Innovation for Improved Care
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/ Categories: NEWS, 2019

Innovation for Improved Care

In the fourth quarter of 2018, just 3 months, United Counseling Service completed 294 crisis evaluations on children with psychological distress who were patients in the Emergency Department at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center (SVMC). To maintain their safety, the children are asked to change into a gown. Their personal belongings are removed. The experience can further traumatize those who are already having emotional and behavioral difficulty. After all of that, 82 percent were released to their homes.

Staff at SVMC and United Counseling Service recognized that the Emergency Department is not the ideal place to care for patients with these symptoms. They created the UCS/SVMC Youth Psychiatric Urgent Care Model and applied for a $125,000 grant from OneCare Vermont to fund the project.

More than 30 applications were submitted, and just three projects we awarded funds to implement their ideas. The funds established and staffed a Youth Psychiatric Urgent Care Center, a home-like environment stocked with kid-friendly activities. The Center partnered with a single referring site, as a test, and has been accepting patients since September.

In the past, staff at the site would have called the police or 9-1-1 for a child experiencing a psychiatric event. The child would have been brought to the Emergency Department. Now, instead, the site calls the Center. From there, the child can be treated by UCS’s specialists and, in the greatest number of circumstances, make a plan to return home.

“The new way of handling these cases is better for children and families, because the treatment matches their needs more closely,” said Jill Maynard, RN, BSN, CEN, SANE, director of Emergency Nursing at SVMC and one of the authors of the project.  “In addition, it improves care for all by making better use of the Emergency Department, freeing it up for patients who need the type of care it is equipped to provide.”

“Children who are seen in Emergency departments for a mental health concern are often traumatized by the very intervention we provide,” said Lorna Mattern, executive director of United Counseling Service. “We are now able to provide the right care in a therapeutic environment that improves outcomes for children and reduces cost.”

If found to be feasible, the program will become permanent and expand to additional referral sites. One day, the originators of the program would like to replicate the it to serve adults as well.

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Resuming Regular Care

So many important medical appointments were booked for March and April and canceled during the height of the pandemic. Now we are beginning to refocus on the fact that skipping appointments, even if you are feeling well now, could become harmful.

One important group of patients that we are eager to see are those with serious chronic conditions. These diseases require patients to see their primary care provider or a specialist at least once a year and sometimes far more frequently than that. Those with heart failure, kidney disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, for instance, all require regular contact with your provider.

Another group of patients we'd like to see are those with new medical concerns. We know that new medical concerns don't stop during a pandemic. Some conditions, like depression and anxiety, are far more prevalent during a pandemic than before. In many cases, new conditions are easiest to treat when patients first notice symptoms, and delaying care for these conditions can be dangerous.

Even regular care for those who are healthy is as important as ever. Other diseases—cancer in particular—haven't gone away. So, if you would normally be getting a screening such as a colonoscopy or mammogram, it's time to schedule an appointment. Many cancers can be detected and treated early with better outcomes. We can only expect those good results, if people are screened.

For children, regular vaccines are very important. If a big portion of the population neglects to get important childhood vaccines on schedule, we may be susceptible to outbreaks of measles or whooping cough.

There are many steps we have taken to improve safety for those seeking medical care. The first one is the availability of telemedicine. If the condition you are seeking treatment for does not require diagnostics or a physical exam, your provider can meet you virtually using any Internet-enabled device or over the phone. See details here.

If you do need to come to the office, you will notice check-ins at entrances, where staff check patients and visitors for respiratory symptoms and ensure that all are masked. You'll also notice efforts to space the waiting rooms to improve social distancing.

So how do you get the care you need?

  • If you have a primary care provider, call in to see what you may have missed during the pandemic. Did you miss an appointment to manage a chronic condition? Also share any new health concerns you have and check that you and your family members are up to date on all of your screenings and vaccinations.
  • If you don’t have a regular doctor, it makes sense to get one now. Locally, call the find-a-provider line at 802-447-5007 for a directory of practices that are accepting new patients.
  • Those with time-sensitive medical needs can use ExpressCare, a walk-in clinic, on the hospital campus in Bennington. Be sure to call ahead to 802-440-4077 if you have respiratory symptoms.
  • For Emergency Care, always come directly to the SVMC Emergency Department.

Most off all, we want our patients to know that we are here for them. There is no longer a need to delay medical care, whether for known conditions, new concerns, or preventive care. In every step we take, we are protecting patients against COVID-19 and helping patients with all of their other medical needs, too.

Bob Schwartz, MD, is associate medical director of Dartmouth- Hitchcock Putnam Physicians at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center in Bennington and a family medicine physician at SVMC Northshire Campus in Manchester.

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