Excerpts
from other publications
Newly
renovated medical center in Immokalee
ready for
physicians from FSU and CHS
By Liz Freeman,
posted on naplesnews.com Aug. 5, 2009
IMMOKALEE
— Dr.
Javier Rosado spent a few
cold winters in New Haven, Conn., for a predoctoral internship in clinical
and community psychology at Yale University. Last September, he relocated to
Immokalee for a postdoctoral fellowship with Florida State University, where
he will complete 2,000 clinical hours with families, mostly children, who
need therapy.
...
The
28-year-old psychologist says the
best part of his practice in Immokalee is learning about the cultural
differences with the mostly immigrant families and helping them.
“I love it,” he says of his time
so far in Immokalee. “The family system is totally different than the
American family.”
On Monday, Rosado and other
colleagues with FSU’s rural medicine program in Immokalee and its affiliated
pediatric clinic run by Collier Health Services will occupy what used to be
empty space in the FSU Isabel Collier Read Medical Center. Until now, they
used other space in the building that wasn’t suitable for their purposes on
a permanent basis.
The NCH Healthcare System donated
the 29,000-square-foot building to FSU in December 2007 after protracted
negotiations that enabled the university to bring its rural medicine
training program to Immokalee for medical school students.
About $4 million has been spent to
transform what had been 11,000 square feet of unused shell space in the
building into a medical clinic. Half of the cost came from the Naples
Children and Education Foundation, sponsors of the Naples Winter Wine
Festival. Another 2,000 square feet of space will be renovated in the next
stage of the project.
All told, there are 17 examination
rooms for the pediatrics clinic operated by Collier Health Services, a
private, nonprofit organization, in a partnership with FSU where the
university provides the educational component of the program for the medical
students and CHS handles the clinical operations.
“It’s been a wonderful
relationship,” said Steve Weinman, chief operating officer of CHS. “I think
there is a huge benefit being affiliated with a university.”
Patients are more receptive to a
university affiliation but it could also be a draw to get more physicians to
come to the community, even from Naples, for the experience of teaching and
to acquire courtesy privileges with the university, he said.
“We are hoping to get specialists
out here at some point,” said Lesa Peterson, spokeswoman for CHS.
Even an old patient transport bus
was replaced with a new bus, with CHS and FSU splitting the cost, she said.
The rural medicine training
program in Immokalee, which got started in January 2008, has become popular
with third- and fourth-year medical students at FSU for rotations, said Dr.
Karimu Smith-Barron, FSU’s faculty director for pediatrics and adolescent
medicine in Immokalee.
“We usually have two to three
students,” she said. “This winter between October and January, we will have
10 students. Immokalee is a hot spot. They want the experience in internal
medicine.”
She even has a second-year medical
student in Immokalee this summer who is going around the community assessing
perceptions about health care and shadowing doctors. As a second-year
medical student, it’s too early for clinical rotations for him, she said.
Today, the rural medicine program
has about 10 elective options in Immokalee in terms of specialties, which
include pediatrics, family medicine, women’s health, internal medicine and
behavioral health.
“So there’s quite a few options,”
Smith-Barron said. “And we have students coming as far as Pensacola.”
Housing has been a hindrance in
attracting more students than six at a time. The students must be willing to
share a room with another student in a three-bedroom, two-bath home that CHS
acquired near the facility.
The hope for CHS and the Immokalee
community at large is that some of the medical students would return after
they complete their education to set up practices in Immokalee. The program
hasn’t been operating long enough in the community for that to have
happened.
But Rosado, the psychologist who
began a fellowship in Immokalee last fall with FSU, said he is enjoying the
experience and working with the families and the issues they face. There may
be undocumented family members who face deportation, and he deals with the
impact to the children or other issues that migrant children face, he said.
“It’s a very unique population,”
he said. “I really enjoy the community.”
HIT and Medical
Education: The Innovators
Excerpt from:
EHR Bloggers/ Physician insight on EHR and healthcare IT topics
Friday,
September 4, 2009
… [F]inding space to teach HIT in a densely
packed medical school curriculum means subtracting time from something else.
