of closing ... inpatient hospice units or losing much of their team to the pandemic and illness. “We were scared, and some panic was setting...
In the middle of page 44...
... in,” said Fowler. The organization’s response was to establish a communication process that was disciplined and thoughtful. For example, headquarters sent out a standardized daily e-mail at 5:30 a.m. using the Situation, Background, Assessment, and ...
In the middle of page 44...
... Fowler and her colleagues also took a close look at the available workforce to get an idea of how the teams would care for patients if team members became ill ... unavailable. They developed plans for each team member’s role and decided which services the teams would provide under contingency, crisis, and catastrophic staffing levels. Fowler explained that the organization cross-trained everyone for alternate jobs. Nurses in administrative roles were ... to conduct home visits, for example, and office staff were trained to serve as medical equipment technicians who could decontaminate equipment and subsequently install it in clients’ homes. The teams knew who would come to perform what services under contingency levels compared to crisis ...
At the bottom of page 44...
... Kentucky declared a state of emergency and everyone transitioned to remote work, Fowler concluded that team members needed flexibility, given that schools were closed and other services were unavailable. It was fortunate, she said, that her organization could provide care at any time of the day as long ... identify their needs rather than assume. For example, the organization initially proposed an on-demand tutoring system to relieve challenges in homeschooling children. However, when management surveyed team members, they learned that the team was more concerned about not having desks and laptops at home....
In the middle of page 45...
... Bluegrass Care Navigators also hired coaches to help the organization’s managers normalize their sadness, exasperation, and fatigue. They circulated the Professional Quality of Life Scale20 instrument to all team members and discovered that 70 percent felt worn out by ... work and 64 percent felt overwhelmed by their work assignments and felt that their work was never ending (Stamm, 2009, 2010). “We knew something was going on and more needed to be done for our team, but this really ...
In the middle of page 45...
... inpatient stays. Depression ranked fourth in diagnosed chronic conditions among staff claims—approximately 50 percent higher than the benchmark—and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ranked seventh. The organization responded to the team’s needs by having a clinical psychologist conduct ... Schwartz Center for Compassionate Health Care to offer Schwartz Rounds,21 which create a safe place for team members to work through their feelings and normalize and process their roles as caregivers for people with serious illness....
In the middle of page 45...
... Lavender response team to provide the teams with debriefings for stressful work-related incidents (Stone, 2018). Any team member could request one, and peers could even do so for other team members. The second component, designed to support the workforce, was a compassionate leave policy created with ... members can use paid time off, time from a sick leave reserve bank the organization established, or unpaid time off to recover, rejuvenate, process, and deal with their grief. In addition, staff meetings include a mindfulness moment, and business meetings include asking staff how they are feeling. The ...
In the middle of page 46...
... and other techniques that can help individuals reset. “We are hoping that all of these things will help us be more sustainable, reduce our absenteeism, ... our workforce, and improve productivity,” said Fowler....
In the middle of page 46...
... Fowler pointed out that the organization established a 24/7 call center that team members and their families can call into for support. It has also expanded its use of nonlicensed team members, including scribes and CHWs, and developed partnerships with other providers, such as emergency medical services ...
In the middle of page 46...
... In closing, Fowler pointed out the legislative and regulatory work needed at the state level to allow the organization to make more use of unlicensed workers or those licensed for other tasks. For ... , paramedics must work under the direction of an emergency medical physician or emergency medical director, so regulatory and legislative changes may be necessary to integrate them more effectively into the workforce caring for people with serious illness....
At the bottom of page 46...
... The Role of Community Health Workers in the Pandemic...
At the bottom of page 46...
... Shreya Kangovi, founder and executive director of the Penn Center for Community Health Workers and associate professor at the Perelman School of Medicine, opened her remarks by reinforcing what previous speakers had highlighted: the pandemic has had a disproportionate impact on people of ...
At the bottom of page 46...
... condition that affects those of us who are privileged. It is psychological because it takes such forms as racism, group narcissism, xenophobia, and savior thinking… and those are psychological distortions.” Those distortions then make their way into policies, whether for federal housing, ... coverage, clinic no-shows, or institutional hiring. Those policies shape the distribution of wealth and power across the nation’s institutions and society in a manner that has an impact on living conditions and social needs, which affects behaviors and health across different domains, Kangovi ...
In the middle of page 47...
... because we tend to have conversations about health inequity that are quite ‘othering,’ where people who are privileged talk about how can we help and fix those people who face inequities,” observed Kangovi. A transfer of power is required to improve health inequity in Kangovi’s view, because “...
In the middle of page 47...
..., 23 percent are white and often in rural or low-income communities, and 10 percent are Native American.23 “They may not have extensive formal schooling, but they do have lived expertise of racism, of injustice, of financial hardship,” she said....
In the middle of page 47...
... Kangovi explained that health programs using best practices select CHWs based on personality attributes, such as being empathetic, altruistic, and nonjudgmental.24 These attributes are critical to their work; rather than merely compiling a list of social needs, for example, CHWs tend to “ ... to people, they get to know their life stories,” said Kangovi. CHWs find out who people are and what they think they need to live their best lives and then work to deliver those things. In Kangovi’s view, CHWs are the “power grid, not the lampposts.”...
In the middle of page 47...
... Observing that CHWs do not think in terms of disease or domain silos but rather work across domains and conditions, Kangovi explained that this capacity gives them power, as does their ability to intervene at all stages of the health inequity trajectory. ... CHWs are able to navigate access to care and bridge gaps with health teams to improve health outcomes, while also provide coaching about healthy behaviors and address unmet social needs. “By ...
In the middle of page 48...
... reshaping the distribution of wealth and power in our institutions and within health care and public health more broadly,” said Kangovi....
In the middle of page 48...
... from lived experience. Who better, asked Kangovi, to redesign the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, for example, than someone who has firsthand experience at the checkout counter? In addition, CHWs are starting to lead antiracism and social justice innovations. At Penn Medicine, Kangovi ... , the chief executive officer and other senior executives now have CHW mentors who train them on what it is like to live with some of these inequities (Vasan et al., 2021)....
At the bottom of page 48...
... Kangovi noted that CHWs are one of the most evidence-based workforces in health care and public health. For example, multiple randomized, controlled trials have demonstrated that they can move the needle on chronic disease control, cancer screening, access to and quality of care, ...
At the bottom of page 48...
... the factors that produce these positive outcomes, Kangovi conducted approximately 1,500 interviews with patients at their bedsides, on porches, and in shelters, asking them what makes it hard for them to stay healthy and what CHWs should be doing differently when designing programs. She and her ... also studied other CHW programs to gain insights into what worked and what did not. The result was Individualized Management for Patient-Centered Targets (IMPaCT), a standardized, scalable program that leverages CHWs to ... health and address certain historical challenges these programs have faced (Kangovi et al., 2018, 2020; Vasan et al., 2020)....
At the bottom of page 48...
... Turnover, for example, has been a perennial challenge, so she and her colleagues developed hiring toolkits that allow programs to select trustworthy individuals with shared life experiences. IMPaCT produces ... and infrastructure that enables CHWs to have a person-centered work practice, where they can get to know people’s life stories and improve their lives. The program also provides compensation and supervision that is supportive and relies on supervisors who understand how to work ... CHWs. “All of these elements are critical, and, on a programmatic level, have allowed us to build out this program and replicate it across 20 different states,” said Kangovi. She noted that during the pandemic, co-designing with frontline...
In the middle of page 49...
... workers was critical to ensuring that they participated in health care decision making, design, and delivery....
In the middle of page 49...
... Kangovi identified standards and financing as the two components for successful scaling of these programs. Over the past year, she explained, her team has collaborated with the ... Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), the National Association of Community Health Workers, and other stakeholder organizations across the country to try to address the question, “What do community health workers need in order to do their best ... ?” After holding listening sessions with CHWs nationwide and reviewing the domestic and international literature, her team and colleagues at NCQA developed a white paper that identifies what organizations need to do to set CHWs up for success (NCQA and Penn Medicine, 2021). ...
In the middle of page 49...
... The key ingredients for success include providing training at all levels—not just a certification for CHWs but training for supervisors and program directors; providing fair compensation, supportive supervision, and manageable caseloads; and allowing CHWs to take a person-centered ... . These different domains, said Kangovi, could form the basis of national standards for CHW programs, serve as important guardrails for federal funding, and benefit CHWs....
At the bottom of page 49...
... Kangovi emphasized that CHWs are indispensable to addressing the root causes of poor health and health inequities. They can establish the relationships that need building to address social determinants; relieve workforce strain and reduce health ... spending; and, perhaps most importantly, improve health for people with serious illness and even prevent it from developing....
At the bottom of page 49...
... A significant challenge is that CHWs lack a systematic way to be paid for their services, relying instead on a patchwork of grants and pilot funding. Kangovi explained that her center has been pushing for broader Medicaid coverage of CHW services and ensuring that funding is aligned ... quality standards. “This will ensure that the work is high quality and that community health workers are not co-opted or over medicalized,” Kangovi explained. This policy initiative, she noted, has gained traction with ... Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and Congress. She noted that there are also efforts on the state and national levels to expand the CHW workforce....
In the middle of page 50...
... hiring and empowering those who have lived experience of that injustice is the best place to start....
In the middle of page 50...
... The discussion session, which Wang moderated, began with a conversation about wellness and the interventions that provide the greatest benefit to the health care workforce. Tucker responded that the sources of burnout are institutional and ... , including the lack of flexible work schedules, equitable compensation, ways to ensure that staff feel valued, and availability of compassionate leave time. Tucker referred to initiatives such as the Circle Up framework, staff debriefings, encouraging all staff to ... grace, and being flexible as the most effective approaches because they were immediate and personal actions. Larson pointed to the importance of nursing leadership training so that nurses can have an impact on job satisfaction and quality ...
In the middle of page 50...
... have a voice in the decisions that affect them is essential. Fowler agreed that taking steps without the whole organization’s support seemed trite and meaningless, which is why she involved frontline workers to create a compassionate leave policy for their organization. Also important, she added, is ... empathy and emotional intelligence among her organization’s managers and giving them the power to make exceptions for individuals to address wellness concerns....
At the bottom of page 50...
... Kangovi was asked about ways to support a diverse and inclusive community of health care workers. She replied that clinicians need to give up some degree of control and stop presuming that only people ... stems from thinking about health as a purely clinical matter. For Kangovi, moving the needle on health is less about hiring more people with thousands of hours of biomedical training and more about involving people with shared lived experience who have the empathy and flexibility to address a wide ... of challenges. Tucker noted that perhaps cultural suffering should be a fifth domain of suffering that the palliative care field addresses,25 and Kangovi agreed....
At the bottom of page 50...
... Kangovi then addressed the question of what physicians, nurses, and social workers can learn from CHWs. She explained that her program pairs...
At the bottom of page 50...
... 25 Palliative care addresses physical, psychological, social, and spiritual aspects of care. See https://www.nationalcoalitionhpc.org/ncp (accessed March 15, 2022)....
