Thanks for visiting. You will note that I never use my family's names. If you are a personal friend, please remember to not include any of our names in your comments. Otherwise, I hope to hear from everyone!
Wednesday, September 27, 2023
So, I became a nurse
Tuesday, September 19, 2023
Bedtime flip
Friday, June 23, 2023
Evaluating a person
While listening to the Hubermann Lab podcast with guest Tim Ferriss, the following quote was mentioned:
"Judge a man by his questions rather than his answers."
-Voltaire
Please edit "man/his" to "person/their."
Or don't.
***
Funny thing: I looked up the quote. It turns out that, according to my brief research, that quote is wrongly attributed to Voltaire and isn't quite correctly stated:
"It is easier to judge the mind of a man by his questions rather than his answers."
-Pierre-Marc-Gaston de Levis (Wikipedia page)
Tuesday, June 20, 2023
the amateur vs The Pro
At work, I was talking with a person with depression and anxiety who has an artistic gift, but they have not practiced it in a long time. They referenced wanting to use it to make a lot of money.
When talking with them, I asked if they love doing it for themself and maybe trying out a small gig.
My supervisor came in at the end of the session. He talked about using their artistic gift in a way to improve structure in their day to alleviate their symptoms.
That is a pro - knowing how to use tools toward achieving an effective outcome.
Saturday, April 29, 2023
Strategies for Medication Adherence
One of the challenges for the healthcare industry is getting patients to adhere to their medication regiment. among the most common examples is that of antibiotics. Something that we learn in nursing school is that patients often will stop taking their antibiotic when they are feeling better, rather than taking the full course of the medication. Another example is getting patients to do prescribed exercises the improve body and system function, such as weight-bearing for bone and muscle strength or aerobic exercises for respiratory function.
The challenge, of course, is hat once the client has left the healthcare facility, it is up to them to comply on an ongoing basis by incorporating the new regiment into their old routine. I think we can all find examples in our lives where doing so, despite knowing the benefits, is challenging and results in failure.
What if healthcare organizations had a department for follow-up with clients on an ongoing basis to remind and ensure compliance?
Think about a position for case workers, nurses, and therapists (PT, OT, RT, SLP, etc.) They can follow-up with the client via phone or video to ensure compliance.
One challenge: who pays for it? Let's establish the chain of commerce: the client has health insurance and seeks care from the provider. The provider cares for the client and bills the insurance company. The insurance company takes premiums from the client pool and pays the provider. The provider gets a combination of payment from the client and the insurance company.
Let's think about this. The client is NOT going to want to pay every time that they get a phone call from the provider. That would almost certainly cause reduced compliance due to avoidance. It would be like a bill collector.
Who in the chain has the most to gain, financially? The insurance company. Improved adherence should lead to a better health outcome fore the patient, which should result in lower ongoing costs, and then to reduced need for reimbursement from the insurance company.
The insurance company has an incentive to give financial incentives to the healthcare organization for following up with the client to ensure adherence. If the client takes their pills everyday, exercises, etc. then there should be some specific, measurable long term goals that would be met.
By achieving those metrics, the healthcare organization can finance the employees whose job is to follow up with clients and see how they're doing, including what friction or barriers they have to sticking with the program.
This provides a remote work position for teams or for people who are unable to work in person. This is an established position: I have a friend who works in oncology. She works 3 days per week, one of which is remote and responds to incoming messages through the client portal. Either in addition to that or as a separate position, people can use that position proactively to reach out to clients to see how they're doing by text, phone, or video. Examples of employees who may like this position include the rotation that my friend participates in, and someone who is on disability leave but could still do work, just not in person.
Finally, the healthcare organization could give the client financial incentives by showing adherence to the regiment. That could come in the form of direct payment (cash or gift card) or reduced billing.
There may be some who feel that the hands-off, self-determination approach is best: if you want to get better, it's up to you.
Others may think that the financial incentives lacks the altruism of helping people: people should be helped without needing financial incentives.
However, the pragmatist knows that neither of those approaches is realistic. Companies expect to make money, workers expect to be paid, and clients expect service. By catering to improved outcomes from both the individual health as well as the financial perspectives, the interests of all parties are served.
Friday, February 17, 2023
Quality Improvement in Healthcare: Typing Skills
Documentation is one of the most important aspects of the healthcare system, yet many of the people in the system do not have adequate typing skills.
In any industry where documentation via keyboard is essential and expected, the company would be wise to implement keyboarding skills into their continuing education. (Including grammar and spelling wouldn't hurt, either.)