Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Free Home Visits: Nurse Aides Strive To Help Discharged Patients
The key to keeping patients who are recovering from serious medical events from returning to the emergency room during the COVID-19 pandemic as hospitalization rates soar again could lie in a Houston medical program. Grand-Aides is an organization of 1,500 nurse aides and medical assistants who check on patients after they鈥檙e discharged from the hospital to ensure that they鈥檙e taking medications, adhering to special diets and managing side effects at home. The program was conceptualized in 2012 by Arthur 鈥淭im鈥 Garson, a health policy expert and former dean of academic operations at Baylor College of Medicine, but has gained renewed interest as fears of catching COVID-19 lead people to avoid seeking medical care. (Wu, 12/31)
A member of IU Health's board of directors said he is concerned about the experience of Dr. Susan Moore, a Black woman who described聽receiving inadequate care at the system's Carmel hospital before dying of COVID-19 this month. Julius C. Trimble, who also serves as resident bishop of the Indiana Conference of the United Methodist Church, said he is connecting Moore's story with a broader聽problem facing Black patients聽who require health care.聽He also penned an op-ed published on IndyStar this week. "The question that hangs out over me, you know, is whether or not race is a factor in whether a person receives treatment, and the best quality treatment," said Trimble, a longtime advocate for racial health equity, in an interview with IndyStar.聽"That question has to be answered." (Martin, 12/30)
Also 鈥
Despite the prevalence of obesity in the U.S. and its contribution to costly chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension, seasoned primary-care physicians often lack the education and resources to adequately address the condition among their patients.聽A 2017 survey from the medical association AMGA found 68% of its members weren鈥檛 following any guidelines for obesity care management in their practices. There were several reasons for this, including stigma among health professionals about obesity being a lifestyle choice rather than a chronic condition, said Elizabeth Ciemins, AMGA vice president of research and analytics. Additionally, physicians weren鈥檛 adequately trained until recently on obesity management and were often uncomfortable broaching the topic with patients. Providers 鈥渄on鈥檛 know how to have those conversations,鈥 Ciemins said.聽(Castellucci, 1/2)
KHN: Children鈥檚 Hospitals Are Partly To Blame As Superbugs Increasingly Attack Kids
A memory haunts Christina Fuhrman: the image of her toddler Pearl lying pale and listless in a hospital bed, tethered to an IV to keep her hydrated as she struggled against a superbug infection. 鈥淪he survived by the grace of God,鈥 Fuhrman said of the illness that struck her oldest child in this central Missouri city almost five years ago. 鈥淪he could鈥檝e gone septic fast. Her condition was near critical.鈥 Pearl was fighting Clostridium difficile, or C. diff, a type of antibiotic-resistant bacteria known as a superbug. A growing body of research shows that overuse and misuse of antibiotics in children鈥檚 hospitals 鈥 which health experts and patients say should know better 鈥 helps fuel these dangerous bacteria that attack adults and, increasingly, children. Doctors worry that the covid pandemic will only lead to more overprescribing. (Ungar, 1/4)
Around 200 people are starting 2021 off without any medical debt thanks to the kindness of an oncology doctor who erased $650,000 of his patients' debt. Dr. Omar Atiq, a medical oncologist for nearly 40 years, closed his cancer clinic in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, in March after nearly three decades in business. He worked with a billing company for several months after closing to try to collect payments from his former patients, but soon made a decision to stop reaching out. (Kindelan, 1/1)