In the middle of page 51...
... five leaders or health system executives with five CHWs who meet in a combination of small groups and one-on-one sessions. This yearlong process, has a trajectory, said Kangovi. In the first group session, all 10 people share their life story, and the ... between the health care leaders’ stories and those of the CHWs are revealing. This process allows each individual to learn about the others on a human level, which opens the door to discussing ... matters on a more equal footing when the leaders shadow the CHWs and vice versa. At the end of the process, the groups work together on redesigning a specific aspect of the care system....
In the middle of page 51...
... workers to identify the competencies that every team member needs based on the organization’s core values. Teamwork, for example, is a core value, and according to frontline workers, it requires interpersonal skills combined with practical understanding. She noted that her organization has been on a ... of standardization to enhance its culture of safety, which served it well during the pandemic. In terms of cross-training, an example would be training nurses how to order medical equipment, something that does not require a license. ... commented that health care often handicaps itself by focusing on training instead of hiring people with the proper people skills....
At the bottom of page 51...
... communities; its use was not widespread in early 2020, noted Haiden Huskamp, the Henry J. Kaiser Professor of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School. Once the pandemic struck, inpatient visits declined significantly, and health care systems nationwide rapidly deployed telehealth capabilities. This ...
At the bottom of page 51...
... Steven Clauser, program director for health care delivery and disparities research at the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), opened his remarks by noting that at the time of the webinar, ...
In the middle of page 52...
... visits had plateaued, though at a level significantly higher than prior to the pandemic. In addition, telehealth growth has varied by specialty care, with endocrinology and neurology, for example, using it extensively but specialties ... as orthopedics, general surgery, and ophthalmology using it to a lesser extent. According to Clauser, during the early phases of the pandemic, approximately half of all telehealth visits were related to mental health concerns....
In the middle of page 52...
... Reimbursement and regulatory changes to eliminate barriers played a key role in enabling telehealth use to grow so quickly, said Clauser. These included changes such ... lifting site of service and licensure restrictions, adding new covered services, and expanding payment parity between telehealth and in-person visits. Clauser noted that CMS recently released its final physician fee schedule for 2022, and will continue enhanced reimbursement for ...
In the middle of page 52...
... Referring to Boulware’s presentation, Clauser pointed out that most of the disparities in health outcomes exacerbated by the pandemic appear to be the result of access rather than care issues. “One would think that telehealth, by reducing time and geographic barriers might ... effective research studies in this area.27 He added that about half of the PCORI-funded studies are using telehealth to address disparities in access and health-related outcomes. They are addressing diverse vulnerable populations, with more than half of them focusing on telehealth delivery in racial ...
At the bottom of page 52...
... Clauser explained that PCORI’s broad definition of telehealth includes web portals, mobile apps, remote monitoring, and text messaging, as well as the more traditional two-way video interaction between clinicians and patients. PCORI funded 24 studies intended ... to address the challenges of delivering care virtually during the pandemic. Nineteen of...
At the bottom of page 52...
... 27 See https://www.pcori.org/topics/telehealth and https://www.pcori.org/collection/telehealth-highlights-pcori-funded-studies-and-projects. Also see https://www.pcori.org/research-results/2020/comparing-telehealth-and-person-care-patients-chronic-conditions and https://www.pcori. ... /document/changes-telehealth-policy-delivery-and-outcomes-response-covid-19-landscape-review (accessed March 15, 2022)....
In the middle of page 53...
... five resulted from targeted funding announcements that solicited rapid comparative effectiveness studies. Twelve addressed addiction, mental health, and social isolation; eight examined management of chronic diseases using telehealth; five looked at emerging uses of telehealth for urgent pandemic- ... needs, such as infection control in nursing homes; and two focused on maternal health. (Some studies focused on more than one subject.)...
At the bottom of page 53...
... Clauser discussed a study that compares the impact of two different models of palliative care—one that moves largely to care provided virtually and another that maintains in-person visits—to determine whether they provide similar outcomes to patients (Chua et al., 2019). The investigators found ... video visits overcame certain challenges that typically occur with in-person palliative care, including those related to time, transportation, and patient privacy....
At the bottom of page 53...
... it was for clinicians to build rapport for difficult conversations by practicing the pace at which they conduct video visits, increasing the comfort and participation of family members, and providing technical support to the family and patients. Also important was being intentional and using what the ... manner,” which involved ensuring a proper setup for holding a virtual conversation, maintaining a conversational rhythm, responding to emotion, and concluding the visit appropriately (Chua et al., 2020). They also identified considerations that may require moving from a virtual to a phone visit, ...
At the bottom of page 53...
... that its efficacy as a care delivery mechanism depends on many factors. For example, technical issues can negatively affect the patient experience, and long-term adherence to telehealth modalities, such as remote monitoring and mobile health applications—known as mHealth—are consistently poor. ...
In the middle of page 54...
... Clauser pointed out that the lack of integration of the telehealth platform into electronic health records poses a barrier to clinical acceptance and thus access to specialty care. Moreover, the digital health divide, such as lack of access to broadband internet and eHealth literacy, constrains the ... of telehealth to improve access to care more broadly. Clauser noted that patient adherence to remote monitoring applications was found to be poor, and the amount of data that these generate can overload clinicians. In addition, clear protocols for managing clinical data are lacking....
In the middle of page 54...
... Clauser shared that telehealth strategies that hold promise for reducing disparities emphasize patient-centered design and ensure that the interface is engaging and meaningful to patients who experience disparities. Clauser added that it is also important to deliver a ... competent message that reflects the patient’s views and values. The human component can be key to the success of telehealth interventions for persons with serious illness experiencing disparities in care, ... , can help to reduce disparities. In addition, patients need to be assured that the information exchanged through technology is held to the same standards of confidentiality as an interaction that might occur in the doctor’s office....
At the bottom of page 54...
... Emphasizing that PCORI’s research on telehealth is still ongoing, and themes of these early results need additional validation, Clauser concluded on a positive note: “We are hopeful that this portfolio of studies will ... evidence to answer critical questions about which telehealth strategies work best for which populations with serious illness and under what circumstances.”...
At the bottom of page 54...
... Mayo Clinic’s Experience with Telehealth...
At the bottom of page 54...
... Jacob Strand, associate chair for palliative care at the Mayo Clinic, opened his remarks by noting that given his position within an academic health care system, ... has had a tremendous amount of resources to put into telehealth since the pandemic began. He thus cautioned that his experiences might not translate to less-resourced settings, though he was hopeful that they might at least ... runs has a large in-hospital consult service, an outpatient referral practice, embedded oncology clinics, primary palliative care inpatient service, and a regional hospice for approximately 200 patients under Mayo Clinic’s care in southeast Minnesota. Strand works with other leaders to coordinate ... standardize palliative care interventions across Mayo Clinic’s various care settings....
In the middle of page 55...
... Strand explained that during the pandemic, according to Mayo’s internal statistics, telehealth visits increased from less than 100 a year—mostly in a research setting—to 1,500 in ... , partly in response to patient preferences. Another factor driving this continued increase is Mayo Clinic’s strategy to grow its telehealth and virtual capacities rapidly at all of its sites and in all of its practices, with variations based on practice needs. One group is exploring ... medicine and complementary therapies delivered by telehealth care chaplains....
At the bottom of page 55...
... From a personal perspective, Strand said he appreciates being able to blend telehealth with in-person visits. He explained that telehealth gives him the ability to see patients in their ... , have them show him where they keep their medications, for example, and see how they function at home and who is there to support them. Many of his colleagues, including physicians, nurses, advance practice providers, and pharmacists, feel differently, ... they cannot connect meaningfully with their patients via video. Strand pointed out the divergence of opinion about the best use of telehealth in some of Mayo’s sites. Areas of disagreement include whether to use ... specialty palliative care. Questions also arise about whether hospice teams should use telehealth to care for patients in skilled nursing facilities and their families....
At the bottom of page 55...
... To illustrate these differing opinions about the role of telehealth in serious illness care, Strand recalled a patient with advanced lung cancer who did not want to come to the clinic to see her oncologist or the palliative care team managing her ... -related pain. She called when she noted some acute symptom changes, and the initial reaction of some of the outpatient palliative care team was that they could not do virtual care and wanted her to come to the ED. Others ... saw telehealth as a way to triage that visit. Conversations among team members reflected concerns about the role of telehealth in patient care and regulatory responsibilities and what conducting a virtual visit with her might mean for licensure, Strand said....
At the bottom of page 55...
... Strand explained that during the pandemic, some health care teams were using telehealth only to appropriately triage patients and provide resources to the ED, and they are continuing to operate in that manner. Others are continuing to use telehealth to interact with patients in ... , with one social worker working on an intervention to deliver guided imagery interventions for patients in the ICU suffering with significant dyspnea and anxiety. Some sites, said Strand, are focusing on outpatient care models,...
In the middle of page 56...
... In Strand’s view, “this quite varied response across even a unified system, using a unified telehealth platform and medical record, is in large part a reflection of both the variation of our palliative care practices and also the types of palliative care being ... in these sites and what each site is being asked to do by their local leadership.” Other considerations include ways to use telehealth technology to stretch limited ...
In the middle of page 56...
... In closing, Strand said he views telehealth as part of a broader portfolio of technological interventions that will continue to challenge those working in palliative ...
In the middle of page 56...
... Using Telehealth to Provide Palliative Care to People in Rural Areas...
At the bottom of page 56...
... that 96.4 percent of the state of Washington is rural, with some counties that are designated as frontier areas,28 which are among the most remote and least populated areas in the nation. Justis explained that when her office began its work in 2016, the goal was to assist rural health systems and ... in order to care for people with serious illness in their own communities, rather than transferring them to urban tertiary settings far from friends and family....
At the bottom of page 56...
... This project began by engaging communities to form a community-based team to collaborate on asset and gap analysis and create an action plan that included both medical and nonmedical supports for people with serious illness. This work, explained Justis, included ... and coaching on clinical skills and culture change. Her team started telehealth consults and eventually progressed to direct-to-patient clinical telemedicine. Justis...
At the bottom of page 56...
... 28 See https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/topics/frontier#:~:text=Frontier%20areas%20are%20the%20most,grocery%20stores%2C%20and%20other%20necessities (accessed March 15, 2022)....
In the middle of page 57...
... For primary palliative care, Justis’ team is focusing on building the skills and services in these rural communities. The hypothesis was that if her team used case consultation via telehealth, it could also provide secondary ...
At the bottom of page 57...
... Justis shared a key lesson learned from her team’s experience, notably the importance of having community-based team members structure and design the care that needs to be provided given that they are experts in the needs of their own communities. She explained that to be successful, ... consulting experts must affirm the skills they see, offer empathy for how difficult cases can be, and give the rural teams room to engage in dialog with the expert panel. Telehealth case consults began operating at two levels: improving clinical care ... a patient and engaging in generalizable education. Justis noted that rural health teams were already caring for complex patients and relished the assistance from telehealth consults. “Their knowledge and concern for these patients is remarkable and never fails to touch us all ...
