Hospitals too are part of a safe reopening

This past weekend was the unofficial beginning of summer. After 2+ months of stay at home orders and a few weeks of phased reopening depending on the state you live in, the images of large crowds packed in close and without masks at a pool in Missouri, on the boardwalk in New Jersey and at a race track in North Carolina were concerning. As I hope many others chose to do, we stayed home and had a family visit on our patio at a social distance.

We are hearing stories of super spreaders from Mother’s Day two weeks ago resulting in upticks of COVID-19 cases in many states. We see stories of a hair salon in Missouri where two stylists who were ill exposed over 140 customers. We see stories of no available ICU beds in Montgomery, Alabama where cases have reportedly doubled since that state reopened two weeks ago.

On Friday, the President ordered churches to reopen and threatened to override governors who refused to do so. Fortunately, many faith leaders acted responsibly and outlined plans for continued online or outdoor services until they are certain that they can safely reopen their doors to congregants.

News reports say the virus is still spreading at epidemic levels in 24 states and is not contained. This pandemic is not over. And it may be a long time before it is. So how do we begin to recover and safely reopen? Continue reading

Knocking on the digital front door

Health systems are learning many lessons during this pandemic that they will need to carry forward into the recovery and “new normal” phases. One of them may be the need for an integrated digital health strategy, and more specifically a patient focused “digital front door”. The almost overnight shift from in-person ambulatory visits to virtual visits during this pandemic highlighted the need for a more integrated approach for many health systems.

An integrated strategy for a patient centered digital front door has many components including the core website, the patient portal linked to the electronic health record, improved access and scheduling capabilities, call centers, and care delivery through virtual visits. The goal is to meet patients where they are and guide them along the right care pathway with efficient, consistent, and easy processes in the background.

However, these multiple components and functions are often led and directed in an uncoordinated manner by different senior leaders within the organization. The core website is typically owned and directed by Marketing and Communications with technical support from IT. The patient portal is often managed by the ambulatory team in IT partnering with the Chief Medical Information Officer, Ambulatory Services, and Marketing. Improved patient access and scheduling initiatives are often directed by Ambulatory Services or in an academic medical center by the Physician Practice Group leadership. The call center may be managed by Marketing or Ambulatory Services leadership. And telehealth may be provided by a specialized team either connected to or part of IT but be directed by physician leadership.

A successful patient centered digital health strategy needs to involve all these components in a coordinated, comprehensive manner. In some respects, who leads this strategic initiative does not matter. What does matter is that there is buy-in and collaboration from all leaders involved with a common overarching goal to meet patients where they are at and provide an easy, consistent experience to access services. Continue reading

Year of the Nurse: We must support our nurses

The first time I cried during this pandemic was March 17 when I read that in Italy people over 60 years old were being left on gurneys in the hallway to choke on their own sputum. Patients with coronavirus had

Message from Brigham and Women’s Hospital OR nurses: #StayHome

exceeded the hospitals’ capacity. I had been watching the news and stories from Italy closely in anticipation of what was going to happen in our country assuming we were just a few weeks behind them in this crisis. I cried then not only for Italy but for myself. I wondered if I was going to be one of those over 60 left to die if our hospitals were also unable to handle the potential number of very sick COVID-19 patients.

The second time I really teared up was when I thought about my daughter who is the Chief Nurse Practitioner (NP) on the inpatient orthopedic/spine service at Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital in the Boston area and reassigned to work shifts in the ICU with COVID-19 patients. I feared the worst for my family. That she would get exposed and transmit it to her husband and five-year-old daughter who both have very bad asthma and are allergic to almost everything. We knew this virus was not just killing elders. People of all ages and especially those with underlying conditions were and are still at high risk.

Most of the times I have had tears since then has been watching a nurse or physician tell their story on the news. Describing what it is like to care for intubated COVID-19 patients, helping their patients’ families understand there is nothing more they can do, and sharing the fears they have for their own families when they go home from their shift. I have also cried when I see the stories of family members dying within days of each other from this virus, many of them people of color who are essential workers who can’t stay home.

I have listened to my own daughter describe the days she was assigned to work an ICU shift with COVID-19 patients. While it was not the overall intensity of what we have seen on the news in New York City hospitals, every individual case she described was just as sad and heartbreaking. And the emotional and physical toll on the nurses, doctors and respiratory therapists was obvious.

On the brighter side of this crisis, I have smiled with joy as healthcare workers in NYC celebrate the 500th or 1000th COVID-19 patient discharged from their hospital. Continue reading

IT requests increase while budgets decrease

As hospital systems develop their COVID-19 recovery plans, the financial impact of this pandemic is deep and far reaching. IT budgets are no exception. IT leaders are being asked to take salary cuts, furlough staff, and deal with a capital freeze for the rest of the year. This comes at a time when the demand for technology solutions is only increasing. And at a time when IT teams have performed at their peak in providing and supporting new solutions with agility and in record time.

In a recent Becker’s Hospital Review article, Hospital IT Spend Pivots to Mission Critical Projects: 7 Leaders on the Key Focus for the Next 12 Months, IT leaders covered telehealth, digital transformation, analytics, informatics, and of course the reality of cost reduction facing them and their organizations.

IT leaders have long faced the supply vs demand challenge. And they have long faced the need to reduce their budgets while meeting a growing user base and increased demand for technology solutions. The days of significant year to year budget and staff growth in IT are a distant memory.

As we look to the future after the COVID-19 recovery, some people talk about the “new normal” phase and others refer to it as the “re-imagine” phase. The latter certainly encourages us to think differently. Regardless, it will be with far less resources. So how does IT manage and ensure success in this ever more constrained environment? Continue reading