Still, it is argued here that the
HIT Deluge
presents unprecedented challenges to
time-honored communication channels involving patients and physicians, and
that it blurs boundaries between all stakeholders in the care process in
ways that generate new ethical challenges and legal risks of a magnitude
that simply cannot be ignored.
Many medical schools including Harvard, Stanford, Vanderbilt, UCSF and Ohio
State have chosen to approach the conundrum by offering elective courses in
HIT, often in conjunction with other graduate programs at the university….
The Florida
State University College of Medicine has taken a more aggressive approach.
It is one of the
newest medical
schools in the US, so its curriculum developers were not
constrained by prior commitments and teaching methods. They chose to
leapfrog ad hoc approaches to HIT education and design an Internet-age
curriculum that has medical informatics woven into its fabric.
Nancy Clark, who directs
the
Medical Informatics
program there, told me recently that FSU students receive laptops upon
arrival at the school. Their textbooks are on line. During orientation and
first semester, they learn to access library resources on line and gain
early exposure to decision support tools.
In the second semester, she said, FSU medical students receive PDAs and
learn how to use them. They also learn how to carry out literature reviews
and manage bibliographies on line.
In their fourth semester, the students meet in specially designed classrooms
where they learn how to use SOAPware, a laptop-supportable EHR. During their
third year, students use SOAPware during supervised patient encounters and
receive feedback from attending physicians regarding their work.
Alas, the hide-bound curriculums of most medical schools are unlikely to
undergo full-scale renovations of this sort in order to accommodate the
HIT Deluge.
Even if they did, medical schools are not properly positioned to meet the
immediate learning needs created by it.
After all, most practicing physicians graduated long before even the
innovators had HIT courses, and health care professionals other than
physicians need HIT education as well.
This has prompted the American Medical Informatics Association to initiate
its so-called 10x10 program, whose goal is to train 10,000 health care
professionals in applied health and medical informatics
by the year 2010….
SPEAKING OF
INNOVATION…
Dennis Saver , M.D., family
medicine clerkship faculty in Fort Pierce, was featured prominently in a Los
Angeles Times story earlier this year about the use of information
technology in health care. Here’s the beginning of the article by Noam N.
Levey:
A stethoscope with three tiny koalas dangling from his neck and eyeglasses
perched on his nose, Dennis Saver looks every bit the family doctor as he
steps into the examining room of his small practice on Florida's Treasure
Coast. When Saver begins to examine his patient, however, the 56-year-old
physician does something that four out of five doctors in America do not: He
pulls out a computer.
The
little black Toshiba, its edges worn to the bare metal, gets more use than
the stethoscope and has become key to the care Saver gives his patients --
organizing medical histories, test results, prescriptions and other data
that were once a jumble of paper records. Saver's laptop, and the system
behind it, put him on the cutting edge of what President Obama and many
experts say is a critical step to improving the nation's healthcare system
while also reining in costs.
It is known as “Health IT,” an idea that promises to use information
technology to cut medical errors, avoid unnecessary tests and procedures and
identify better treatments. The Obama administration is betting that $19
billion of the economic stimulus package will spread the concept from coast
to coast. Saver and the nine other physicians in his practice decided to
take the plunge 3 1/2 years ago. Gone are tens of thousands of manila files
that filled a big room in their office. Doing away with those has allowed
the practice to cut its record-keeping staff from seven to three. The office
eliminated 2 1/2 more positions in the billing department because clerks no
longer have to struggle over doctors' handwritten notes.
In the
examining room, Jim Culleton -- an 84-year old retiree who cheerfully
explained that Saver had saved his life three times -- teased the doctor
about his incessant tapping on the laptop. “I liked it better when he talked
into his tape recorder. Now, I don't know what he's saying about me,”
Culleton said. “Well, I don't lose your chart anymore,” Saver countered.
“And I don't throw my back out hauling around your file.”
The laptop also
allows Saver to quickly check lab results -- in Culleton's case alleviating
concerns about a possible infection, something that could be deadly for the
recent heart attack victim. And costly tests aren't repeated because a lab
result is lost or an image is misplaced, Saver said. Thanks to warnings
embedded in the electronic health record, or EHR, Saver can monitor his
patients' prescriptions to avoid harmful interactions. In case of a recall,
he can check the database in minutes to find out whom to notify…. |