At the bottom of page 57...
... referenced Clauser’s earlier remarks about the importance of assisting people with technology, particularly in areas with poor or limited broadband access. Justis explained that her program supported patients with hot spot tablets and team members made home visits to teach relevant skills. The ...
At the bottom of page 57...
... Other lessons learned included the importance of having both a nurse clinical coordinator and a technical coordinator. The clinical coordinator, said Justis, works with the various cohort teams to prepare them to present a case, which helps ... teams have confidence and refine how they are going to deliver the case. Training, she added, has focused heavily on communication skills and less so on symptom management, and the telehealth consultant provided the rural teams with the opportunity to observe interdisciplinary teamwork in ... . “We are fortunate to have a medical director for the project who is probably the most egalitarian, team-based individual I have met in my career, and he models that beautifully, along...
In the middle of page 58...
... with the other team members,” said Justis. She noted that her team works closely with the Washington State Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, and this collaboration has prompted that organization to begin exploring how to deliver services in other areas using ...
In the middle of page 58...
... sites jump faster from planning to testing and implementation of telemedicine palliative care visits. Rural health organizations are proceeding with expanded telemedicine as a prime mode for palliative care, and her office will continue providing the expert panel to guide and train rural health teams....
In the middle of page 58...
..., Justis explained that the public health emergency waivers for telehealth were important for rural areas because they enabled rural health clinics and federally qualified health centers to serve as both originating and distant sites for care. Also helpful for providing telehealth in rural ... was CMS’ relaxing Medicare location requirements, establishing payment parity for Medicare telemedicine visits, and allowing for voice-only visits, which is particularly important for areas with poor or no broadband access....
At the bottom of page 58...
... Huskamp opened the discussion session by asking the panelists to comment on the use of voice-only visits to care for people with serious illness and reimbursement for such visits going forward. Justis replied that it is critical to base the decision on patient preference. Strand and Clauser added ... voice-only consults could be useful for those who cannot use video technology. In addition, said Strand, it can be challenging technologically to deliver care via video with a team-based approach, while conference calls are simple to conduct....
At the bottom of page 58...
... amount of concern about overuse of telehealth, particularly for opioid management. “I think we have a technology that is going to add to the menu and have many, many good aspects, but it is not a savior for access. It could potentially even worsen disparities, because some folks do not want to use ... ,” he said. He worries that people who lack broadband access and only have prepaid phones will begin to feel marginalized because they cannot take advantage of these opportunities....
At the bottom of page 58...
... Regarding reimbursement, Strand said it is a critical issue if telehealth is to be sustainable. Clauser noted that prior to the pandemic, neither CMS nor private insurance paid for voice-only visits, making this unfamiliar ter-...
In the middle of page 59...
... ritory for insurance companies, health plans, clinical teams, and patients. He added that the research on this topic is emergent, and that even though CMS reluctantly agreed to continue funding voice-only visits for another year, he doubted that private insurance would allow that ...
In the middle of page 59...
... Huskamp noted that some have argued that the costs of delivering services via telehealth are lower than for in-person care and therefore telehealth should be reimbursed at a lower rate. Justis said that her cohort members have told her that it takes just as much time and ...
At the bottom of page 59...
... When asked about tools, websites, or programs that can help older persons and others who are technology challenged, similar to the services that Senior Planet and the AARP hotline provide, Justis said Northwest Telehealth has ...
At the bottom of page 59...
... Strand addressed a question about barriers to engaging in telehealth from the health care provider perspective, by noting that while most of the clinicians ... when needed to augment a visit. Justis pointed to the importance of having someone supporting the technology who can do so with a sense of warmth and without making people feel on the spot or ashamed. Clauser added that clinicians are right to be cautious given that specialty societies have not yet ... standards and guidance on what works and what does not, despite a developing evidence base. Missing, too, are the quality measures and approaches for measuring accountability for good telehealth interactions that exist for in-person clinical care....
In the middle of page 60...
... state is having success with a blended model in which a board-certified palliative care physician and an experienced person with a Ph.D. in social work and expertise in behavioral health and palliative care join a teleconference with a local team that ... physically with the patient. Strand added that as a palliative care clinician, the more he could collaborate with the clinicians who are primarily managing a patient, the more care he ...
In the middle of page 60...
.... He added that the performance of virtual care starts diminishing over time, suggesting a need for occasional in-person visits so the clinician and patient can reconnect. This area requires further study to determine the “dose effect” that can lead to a good hybrid model, particularly for ...
In the middle of page 60...
... One issue Strand sees is the need for guardrails to protect clinicians from being accessible all the time. Huskamp asked Strand if the demand for palliative care consults have increased as clinicians have seen the value of palliative care during the pandemic and, if so, if that is affecting ... his organization uses the palliative care team. Strand replied that demand has increased and his organization is now looking at the investments needed to fulfill it. Insufficient clinicians are trained in palliative care, and it would require ... investments to develop that workforce. His team is using artificial intelligence and machine learning to analyze patient-reported outcome data to figure out which patients could benefit most from a palliative care specialist versus a ...
At the bottom of page 60...
... meet the needs of rural communities. However, that workforce needs to recognize its limits in terms of determining which patients’ needs they can handle and whom they need to refer to palliative care specialists....
At the bottom of page 60...
... As a final question, Huskamp asked the panelists to identify one or two barriers to delivering serious illness care via telehealth. For Justis, broadband expansion in areas with low population density is critical to reducing disparities for those communities. Strand said that differences in state ...
In the middle of page 61...
... Wang concluded the webinar by observing that the speakers highlighted the need to prioritize the health care workforce and patient safety, the imperative to integrate equity into core health care structures, and the need to identify models of care and policies that will ... to optimal care delivery. Equipped with these and other lessons, the nation could better prepare for future pandemics. Wang closed the webinar on a hopeful note, pointing out that although the pandemic has brought many challenges for people with serious illness, ...
In the middle of page 61...
... Bowman opened the final webinar in the series by explaining that the first session would focus on public health communication and research translation. The second session would attempt to synthesize the many key messages that were raised throughout the webinar series, with the ...
In the middle of page 61...
... Public Health Communication and Research Translation...
At the bottom of page 61...
... The third and final webinar took on two main topics. The first session focused the challenge of public health communications during the pandemic in general and for specific populations, such as pediatric patients and racial and ethnic minority groups. In the second session, the panelists ... to synthesize the key themes and lessons learned into a call to action, for both policy makers and health care providers, for improving care for people of all ages and all stages of serious illness....
At the bottom of page 61...
... Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health,29 opened the webinar with a keynote address focused on the importance of public communication in a health crisis, the pitfalls of ...
In the middle of page 62...
... tion, and some of the challenges scientists, public health officials, and public health academics have in communicating effectively with the public. He also offered some ideas about how the scientific and public health ... better in the future. He began his remarks with the most basic question: Why communicate with the public at all? “Certainly, getting the science and evidence and policy right is central, but communicating with the public is always important, and particularly so in a health crisis,” emphasized ...
In the middle of page 62...
... fundamentally alter the way they live their lives, the way they see their loved ones, the way they engage in their work, and the way they engage with school,” said Jha. “This is hard stuff to ask people to do, and in general, under most circumstances, people will not say yes unless there is a ...
At the bottom of page 62...
... While getting mayors, governors, and presidents to make effective policies is a key step, implementation of and adherence to such policies requires explaining to the public what the underlying issues are and why they need to change their habits and behaviors. ... do so requires an extraordinary effort at public communication and training on the part of the expert communities. “I would argue that most of us in public health, most of us in science, and most physicians have ...
At the bottom of page 62...
... health in terms of scientific communication would be to get the science right, get the data right, figure out the evidence, synthesize the evidence, and then explain it to the people in a way that makes sense. His belief, in short, was that the facts, evidence, science, and data would alter the public�...
At the bottom of page 62...
... Acknowledging how naïve that sounds today, Jha noted that there is still some truth to this belief: facts and evidence do matter to people. However, a major lesson from the pandemic has been that for people to change what they do, it is not enough to give ... facts. “It is also about understanding and addressing things that they value and find meaningful, and that requires an understanding of a variety of things that we in public...
In the middle of page 63...
... health and in science have largely not been trained in,” said Jha. Going on television or participating in town halls and regurgitating evidence is not going to alter public behavior. “We have to understand the fears that people have, the anxiety people feel, and we ... to understand what is going to motivate people to do things that are going to be in their own best interests and their own best health,” he added....
In the middle of page 63...
..., behavioral scientists have identified effective approaches to encourage people to change their behavior. Unfortunately, most people in public health and science communication have not learned those skills, which led to problems during the pandemic. Jha pointed out that widespread misinformation and ... is not uncommon during a pandemic. “Anti-vaxxers,” he noted, have been around as long as vaccinations have, going back to the days of smallpox when groups pushed back against ... anti-mask movement, making exactly the same nonsensical arguments then that today’s anti-maskers raise about how masks cause their own infections and pose a health danger by retaining carbon dioxide....
At the bottom of page 63...
... Jha further explained that misinformation thrives in situations of high levels of uncertainty and an information vacuum. Those who peddle misinformation have become very adept at identifying those moments and offering up information and ideas that ... right, even if they are not. “That, by the way, is a truism throughout all of history,” said Jha. “That is not a phenomenon of the COVID-19 pandemic or the twenty-first century.” Pointing to the echo chambers in which everyone lives as an example of a twenty-first-century phenomenon, Jha ... disseminated creates self-perpetuating, self-enforcing information echo chambers where one bad idea can take hold, get amplified by multiple actors, and then become “gospel truth,” explained Jha....
At the bottom of page 63...
... that the only way to address these sources of disinformation is to tackle them on the platforms they use. “This is a responsibility of Facebook and Twitter and Google to deplatform these folks, because there is no engaging them,” he said. “This is asymmetric warfare that requires a very ...
At the bottom of page 63...
... It is impossible to counter all the disinformation, but the scientific and public health expert community could take certain steps to be more...
In the middle of page 64...
... effective in the information ecosystem, explained Jha. This requires understanding how scientists, physicians, and public health officials struggle with science communication. Jha shared that when he was trained as a scientist to write or talk about his work, for ... , he learned to discuss the limitations of his research, uncertainty in the findings, and exceptions that might make his findings null or not fully applicable. “This is how science works, and it is a good thing for the scientific process,...
At the bottom of page 64...
... is a process. When experts say, “follow the science,” they do not mean follow a finding that will be true forever but rather follow the process and see where that leads. The scientific community needs to make the public understand that they know certain things at a given moment and learn more ... time but without overemphasizing all the uncertainties and unknowns. “My general approach on this has been to recommend that we talk about what we do know and then provide judgment about the areas where ...
At the bottom of page 64...
... as well. “I think there is a way to communicate that gives people a judgment about what is likely to be the case without overstating what you do and do not know,” he said. It is through that process that he believes the expert community can begin to train people to understand the scientific ... . “I think that is actually absolutely critical and is something we have not done enough of,” added Jha....
