To Avoid Quarantining Healthcare Workers, Hospitals Expand Telehealth to Screen for COVID-19
Bergen New Bridge Medical Center, in Paramus, New Jersey, expanded its telehealth services to deal with COVID-19 and prominently displays information about telehealth on its website.
Thanks to COVID-19, we’re running low on personal protective equipment (PPE), hand sanitizers, and allegedly, in some cases, responsible oversight of government responders. Now it appears that we may run low on healthcare workers thanks to the growing number of such workers who self-quarantine. The first documented instance of community transmission of a patient in Vacaville, California, led to more than 200 hospital workers being quarantined, according to
Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, tells KHN: “It’s just not sustainable to think that every time a health care worker is exposed they have to be quarantined for 14 days. We’d run out of health care workers.” Nuzzo argues that hospitals need to find the proper balance that hinges on the continuing flow of evolving medical information about COVID-19 and maintaining enough staff to keep hospitals and other healthcare institutions in operation.
In an opinion piece in
About 80% of all PPE manufactured globally comes from Asia, but large producers like China, Taiwan, Thailand, India, and South Korea have stopped exporting because they need the PPE to deal with COVID-19 outbreaks in their own countries. And it’s unlikely that ramped up domestic production will be able to keep up with demand, writes Specht.
“Even with full personal protective equipment, health care workers are becoming infected while treating patients with Covid-19. As masks become a scarce resource, doctors and nurses will start dropping from the workforce for weeks at a time, leading to profound staffing shortages that further compound the challenges,” Specht writes.
Some hospital systems are turning to telehealth to help protect their employees, as has been recommended by both the
Physician concerns about reimbursement remains a problem, Hollander said. “Without a doubt, reimbursement is the main thing that has prevented further adoption of telehealth,” he said. “Only a few states mandate the payers pay for the services regardless of how they are delivered (in-person or via telemedicine).”
Sutter Health is a believer in telehealth. The health system, in Northern California, is asking patients to call a hotline specifically installed to screen patients for symptoms of COVID-19 rather than come to one of the emergency rooms in one of Sutter’s 24 hospitals. Nurses will screen the calls and those with symptoms will be directed to make a telehealth appointment. Bergen New Bridge Medical Center, in Paramus, New Jersey, expanded its telehealth services to deal with COVID-19. It prominently displays information about telehealth on its
Telehealth and other emergency responses to COVID-19 is being hampered by the fact that from 2003 to 2019, government funding was almost
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