At the bottom of page 64...
... One part of public communication is talking about uncertainty in ways that are more helpful and less nihilistic and explaining the process of scientific learning and discovery. Another important piece, which many people in the science world find uncomfortable, is ...
In the middle of page 65...
... experience. Jha shared that one of the more effective tools he uses for important questions is to start his answer with his own personal decision and then explains why he made it based on the evidence. Taking this approach, said Jha, helps people feel more in touch with the data and enables them to ...
In the middle of page 65...
... Jha, is explaining what evidence is needed to address that uncertainty. For example, people ask if they will need another booster in 6 or 12 months, and the short answer is “we do not know.” However, the better answer would be “we do not know because we have not had enough experience yet, but ... are studies going on that are tracking people who have received boosters to look for waning immunity, and those studies will provide answers in 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months.” That second answer provides a sense of when that uncertainty will lift, ... information, and a framework for understanding what is happening. “It also makes them far less susceptible to misinformation than when someone shows up and says, ‘I know the answer today,’...
At the bottom of page 65...
... In closing, Jha reiterated that effective public communication of science information is central to combating both misinformation and disinformation, both of which thrive in information vacuums. “When we get outside of the scientific community, when we begin to engage with the ... , it is absolutely critical to help Americans understand the scientific process, communicate both uncertainty and certainty, communicate judgment, personalize it whenever that feels appropriate so people know that this is not generic advice but is advice you ... take yourself.” Jha explained that the scientific and public health community can “really build the trust and confidence that people need to fundamentally change their behaviors, because that is what we are asking people to do. We are asking people to do ... they would never do before under normal circumstances, and that fundamentally requires trust,” concluded Jha....
At the bottom of page 65...
... director in the department of nursing science and research integrity officer at the Children’s National Hospital and professor of pediatrics in the School of Medicine and Health Sciences at George Washington University, asked Jha to comment on a situation in which he regrets a personal decision related ...
In the middle of page 66...
... 6 months ago, his response based on the evidence would have been that it was not. When the evidence changed, however, he had to acknowledge that it and the recommendation changed. He said that it is important to remind people that this is how they want their physicians to practice medicine in ...
In the middle of page 66...
... Jha shared that sometimes, however, he honestly gets things wrong. “There is a barrage of information, and I have found that people generally do not penalize you for getting things wrong,” said Jha. “They penalize you when you are not willing to own up ... it, whether it is on social media, Twitter, or television.” The key is to be open and acknowledge the error, just as a researcher would do if they found an error in a submitted paper. This builds long-term credibility....
At the bottom of page 66...
... communication changes when dealing with those who are involved with misinformation or disinformation. Jha replied that the first step is to understand what motivates people to create and spread misinformation or disinformation, and those motives differ. Disinformation is well planned and organized, ... by foreign actors, and that requires a very specific set of interventions that go beyond what he is able to do, which is why he talks about the things that Facebook, ... , YouTube, and other information outlets have to manage....
At the bottom of page 66...
... have a tonic they are peddling as a cure for COVID-19. The second, larger group includes people who believe misinformation based on what they hear, and the key to dealing with those individuals is to understand why certain types of information are accepted without question by certain groups of people....
At the bottom of page 66...
... the exact situation at the time of this webinar, when the Omicron variant was first identified in South Africa, creating a great deal of uncertainty and anxiety with minimal information available. “If all the scientists said, look, we do not know anything and we are not going to talk about it until ... know more—call us back in 2 weeks—that would not work for two reasons,” said Jha. “People feel anxious now, and if you do not fill the information gap, there will be plenty of people with far less knowledge who will be happy to step in and spread misinformation....
In the middle of page 67...
... The best way to counter misinformation, according to Jha, is with good information, which requires everyone in the science, medical, and public health communities to take a role in spreading it. This does not necessarily mean going on television; town halls and local meetings can also ...
In the middle of page 67...
... Lived Experience...
At the bottom of page 67...
... Daniela Lamas, an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School and associate faculty at Ariadne Labs, provided an overview of what it was like in her hospital during the early days of the pandemic. Arriving at ...
At the bottom of page 67...
... tried to tell her something, but she had a hard time hearing through their masks. One of her COVID-19 patients had taken a turn for the worse, and staff decided to allow his wife to visit. Lamas explained that it had been weeks since the woman had seen him. Lamas was worried because she had ... reassuring words every day and knew that a visit would destroy that false picture of stability....
At the bottom of page 67...
... The patient’s wife told Lamas that she had been reading and wondered if her husband could get convalescent plasma. Lamas took out her patient list, wrote “palliative care” next to his name, and told his wife that the palliative ... , not related to COVID-19. That patient was able to go to the regular ICU, but it was a reminder that other health crises continued during the pandemic. Lamas observed that in the early days of the pandemic,...
In the middle of page 68...
... during rounds for anything more than practical questions, such as when to intubate, when to use high-flow oxygen despite the risks to the patient, and whether it was irresponsible or humane to try to sneak in an extra family member overnight....
In the middle of page 68...
... Today, said Lamas, different questions have begun to emerge, such as what went well and what did not. “As we all move toward some sort of new normal and try and grasp at post-traumatic growth to make meaning of the past 18 months, what ...
At the bottom of page 68...
... Before the pandemic, the ICU was a place where families observed procedures and sometimes even resuscitation attempts, in large part because staff had come to recognize that families were not just visitors but essential members ... the care team. But once the pandemic hit, family members were gone, Lamas explained....
At the bottom of page 68...
... Though the threat from the virus has changed, family members are not coming back in large numbers, and Lamas wonders what lessons can be derived from their absence. Though the studies on this are starting to appear, Lamas said that without families, ... hospital is quiet, and she and the rest of the ICU staff struggle to know their patients as more than a list of diagnoses. She also believes that staff is missing subtle and ... if a family member had been at the bedside. For families, she wonders if she can forge the trust in a phone call that once was built over hours and days at the bedside....
At the bottom of page 68...
... we deliver,” said Lamas, who hopes that this will not be a forgotten lesson. A similar lesson is the importance of preparing an advance directive and a medical power of attorney or health care proxy, regardless of how young or healthy an individual is. She noted that she had many conversations with ... care proxies she had never met in person and yet who had to trust her even when she was not sure she could trust herself. Echoing earlier speakers, such as Fineberg and Jha, Lamas noted that “ ... uncertainty and gaining trust despite uncertainty became key in this pandemic… There was so much fear, fear of the virus...
In the middle of page 69...
... but also fear on the part of families of interventions being withheld, fear of the scarcity of equipment, and fear that we were giving inaccurate information. And as for us, the physicians and nurses, the fear was that we were not giving the best possible ...
At the bottom of page 69...
... Lamas noted that, in the early days of the pandemic, those fears led her to reflect on what she did not yet know about delivering the best care during a pandemic and on what she and her team did ... about the components of high-quality critical care. “We know about waking patients up every day, minimizing sedation, meticulously monitoring labs and ventilator settings, but in the early months of the pandemic, we let fear take hold and set our protocols aside,” she said. She accepts that this ... understandable but acknowledged it as an error. “When faced with serious illness and with fear and misinformation, we must make sure that no matter what else is going on, we do not lose sight of life-saving fundamentals that we do know,” she ...
At the bottom of page 69...
... Lamas observed that for those who survived the virus, the pandemic taught them a final lesson: surviving serious illness is not the same as recovering. In critical care, the focus has been on mortality, with ... paying less attention to quality of life. That focus has produced new diagnoses, such as post-intensive care syndrome, and an understanding about a growing population of people with long-term dependence on a ventilator or other life support technologies. Public understanding is growing ... mortality is not the only outcome that matters, and she and her colleagues in ICUs must shift their conversations to account for that change. “The broader system must ensure that there are ongoing ...
At the bottom of page 69...
... As a concluding thought, Lamas said that the pandemic tested the system’s ability to care for seriously ill patients in a way that no other public health care in her lifetime has. “It showed us ... truths about the fault lines in our country’s belief in science and medicine, showed us that fact can be politicized,” said Lamas. “But that was not its only impact,” she continued, “for it also broke down the ... between our patients and ourselves, forcing us to realize that anyone at any time could become seriously ill, and forcing us to see the extent to which we are all truly interconnected.” Lamas concluded that her hope is that the health care community will take ... the critical lessons learned during the pandemic and use them to improve care....
In the middle of page 70...
... at Children’s National Hospital and professor of pediatrics and microbiology, immunology, and tropical medicine at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, began her remarks by describing how the initial reports during the early stages of the pandemic suggested that COVID-...
In the middle of page 70...
... That all changed, however, when the pandemic hit the U.S. East Coast. DeBiaisi and her colleagues began seeing a significant number of infections and hospitalizations of critically ill children, along with the emergence of an inflammatory disorder affecting children. Almost immediately, the ... Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association, which has over 40 hospitals that care for children exclusively, began compiling state-level data. At the time ...
At the bottom of page 70...
... DeBiasi further explained that she and her colleagues at Children’s National Hospital had seen over 4,000 symptomatic children, with over 800 who required hospitalization. One-third of ... hospitalized were critically ill and spent time in the pediatric or neonatal ICU. Just as staff had figured out how to care for these children, a new disease emerged that is unique to ...
At the bottom of page 70...
... DeBiasi described how she realized early on that she and her colleagues had to educate the public about their experience with pediatric patients, to encourage parents to look for the signs of severe illness ... prepare hospitals for the potential influx of pediatric patients with unique needs. DeBiasi explained that as the pandemic hit parts of the country in waves, the pediatric community was able to widely share its knowledge internally. She noted that researchers at her ... , for example, were the first to report and confirm that the racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities seen in adults also occur in children (Goyal et al., 2020)....
At the bottom of page 70...
... When the first reports of MIS-C came out of the United Kingdom, DeBiasi and her colleagues were on the phone and in conference calls to...
In the middle of page 71...
... Coast started seeing nearly identical cases. “We are so thankful to them for raising this awareness because we were able to recognize these cases and start optimizing the care of the children, which has dramatically reduced the number of deaths from this really devastating disease,” she said. She ... her colleagues recently published a compendium not only looking at the epidemiologic and socioeconomic factors in these children but also defining different ways that they can present (DeBiasi, 2021; DeBiasi et al., 2021). Given that all ...
In the middle of page 71...
... DeBiasi observed that at the time of the webinar, the United States had seen over 5,500 cases of MIS-C and 48 deaths, with Black/African American and Hispanic/Latinx children accounting for 46 and 35 percent of cases, respectively. She and her colleagues are following her institution’s initial ... of MIS-C patients to identify any long-term effects. In the meantime, CDC has created informational materials that pediatricians and family practitioners can use to alert parents about the early signs of MIS-C....
At the bottom of page 71...
... Misinformation about vaccines is significantly amplified in the context of caring for children, DeBiaisi pointed out. On the one hand, she explained, pediatricians and public health officials are telling parents that children have only a 4 percent chance of being hospitalized and an ... lower chance of death, while on the other hand, parents are hearing about myocarditis arising from one of the vaccines. In fact, she said, in her institution’s 5- to 11-year-old age group, ... 10,000 have been hospitalized and 100 have died, so children are at risk. “Even though 4 percent is a low number, when we look at the total amount of infections that occur in this ...
At the bottom of page 71...
... unknown etiology that primarily affects children younger than 5 years of age. The disease was first described in Japan by Tomisaku Kawasaki in 1967, and the first cases outside of Japan were reported in Hawaii in 1976. Clinical signs include fever, rash, swelling of the hands and feet, irritation and ... of the whites of the eyes, swollen lymph glands in the neck, and irritation and inflammation of the mouth, lips, and throat” (CDC, 2020). See https://www.cdc.gov/kawasaki/about.html#:~:text=Kawasaki%20disease%20(KD)%2C%20also,reported%20in%20Hawaii%20in%201976 (...
In the middle of page 72...
... noted that while there have been cases of long COVID among children, it is not clear whether it has the same impact as it does on adults. DeBiasi and her colleagues, together with researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, have embarked on a 3-year study to track the ... COVID in children.33 The research team will conduct extensive patient evaluations, including pulmonary, cardiac, neurodevelopmental, quality-of-life, and mental health assessments; develop a biorepository; and examine a variety of scientific research questions about host genetics, T cell responses, and ...
In the middle of page 72...
... DeBiasi pointed out that COVID’s impact on children and families extends beyond its direct effects. The secondary challenges include housing instability, which will grow worse as eviction bans expire; ... child care demands as parents return to in-person work; food insecurity; behavioral health issues resulting from the dramatic increases in pediatric depression, ... , and eating disorders; and the increase in obesity and type 2 diabetes as children become more sedentary. DeBiasi also noted that loss of learning is a particular problem among Black and Brown students ... have been affected disproportionately by the move to virtual instruction during the pandemic....
In the middle of page 72...
... National Institutes of Health’s Efforts to Reduce COVID-19 Health Disparities and Distrust...
In the middle of page 72...
... Monica Webb Hooper, deputy director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Minority Health and Health Dispari-...
At the bottom of page 72...
... COVID-19 vaccine, representing 20 percent of 5–11 year olds. See https://www.aap.org/en/pages/2019-novel-coronavirus-covid-19-infections/children-and-covid-19-vaccination-trends (accessed March 8, 2022)....
At the bottom of page 72...
... 33 See https://childrensnational.org/news-and-events/childrens-newsroom/2021/cnh-and-niaid-launch-large-study-on-long-term-impacts-of-covid-19-and-mis-c-on-kids (accessed March 8, 2022)....
In the middle of page 73...
...), opened her remarks by explaining that health disparities are a particular type of health difference that is closely linked with social, economic, and/or environmental disadvantage. They adversely affect groups of people who have systematically experienced greater obstacles to health based on their ... is the causative agent. “Importantly, in contrast to general population differences, health disparities are differences that should not exist and that are modifiable, which means that we have the opportunity for change,” said Webb Hooper....
At the bottom of page 73...
... Referring to Boulware’s presentation in the first webinar, Webb Hooper explained that most health conditions have considerable racial and ethnic disparities, including shorter overall life expectancy; higher rates of cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, infant mortality, stroke, ... impairment, asthma, sexually transmitted infections, and dental diseases; and differences in the prevalence and outcomes of mental illness. Webb Hooper noted that she and two of her colleagues published an editorial on racial and ethnic COVID-19 disparities ... made the point that the pandemic has served to shine a light on health disparities, creating an opportunity to address the root causes of underlying inequity by using culturally ... and community-competent strategies (Webb Hooper et al., 2020). These strategies must consider the nuances of populations, communities, families, and individual differences, all of which have a vital role in reducing health disparities by promoting health equity and improving population health....
At the bottom of page 73...
... Webb Hooper observed that early in the pandemic, scientists, physicians, and health officials often noted medical comorbidities as the cause of disparities, and racial and ethnic minority populations have a disproportionate ... of underlying comorbidities. Webb Hooper emphasized, “Race is a sociocultural construct, not a biological or genetic one, and race is important to study because it shapes the lived experiences of all groups. It is important, then, that we consider the full context, which ... systemic factors, such as historical and ongoing discrimination, chronic stress and its effects on immunologic functioning and health, and others.”...
At the bottom of page 73...
... A key point, she continued, is that disparities in COVID-19 are not occurring because racial and ethnic minority groups are inherently more susceptible to the virus. Rather, they result from social inequities that have...
In the middle of page 74...
... given rise to higher rates of preexisting conditions, such as heart disease, diabetes, and HIV. This points to structural issues rather than inherent biological or genetic underpinnings. Webb Hooper identified trust as an underappreciated ...
In the middle of page 74...
... then focused on the work of the Community Engagement Alliance (CEAL) Against COVID-19 Disparities.34 This NIH-wide initiative is focused on outreach and engagement efforts to address distrust, particularly among racial and ethnic minority groups disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. CEAL’s ... priority was to address disparities and diversity in clinical research trials, particularly the COVID-19 trials that launched in summer 2020. A lack of diversity is a perennial issue; as an ...
In the middle of page 74...
... Webb Hooper explained that one issue she and her colleagues have focused on since the beginning of the pandemic is how to increase trust in biomedical science and health care. “We do know that expertise from multisector stakeholders, including those from ... communities, is important,” she said. “We need individuals who can deliver the right messages, and community groups and other experts are among the right messengers to help build trust.” Those stakeholders, she added, also have important insights about the members of ... communities. Webb Hooper described a number of approaches to effectively increase trust and participation in clinical trials, such as diversifying the care team, setting a priori targets for recruitment, developing a multifaceted recruitment ... , engaging the community in a bidirectional manner, and establishing trust as the foundation. Additional approaches include addressing the social and structural determinants of health, acknowledging the long-standing, and earned, distrust of medical institutions and biomedical research, and ...
In the middle of page 75...
... diversity.35 NIH leadership and subject matter experts provided guidance about the aforementioned strategies. Moderna’s team made some adjustments, explained Webb Hooper, and ... and ethnic minority inclusion improved over time. At the trial’s conclusion, the proportion of racial and ethnic minority individuals was significantly higher than most industry-led clinical trials, with Black and African American and Hispanic/Latinx ... accounting for 10 and 20 percent of participants, respectively. Webb Hooper noted that Moderna acknowledged the role of NIH and CEAL in increasing the diversity of the trial’s participants....
In the middle of page 75...
... in activities across its 23 locations nationwide to establish partnerships with communities, address misinformation, increase trust in science, and accelerate uptake of beneficial interventions, including vaccines. All of these efforts focus on tackling the disproportionate burden of COVID-19 on ... and ethnic minority populations. Webb Hooper noted that CEAL’s website contains a repository of valuable information to help combat what she referred ... as the “COVID-19 infodemic.” The materials are available in multiple formats and in Spanish, and may be customized for local or community contexts....
In the middle of page 75...
... Webb Hooper emphasized that researchers need to recognize that racial and ethnic minority groups, in general, are just as willing to participate in clinical trials, which several well-conducted trials demonstrate. In fact, ... the case. “It is important to dismiss the notion that these groups are just not interested in participating or are just hard to reach,” she said, and to identify the best approaches for reaching marginalized communities. “Maybe we just have not done enough, in terms of the health care system and ... , to ease the minds of populations around research and to address the institutional distrust that exists,” she concluded....
At the bottom of page 75...
... To open the discussion session, Hinds asked Webb Hooper how she can talk about a tragic experience, such as the pandemic, and still think about it in terms of opportunities. Webb Hooper replied that because the pandemic...
At the bottom of page 75...
.../news/2021/researchers-take-cues-past-ensure-diversity-covid-19-clinical-trials (accessed March 15, 2022). Also see https://www.kff.org/racial-equity-and-health-policy/issue-brief/racial-diversity-within-covid-19-vaccine-clinical-trials-key-questions-and-answers (accessed March 15, 2022)....
In the middle of page 76...
... has laid bare the inequities in the health care system and the disconnect between public health, science, and medicine, she and her colleagues at NIMHD are seeing an unprecedented level of national attention to and discourse about disparities. This attention creates an ... to inform, educate, and think about ways to address these inequities....
At the bottom of page 76...
... Hinds then asked DeBiasi how she provides information about COVID-19’s effects on children without creating panic. DeBiasi explained that in the pandemic’s initial phases, the public was aware of the severe impact of COVID-19 on adults, and as soon as people heard it was not a serious concern for ... , an out-of-sight, out-of-mind attitude developed and parents stopped thinking about it as a threat to their children. When children began becoming seriously ill, however, the media focused on the most ... cases. Parents were confused by conflicting messages. DeBiasi pointed out that her approach was to provide accurate, up-to-date information and then empower parents, telling them they know their children better than anyone else does. If their child looks seriously ill to them, get them to ... , but do not rush to the ED every time their child looks sick. If their child looks fine but has a runny nose and a cough, they should not worry because this is typical of the overwhelming majority of children with COVID-19. Referring to an earlier comment by Jha, ... about something that happened in her own family. “It really does help people to see that we are navigating the same information in our own families and with our own kids,” said DeBiasi....
At the bottom of page 76...
... belief system has grounds to trust someone just because they are a physician. She recounted how serving on the DC Vaccine Advisory Committee for Safe and Equitable Access, where she was the only physician and scientist, helped her learn from the other 25 members to build trust with different groups of ...
At the bottom of page 76...
... Webb Hooper added that trust is an underappreciated social determinant of health. Trust, she said, is a complicated cognitive, behavioral, and emotional construct, and once damaged or broken, it is hard to win back. “I think the pandemic put us in a situation where because we had...
In the middle of page 77...
... not addressed long-standing distrust of a number of populations, we are now in a crisis, and we want automatic trust, and that is just not how trust works,” said Webb Hooper. She said that it is important to work consistently to earn trust by providing evidence-based ... and not assuming people will believe it because it is from a scientist or physician. Rather, there has to be a dialog to understand the sources of their concerns, affirm and acknowledge what has happened previously, and convey why this time might be different. Perhaps most ... , attitudinal change and building trust take time....
At the bottom of page 77...
... Lamas referred to the more rapid nature of trust building that has to happen in the ICU and pointed out that dealing with patient and family uncertainty is key. The willingness to acknowledge that sometimes cases are worse than expected and other times outcomes are better than ... challenge is that trust building often has to happen quickly because a decision needs to be made on the spot. Lamas shared that during the pandemic, she and her colleagues worked hard to gradually build trust with family members. However, often, that carefully developed trust eroded over time ...
At the bottom of page 77...
... to survive; the family wanted Lamas to give their mother a medicinal supplement that they had spent a great deal of money on but that the Food and Drug Administration had identified as not effective for COVID-19. She and her team had a great deal of back-and-forth about whether to acquiesce to ... demand. Ultimately, they decided to do so, essentially treating the family but providing no benefit to the patient. “This was an interesting moment of how ... you build trust with people, and what does it mean if building trust means doing something that you do not actually think is useful for your patient,” said Lamas....
At the bottom of page 77...
... for building trust turned out in hindsight not to be the best approach, particularly since information has been changing so rapidly during the pandemic. “If the trust level is low and you give people information, they try to take that in, and then the information continues to change, it does ... bode well for trust building,” she said. “That requires a much more nuanced approach to addressing trust than I think we took early on in the pandemic.”...
In the middle of page 78...
... about the need to provide more information about effective treatments, such as antibody infusion. DeBiasi replied that the balance between treatment and prevention is difficult to achieve. “Most of us believe that it would be more useful and more achievable to have people vaccinated and prevent ... once they are infected,” said DeBiasi. However, she added, “there is still going to be a subset of people who do not want to be vaccinated, and should we then deny them access to monoclonal antibodies if they get really sick? That is an ethical question.”...
In the middle of page 78...
... Lamas agreed that it is prudent for the main conversation to be about being vaccinated, and there is a tension about how much to talk about treatments that people are relying on in lieu of being vaccinated. However, people have many reasons ...
In the middle of page 78...
... Another audience member asked the panel to comment on ethnic and racial underrepresentation in international clinical trials. Webb Hooper responded that one reason is that the distribution of race and ethnicity and ... the concerns about it are different in many countries. For example, in countries such as France it is illegal to ask about race and ethnicity. Webb Hooper noted that the focus on, and categorizations of people by, race and ethnicity differs greatly compared with the United States. ... often focus on socioeconomic disadvantage rather than race or ethnicity, yet it remains necessary to strive for a match between trial representation and the burden of disease on specific subpopulations....
At the bottom of page 78...
... DeBiasi agreed and noted that in the trial she is conducting, her team is working to capture the patients whom COVID-19 and MIS-C are affecting the most. She explained that 85 percent of the patients in her institution are either Black/African American or Hispanic/Latinx, ... populations is critical. While this may require more effort—recruiting a patient whose family only speaks Spanish, for example, requires more time and personnel than recruiting a child from a Black/African American family—it is important to dedicate the resources to achieve the proper population ...
At the bottom of page 78...
... Building on Lessons Learned to Guide Future Policy...
At the bottom of page 78...
... To open the final session, Jon Broyles, executive director of the Coalition to Transform Advanced Care and session moderator, posed a series...
In the middle of page 79...
... What will it take to implement the new Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) refresh strategy as an accelerator for value-based payment models for serious illness care?...
In the middle of page 79...
... How do we ensure health equity as part of the future of care models and payment models?...
In the middle of page 79...
... What are some important trends that we should all be aware of that are going to impact policy moving forward from the pandemic, such as the growing presence of private equity in health care delivery and in this space in particular of serious illness?...
In the middle of page 79...
... How will we track the trend of burnout among many frontline workers?...
At the bottom of page 79...
... The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation’s Strategy Refresh...
At the bottom of page 79...
... by explaining that the statute that created the Innovation Center explicitly provides CMS with the authority through CMMI to test innovative payment and service delivery models. The goal of developing and testing these models is to preserve or enhance the quality of care for Medicare, Medicaid, and ... ��s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) beneficiaries. She specified that the models are designed to achieve one of three conditions: (1) quality improves and costs remain neutral, (2) quality remains neutral and costs are reduced, or (3) quality improves and costs are reduced. If a model achieves one of ... outcomes, the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) can expand its duration and scope through rulemaking....
At the bottom of page 79...
... had accomplished over the previous decade, which included launching over 50 models, 30 of which are still operating and a handful of which have been expanded. The team also looked to other experts across HHS and CMS and to external experts and leaders in health...
In the middle of page 80...
... policy and health care delivery to inform the refresh strategy, which it outlined in August 2021 (Brooks-LaSure et al., 2021; CMMI, 2021)....
In the middle of page 80...
... The purpose of the strategy, said Rawal, is to plot a path forward for CMMI, increase momentum toward value-based care, and reignite some of that sense of forward movement that staff felt in 2010 when CMMI first began its work. “I think there has been a little bit of a ... down of that momentum, and maybe some not so clear signals to providers and beneficiaries about where we are headed,” said Rawal....
In the middle of page 80...
... Other goals for the refresh strategy include taking the lessons learned over the previous 10 years to streamline and harmonize CMMI’s portfolio of models and to renew its vision to achieve equitable outcomes through high-quality, affordable, person-centered care. ... CMMI has organized the strategy around five objectives: drive accountable care, advance health equity, support innovation, address affordability, and partner to achieve system transformation....
At the bottom of page 80...
... objective encompasses CMMI’s goal of increasing the number of people in relationships with providers who are accountable for patients’ costs and, most importantly, for improving care quality. Achieving this goal, explained Rawal, requires increasing beneficiary access to both advanced primary ... and accountable care models that are equipped to coordinate the care of beneficiaries and integrate with specialty care. Accomplishing this task will ensure that the health care system is meeting the full range of patient needs....
At the bottom of page 80...
... addressing equity up front,” emphasized Rawal. Among the strategies CMMI will employ is embedding health equity in every aspect of the models and addressing barriers to participation in the models for those providers who care for underserved or rural populations, practice in health professional ... areas, or practice in medically underserved areas.37 As part of this effort, Rawal and her colleagues are committed to engaging a broader range of provider types, such as safety net providers, federally qualified health centers, and ...
In the middle of page 81...
... have more providers and different types of providers in our models,” she said....
In the middle of page 81...
... objective, supporting innovation, Rawal knows that CMMI can do more to support innovative care delivery approaches, which will include actionable and practice-specific data, technology, dissemination of best practices, peer-to-peer learning collaboratives, and payment and other regulatory ... . Rawal pointed out that these are tools to support providers but also mechanisms for achieving the goals of better care and better outcomes for beneficiaries....
In the middle of page 81...
... Regarding the fourth objective, addressing affordability, Rawal noted that CMMI has to be aware of the impact of a model on Medicare and Medicaid spending. In addition to reducing or stabilizing spending, these models can sometimes lower patient out-of-pocket costs, which is important ... beneficiaries and their families. This is a priority across CMS, Rawal pointed out, so her team will be looking at strategies in the context of the models to target ... care prices and affordability and to reduce unnecessary or duplicative care that can increase costs....
At the bottom of page 81...
... The fifth objective is furthering the reach of transformation. Rawal explained that “we want to align priorities and policies across CMS to achieve our vision, so we are working closely with our CMS colleagues, as well as with experts, beneficiaries, patient groups, ... , providers, and purchasers to achieve our vision… We know that it going to take not only a shared vision but shared commitment and action to move forward.”...
At the bottom of page 81...
... in how it operates. This will begin with strengthening its communications with stakeholders. The first step will be to engage with beneficiaries and advocates to integrate the patient perspective across the life cycle of the models, including during the conceptualization and development stages. ... also wants to gain a clearer understanding of the barriers and facilitators to participation. This will require talking to model participants and finding those that dropped out or were unable to join. “If we want to reach our goals for accountable care and advancing health equity, we are ... to need to understand and address the barriers so that more folks can cross that threshold into value-based payment and then be able to sustain their participation once they are in,” said Rawal....
At the bottom of page 81...
... At the first of a long-term series of listening sessions her team held (a general session), over 1,200 participants and 15 members of the public spoke and provided comments. Rawal noted that her team is looking for additional opportunities to solicit input from experts ...
In the middle of page 82...
... The second change CMMI is making is to generate and evaluate learnings from the models more dynamically, using its internal evaluation group and engaging outside experts to evaluate findings. Its data teams are piloting efforts to share research-identifiable files via the CMS Data Research ...
In the middle of page 82...
... Rawal said that CMMI’s “north star” would continue to be testing successful models to reduce program costs and improve quality and outcomes for Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP beneficiaries. It also wants to review the effects that other models are having even if they do not meet ...
In the middle of page 82...
... how the models are affecting beneficiaries and families in terms of their patient or caregiver experiences, the quality-of-care transition, and access to home- and community-based care;...
In the middle of page 82...
... how the models are affecting providers in terms of their ability to move down the transformation pathway;...
In the middle of page 82...
... whether the models are giving providers more timely and actionable data that inform care delivery; and...
At the bottom of page 82...
... whether the models have new tools or use tools differently to facilitate clinical transformation and care integration....
At the bottom of page 82...
... In addition, Rawal and her staff will be examining how the models affect health care markets, whether they are creating new linkages or relationships between providers, if ... are affecting consolidation, and if successful elements of the models are spreading to other payers. “We want to define our success more broadly and think more deliberately on the front end about the potential for models to have these provider and system impacts,” said Rawal in closing....
At the bottom of page 82...
... Investing in Quality, Workforce, and Payment Models for Care of People with Serious Illness...
At the bottom of page 82...
... Joe Rotella, chief medical officer of the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM), began with an observation about how the pandemic has shown how quickly innovation can happen, as evidenced...
In the middle of page 83...
... by the earlier presentations. He also referred to the significant challenges, such as workforce shortages, that the pandemic exacerbated and the dramatic intensification of clinician distress....
In the middle of page 83...
... Using these observations as a launch pad, Rotella turned to the subject of the value imperative in health care and the role of serious illness care. The simplest definition of value, Rotella explained, is quality divided by cost, where quality comprises better ... and better experience of care. The need to focus on value and quality arises because the United States ranks last among 11 high-income nations in health care outcome and first in health care spending (Schneider ... do not see value associated with high spending.” Serious illness is part of the problem, he added, given that it is associated with poor outcomes and high costs. While numerous studies have demonstrated that palliative care improves outcomes and lowers costs, traditional fee-for-service mechanisms ...
In the middle of page 83...
... $500 a month, everyone with a serious illness would likely be using it today, given its proven benefits. Palliative care is a health care service, however, so it must prove that it not only improves quality of care but also can save money....
In the middle of page 83...
... with serious illness—has taken over the past decade or so. The first was implementing the hospice benefit in 1983. Hospice has remained the gold standard for end-of-life care, care quality, and, when used appropriately, cost control. The Affordable Care Act of 2010 established CMMI, which in 2014 ... a health care innovation award to Four Seasons Compassion for Life and Duke Medical Center for its demonstration of community-based palliative care.39...
At the bottom of page 83...
... Rotella explained that another important step toward value in serious illness care was the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015...
In the middle of page 84...
... (MACRA), which established a quality payment program for physicians:40 the merit-based incentive payment system and alternative payment models, which accelerated the move toward value. MACRA created the Physician-Focused Payment Model Technical Advisory Committee ( ... Medicare Care Choices model of concurrent hospice care that allowed people with cancer, heart disease, lung disease, or AIDS to pursue both hospice and disease-related treatments. It is now ending and has proven to be one of the more successful models.42...
In the middle of page 84...
... In 2018, CMS awarded MACRA funding to AAHPM and its partners, the RAND Corporation and the National Coalition for Hospice and Palliative Care, to develop palliative care quality measures to use in the quality payment program. CMMI announced several models affecting people ... -in option in 2021.43 CMMI also announced its new strategic direction, as Rawal discussed, placed the geographic direct contracting model on hold, and decided not to go forward with a serious illness population model....
In the middle of page 84...
... to increase value have focused on reducing costs, in part because quality has proven difficult to measure. To address that issue, his organization and the Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association convened the Measuring What Matters initiative to identify the best quality measures available for ... quality improvement (Dy et al., 2015). Rotella explained that most of the available measures focused on processes, and these are limited when it comes to driving quality improvement. In fact, while the United States is ranked last in health outcomes and first in ...
In the middle of page 84...
... In 2018, PTAC recommended testing two advanced payment models, proposed by AAHPM and CTAC (Coalition to Transform Advanced Care), respectively, though Rotella noted that they are on hold or not going forward. “We still need to come ...
In the middle of page 85...
... lation,” he said. Also in 2018, the National Consensus Project44 published the fourth edition of its clinical practice guidelines for quality palliative care, calling for care coordination and some basic process of care for all individuals with ...
In the middle of page 85...
... In 2021, the Palliative Care Quality Collaborative46 launched the first unified program- and patient-level data registry in the serious illness field. In addition, the Palliative Care Quality Measures Project, which MACRA funded, submitted ... patient-reported experience or outcome measures: the percentage of patients with a recent outpatient palliative care visit who report feeling heard and understood by their palliative care provider and team and the percentage who felt they were getting the help they wanted for their pain.47 The ... , which assess outcomes at the level of provider and team, fill major gaps in measuring the quality of communication and symptom management, both of which matter greatly to patients and clinicians, said Rotella. In keeping with CMMI’s new strategy, this project ... patients on the technical panel and included vigorous public engagement from over 200 stakeholders during the comment period.48...
In the middle of page 85...
... Rotella noted that the National Coalition for Hospice and Palliative Care has submitted recommendations to CMMI,49 including the following key points:...
At the bottom of page 85...
... 45 ICD-10-CM is a standardized classification system of diagnosis codes that represent conditions and diseases, related health problems, abnormal findings, signs and symptoms, injuries, external causes of injuries and diseases, and social ...
In the middle of page 86...
... apply crosscutting structural and process requirements and quality outcome measures to all payment models that care for people with serious illness,...
In the middle of page 86...
... advance health care equity, and...
In the middle of page 86...
... ensure that accountability for the quality of care for people with serious illness does not vary across payment models....
In the middle of page 86...
... Rotella said that the specialty-level interdisciplinary palliative care workforce is insufficient for current and future needs.50 The Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act51 would expand training at both the specialist and generalist levels. ... is a need to study and leverage telehealth as a means of improving access to palliative care and an imperative to address systemic causes of burnout, moral distress, and inequity....
At the bottom of page 86...
... In closing, Rotella said that the Triple Aim needs to become the Quintuple Aim—better outcomes, better experiences, and lower costs sustained by thriving clinicians who deliver more equitable care. “I do not know what the future brings, but whatever surprises the ... may hold, we must provide better care to people with serious illness and their families and caregivers,” said Rotella. “This was important before the pandemic, and it is even more important afterwards, when we have learned so much. We ... so many tools and are poised now to make a difference, so let us double down,” he concluded....
At the bottom of page 86...
... Richard Gilfillan, former president and chief executive officer of Trinity Health and the first director of CMMI, began his remarks by noting that 2 years ago, the consensus was that the nation was transforming health care. Since then, ... , health care systems have had to step up and meet the incredible challenges brought on by the pandemic, yet many of them continued to do the work of transforming health care through the various models that the webinar has featured. The question is ...
At the bottom of page 86...
... 50 See https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25789/building-the-workforce-we-need-to-care-for-people-with-serious-illness (accessed March 10, 2022)....
In the middle of page 87...
... In terms of where health care is today, Gilfillan observed that accountability models, such as accountable care organizations and bundled payments, have not had any large-scale successes, but a limited test had some positive results. Gilfillan explained that tests have been ... providers who find that change is difficult. “No one totally turns their care model or business model upside down without a strong reason to do it, and providers have not done it yet because the need is not there,” he said. In Gilfillan’s view, a forcing function (something that makes health ... leaders conclude that they must transform) is needed. Gilfillan suggested that a mandatory accountable care organization path might serve this purpose....
At the bottom of page 87...
... According to Gilfillan, any additional waivers and continuation of the waivers that have been put in place through the pandemic should only be granted in the context of providers who are actually accepting accountability for the Triple Aim or even the “Quintuple Aim.” ... , any activity specific to people with serious illness should be structured to be consistent with the strategic pillars of CMMI’s refresh strategy and maintain accountability. The community palliative care model is an example of a care rather than a payment model....
At the bottom of page 87...
... Gilfillan suggested thinking about how to conduct an integrated test for a model that provides care for the serious illness population, such as a team-based, community-based care model in ...
At the bottom of page 87...
... Gilfillan explained that for a realistic test of a care model, CMMI needs to fund it directly and not as part of a payment model. He suggested offering this model in both the accountable care organization context and others to see if it works ... in one rather than another and providing specifications for the model rather than a setting a target cost. “What we want to test is a care model, and we want to do it adequately with defined elements and a clear definition of success,” said Gilfillan. He suggested that half of the participants ...
In the middle of page 88...
... by an overall kind of generalized care management approach, rather than as a test of the payment plan. “We can decide after that how to pay for it and what the payment mechanism might be. The critical point would be do we know after a year or two or three whether we start seeing evidence that this ...
In the middle of page 88...
... Gilfillan pointed out that “We need to match our evaluation capabilities with the speed with which the system can change, and that is a new change that the Innovation Center and CMS as a whole need to confront. … We cannot learn in 2–5-year cycles. That is not the way to ... the system forward, and we know that people in the health care system can innovate much more quickly than we thought,” concluded Gilfillan....
At the bottom of page 88...
... Broyles opened the discussion session by asking Rotella to respond to Gilfillan’s suggestion about testing a dedicated care team and carving out dedicated funding versus an integrated approach. Rotella said he loved the concept and would like to explore it further. He noted that a ...
At the bottom of page 88...
... Rawal commented that she appreciated Gilfillan’s emphasis on the need for more rapid transformation and accountability, which is CMMI’s first objective in its new strategy. From CMMI’s perspective, emphasizing accountability means creating pathways ... more providers to be able to engage in value-based payment and creating an imperative to move forward even if doing so is not mandatory. “How do we signal that what we want to be able to move toward is that there are accountable care entities or ways of delivering whole-person ...
In the middle of page 89...
... Reflecting on the integrated model that Gilfillan discussed, Rawal said that CMMI’s teams are actively doing research on this and would welcome conversations about what has and has not worked in the accountable care organization world. A central question for her team to answer ... what it looks like when there are populations that need more intensive and more specific care delivery approaches. Additionally, what are the opportunities to transform care for those populations in the context of an ...
At the bottom of page 89...
... forward with the serious illness population component of the Primary Care First model. Rawal responded that decision was based on reviewing lessons learned from the Innovation Center’s portfolio, which concluded that the risks of implementing that component as a valid test model were too high. CMS ...
At the bottom of page 89...
... Rawal identified important lessons learned about beneficiary outreach and model design through which her team needs to work. She added that she hopes that her participation in this webinar signals that CMMI remains ... to seeking opportunities to develop and test value-based models of care for this population; in fact, it has several new and ongoing initiatives targeted at providing better care for such beneficiaries. Broyles noted that the number of Medicare Advantage plans with a ...
At the bottom of page 89...
.... Rawal replied that the overall goal is to increase the number of beneficiaries in accountable care relationships so that they get more integrated and person-centered care. Her team is exploring how this approach can include support for the social determinants of care, including greater access to ... - and community-based care. “We have learned a lot from our work in the accountable health community model about how to support screening and referrals to community-based organizations,” said Rawal. “We have also learned through our primary care portfolio on how those screenings and ...
In the middle of page 90...
... leaders to tell Congress they will not oppose changes to its risk adjustment that would somewhat modify the overpayments going to these plans and to take that money and put it into social services. “They are not investing in social services because they do not have the pay-fors,” noted ...
In the middle of page 90...
... with a comprehensive assessment that views people as not just health entities, but as human beings who have social lives, practical problems, and financial issues. Rotella emphasized that this is the basis of the comprehensive palliative care assessment that serves as the foundation of ...
At the bottom of page 90...
... To conclude the third webinar and the workshop series, Bowman explained that when the committee started planning the workshop 7 months ago, it hoped that it would be a retrospective ... at the pandemic. “Now, here we are with very fresh concerns about the newest variant and the care delivery landscape that is still changing week by week, so we have been adapting and adapting at breakneck speed since March of 2020,” she said. As a result, she ...
At the bottom of page 90...
... into four categories, based in large part on their racial makeup. Neighborhoods with minority occupants were marked in red—hence “redlining”—and considered high-risk for mortgage lenders. See https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/10/19/498536077/interactive-redlining-map-zooms-in-on-...
In the middle of page 91...
... Bowman recognized so much innovation and so many new ways of caring for patients, partnering across silos, and organizing care. If such changes persist beyond the pandemic, it would represent a meaningful improvement in the lives of people with serious illness ... their families. Her fear is that everyone is tired, creating the threat that the system will regress to the mean when the pandemic is over....
At the bottom of page 91...
... “As we have heard from our speakers and our patients, that is simply not good enough,” said Bowman. “Yes, patients and families are reeling from COVID, but they experienced gaps in care and unnecessary suffering before the pandemic. Yes, our health system is straining ... . Providers have been stretching for years really to align with value-based care goals while having to keep a foot in the fee-for-service canoe, and our workforce is strained to the breaking point, but that need is only going to grow as the number of people living with serious illness grows.”...
At the bottom of page 91...
... Adding to these challenges, she said, is the core theme throughout the workshop: the pervasive disparities in health care and health that stem from our nation’s history of racism. She said that it is difficult in the context of the pandemic not to draw the parallel that ... is another public health emergency, one that demands the same ingenuity, the same spirit of collaboration, and the same urgency with which the nation has met the pandemic. “If, as we regroup and rebuild from the pandemic, we allow for that urgency to ... in our policy and our care redesign conversations, and if we do not take advantage of this opportunity, then we will have neglected the foundational principles of palliative care that each patient’s ... are unique and that every patient deserves the best that we have to offer in health care,” said Bowman....
At the bottom of page 91...
... by serious illness or a history of inequity. “We need to continue to systematically scale up what was working before the pandemic, particularly expanded access to palliative care in all settings, while integrating the best of palliative care innovations and adaptations from COVID across all care ...
In the middle of page 92...
... In closing, Bowman said that everyone on the front line is a stakeholder in using this pandemic experience as a catalyst and an opportunity to transform care for patients with serious illness. “I am grateful to all of our speakers in this workshop because they have given ... strategies for pulling those COVID adaptations into the future of care delivery for patients with serious illness, for leveraging that expertise and the approaches of the palliative care field, and for holding equity as our priority.” Those strategies, she added, are the call to action, and as ...
In the middle of page 92...
... her closing reflections, noted that traditional medicine is disease centric rather than focused on the whole person or physical, emotional, social, and spiritual health. Therefore, it is natural that health care has responded to the pandemic similarly, with rapid crisis response, development of new ... , and a hope that it will all go away. In her view, palliative medicine offers an alternate approach to not only cope with uncertainty but to cultivate ... even under severe conditions. Team-based care fosters connection, and clinicians “show up for each other,” Wang explained. “The benefit of a holistic approach addressing quality of life and supporting families is ...
In the middle of page 92...
... Aiken, L. H., D. M. Sloane, L. Bruyneel, K. Van den Heede, P. Griffiths, R. Busse, et al. 2014. Nurse staffing and education and hospital mortality in nine European countries: A retrospective observational study. Lancet 3(9931):1824–1830...
At the bottom of page 92...
... Ankuda, C. K., C. D. Woodrell, D. E. Meier, R. S. Morrison, and E. Chai. 2020. A beacon for dark times: Palliative care support during the coronavirus pandemic. NEJM Catalyst/Innovations in Care Delivery, May 12....
At the bottom of page 92...
... Anubui, O., T. Carter, M. Phillippi, D. G. Ruggieri, and S. Kangovi. 2021. Developing sustainable community health worker career paths. New York, NY: Milbank Memorial Fund....
At the bottom of page 92...
... Brooks-LaSure, C., E. Fowler, M. Seshamani, and D. Tsai. 2021. Innovation at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services: A vision for the next 10 years. Health Affairs Blog. Washington, DC: Health Affairs....
At the bottom of page 92...
... Campos-Castillo, C., and D. Anthony. 2021. Racial and ethnic differences in self-reported telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic: A secondary analysis of a U.S. survey of internet users from late March. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 28(1):119–125....
In the middle of page 93...
... CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). 2020. About Kawasaki disease. https://www.cdc.gov/kawasaki/about.html#:~:text=Kawasaki%20disease%20 (accessed June 9, 2022)....
In the middle of page 93...
... Chopra, S., P. Solomon, S. L. Goldhirsch, H. Fernandez, and K. Cummings. 2022. Geriatrics fellowship during COVID-19: Expanding impact, using innovation and maintaining balance. Gerontology & Geriatrics Education 43(1):55–63....
In the middle of page 93...
..., K. Curseen, C. Grey, R. Rhodes, L. Shoemaker, M. Silveira, S. Fischer, S. O’Mahony, K. Leventakos, C. Trotter, I. Sereno, M. Kamdar, J. Temel, and J. A. Greer. 2019. Early integrated telehealth versus in-person palliative care for patients with advanced lung cancer: A study protocol. Journal of ...
In the middle of page 93...
... Chua, Issac, V. Jackson, and M. Kamdar. 2020. Webside manner during the COVID-19 pandemic: Maintaining human connection during virtual visits. Journal of Palliative Medicine 23(11):1507-1509. http://doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2020.0298....
In the middle of page 93...
... CMMI (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation). 2021. Innovation Center Strategy Refresh. Woodlawn, MD: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services....
In the middle of page 93...
... DeBiasi, R. L. 2021. Immunotherapy for MIS-C—IVIG, glucocorticoids, and biologics. New England Journal of Medicine 385(1):74–75....
In the middle of page 93...
..., M. Delaney, M. Bell, K. Smith, J. Pershad, E. Ansusinha, A. Hahn, R. Hamdy, N. Harik, B. Hanisch, B. Jantausch, A. Koay, R. Steinhorn, K. Newman, and D. Wessel. 2020. Severe coronavirus disease–2019 in children and young adults in the Washington, DC, metropolitan region. Journal of Pediatrics 223:...
At the bottom of page 93...
.... N. Kline, T. Ronis, S. Majumdar, E. Sadler, S. R. Conway, C. I. Berul, S. Sule, R. Lahoz, E. Ansusinha, J. Pershad, V. Bundy, E. Wells, J. E. Bost, and D. Wessel. 2021. Multisystem inflammatory syndrome of children: Subphenotypes, risk factors, biomarkers, cytokine profiles, and viral sequencing. ...
At the bottom of page 93...
... Dewolfe, D. J. 2000. Training manual for mental health and human service workers in major disasters. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Mental Health Services....
At the bottom of page 93...
... Dy, S. M., K. B. Kiley, K. Ast, D. Lupu, S. A. Norton, S. C. McMillan, K. Herr, J. D. Rotella, and D. J. Casarett. 2015. Measuring what matters: Top-ranked quality indicators for hospice and palliative care from the American Academy of Hospice and ... Medicine and Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 49(4):773–781. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2015.01.012....
At the bottom of page 93...
... Goyal, M. K., J. N. Simpson, M. D. Boyle, G. M. Badolato, M. Delaney, R. McCarter, and D. Cora-Bramble. 2020. Racial and/or ethnic and socioeconomic disparities of SARS-COV-2 infection among children. Pediatrics 146(4)....
At the bottom of page 93...
... Kane, R. L., T. Shamliyan, C. Mueller, S. Duval, and T. Wilt. 2007. The association of registered nurse staffing levels and patient outcomes: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Medical Care 45(12):1195–1204. https://doi.org/10.1097/MLR.0b013e3181468ca3....
At the bottom of page 93...
... Kangovi, S., N. Mitra, L. Norton, R. Harte, X. Zhao, T. Carter, D. Grande, and J. A. Long. 2018. Effect of community health worker support on clinical outcomes of low-income patients across primary care facilities: A randomized ...
In the middle of page 94...
... Kangovi, S., N. Mitra, D. Grande, J. A. Long, and D. A. Asch. 2020. Evidence-based community health worker program addresses unmet social needs and generates positive return on investment. Health Affairs 39(2):207–213....
In the middle of page 94...
... Katzman, J. G., K. Thornton, N. Sosa, L. Tomedi, L. Hayes, M. Sievers, K. Culbreath, K. Norsworthy, C. Martin, A. Martinez, J. Liu, and S. Arora. 2021. Educating health professionals about COVID-19 with ECHO telementoring. American Journal of Infection Control 50(3)....
In the middle of page 94...
... Kelley A. S. and E. Bollens-Lund. 2018. Identifying the population with serious illness: The “denominator” challenge. Journal of Palliative Medicine 21(S2):S7–...
In the middle of page 94...
..., H. Mather, L. C. Hanson, C. S. Ritchie. 2019. Identifying older adults with serious illness: Transitioning from ICD-9 to ICD-10. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 57(6):1137–1142....
In the middle of page 94...
... Leonard, M., S. Graham, and D. Bonacum. 2004. The human factor: The critical importance of effective teamwork and communication in providing safe care. Quality & Safety in Health Care 13(Suppl 1):i85–90....
In the middle of page 94...
..., P. Bono, J. Wagstaff, T. C. Gauler, T. Ueda, Y. Tomita, F. A. Schutz, C. Kollmannsberger, J. Larkin, A. Ravaud, J. S. Simon, L. A. Xu, I. M. Waxman, and P. Sharma. 2015. Nivolumab versus everolimus in advanced renal-cell carcinoma. New England Journal of Medicine 373(19):1803–1813....
In the middle of page 94...
... NCQA (National Committee for Quality Assurance) and Penn Medicine. 2021. Critical inputs for successful community health worker programs: A White Paper. Philadelphia, PA https://www.ncqa.org/wp-content/...
In the middle of page 94...
... Price-Haywood, E. G., J. Burton, D. Fort, and L. Seoane. 2020. Hospitalization and mortality among Black patients and white patients with COVID-19. New England Journal of Medicine 382(26):2534–2543....
At the bottom of page 94...
... Rock, L. K., J. W. Rudolph, M. K. Fey, D. Szyld, R. Gardner, R. D. Minehart, J. Shapiro, and C. Roussin. 2020. “Circle Up”: Workflow adaptation and psychological support via briefing, debriefing, and peer support. NEJM Catalyst Innovations in Care Delivery, September 22....
At the bottom of page 94...
... Rodriguez, J. A., J. R. Betancourt, T. D. Sequist, and I. Ganguli. 2021a. Differences in the use of telephone and video telemedicine visits during the COVID-19 pandemic. American Journal of Managed Care 27(1):21–26....
At the bottom of page 94...
... Rodriguez, J. A., A. Saadi, L. H. Schwamm, D. W. Bates, and L. Samal. 2021b. Disparities in telehealth use among California patients with limited English proficiency. Health Affairs 40(3):487–495....
At the bottom of page 94...
... Saenz, R., and C. Sparks. 2020. The inequities of job loss and recovery amid the COVID-19 pandemic. University of New Hampshire Carsey School of Public Policy. Carsey Research National Issue Brief # 150, Summer....
At the bottom of page 94...
... Schneider, E. C., A. Shah, M. M. Doty, R. Tikkanen, K. Fields, and R. D. William II. 2021. Mirror, mirror 2021: Reflecting poorly. New York, NY: The Commonwealth Fund....
In the middle of page 95...
... Stamm, B. H. 2009. Professional Quality of Life: Compassion Satisfaction and Fatigue Version 5 (ProQOL). www.isu.edu/~bhstamm or www.proqol.org (accessed March 20, 2022)....
In the middle of page 95...
... Vasan, A., J. W. Morgan, N. Mitra, C. Xu, J. A. Long, D. A. Asch, and S. Kangovi. 2020. Effects of a standardized community health worker intervention on hospitalization among disadvantaged patients with multiple chronic conditions: A pooled analysis of ...
At the bottom of page 95...
... Vasan, A., A. Harris, S. Kangovi, and K. Mahoney. 2021. Getting proximate: Flipping the mentorship paradigm to promote health equity. The New England Jorunal of Medicine 385:24....
At the bottom of page 95...
... Webb Hooper, M., A. M. Nápoles, and E. J. Pérez-Stable. 2020. COVID-19 and racial/ethnic disparities. JAMA 323(24):2466–2467....
At the bottom of page 95...
... Yehia, B. R., A. Winegar, R. Fogel, M. Fakih, A. Ottenbacher, C. Jesser, A. Bufalino, R. H. Huang, and J. Cacchione. 2020. Association of race with mortality among patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) at 92 U.S. hospitals. ...
At the bottom of page 95...
... Zhang, X., D. Tai, H. Pforsich, and V. W. Lin. 2018. United States registered nurse workforce report card and shortage forecast: A revisit. American Journal of Medical Quality 33(3):229–236....

A total of pages of uncorrected, machine-read text were searched in this chapter. Please note that the searchable text may be scanned, uncorrected text, and should be presumed inaccurate. Page images should be used as the authoritative version.