Tagged With "COVID-19"
Blog Post
COVID-19 and Healthcare worker's families: behind the scenes of frontline response [thelancet.com]
By Amine Souadka, Hajar Essangri, Amine Benkabbou, et al., EClinical Medicine, May 17, 2020 During the COVID-19 outbreak, healthcare professionals are exposed to a high-risk of infection and mental health problems, but also fear of contagion and spreading the virus to their families. In fact, considering them as individuals implies looking beyond their function as frontline responders and taking into account their societal role as parents, spouses and offspring. While work-family balance is...
Blog Post
Op-Ed: I'm a doctor fighting COVID-19. Outside of the hospital, I've never felt more alone [latimes.com]
By Samuel Yamshon, Los Angeles Times, May 15, 2020 As I make my way into my building’s elevator after a long hospital shift, a neighbor throws his arm out to stop me. “Sorry,” he says, “only one person per elevator.” Seeing my confusion, our doorman kindly but firmly corrects him. “Two per elevator is fine.” I take a step toward the open doors, but the passenger again holds up his palm. “Please,” he pleads, his eyes glancing frantically at my scrubs. “Please, just take a different one.”...
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The Impact of Childhood Adversity on Health and COVID-19 [acpm.org]
By Kevin Sherin, American College of Preventive Medicine, May 7, 2020 There is a growing dialog about COVID-19 and its impacts on childhood adversity (ACEs), chronic stress, and mental health across the lifespan. The fear and social isolation associated with COVID-19 commonly exacerbates existing chronic stresses. Reports are surfacing of increased mental health problems, anxiety, partner violence, depression, suicidality, child abuse, opioid use disorder, other substance abuse, drug...
Blog Post
Trauma-informed Telehealth Podcast Interview
I enjoyed joining the Women-Centered Health Podcast hosts nursing scholars Drs. Nicole Loew and Stephanie Edmonds to talk about how to apply principles of trauma-informed care to our telehealth encounters. This is so critical during COVID-19 and beyond. http://womancenteredhealth.com/telehealth/
Blog Post
World-wide COVID experiences survey
From: Zgierska, Aleksandra < azgierska@pennstatehealth.psu.edu > Sent: Monday, April 20, 2020 9:55 AM Cc: Lennon, Robert < rlennon@pennstatehealth.psu.edu > Subject: World-wide COVID experiences survey Dear Friends and Colleagues We at Penn State have launched a world-wide survey, now translated into 20 languages to study the effective (vs ineffective) ways of communicating the the COVID pandemic related messages. This survey has been already completed by over 10,000 people...
Blog Post
Stolen Breaths [njem.org]
By Rachel R. Hardeman, Eduardo M. Medina, and Rhea W. Boyd, New England Journal of Medicine, June 10, 2020 In Minnesota, where black Americans account for 6% of the population but 14% of Covid-19 cases and 33% of Covid-19 deaths, George Floyd died at the hands of police. “Please — I can’t breathe.” He was a black man detained on suspicion of forgery, an alleged offense that was never litigated or even charged, but for which he received an extrajudicial death sentence. “Please — I can’t...
Comment
Re: Trauma-Informed Telehealth in the COVID-19 Era and Beyond
Thank you for posting @Ellen Goldstein and for your enduring kind support! The pdf is now available and attached.....
Blog Post
Trauma-Informed Telehealth in the COVID-19 Era and Beyond
https://www.mdedge.com/fedprac/article/225184/coronavirus-updates/trauma-informed-telehealth-covid-19-era-and-beyond Background: The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) entered the COVID-19 pandemic crisis with an existing and robust telehealth program, but it still faces a fundamental paradigm shift as most routine outpatient in-person care was converted to telehealth visits. Veterans are a highly trauma-exposed population, and VHA has long offered effective telemental health services.
Blog Post
MORE THAN A ROUGH YEAR - Dr. Marshall Fleurant (TIHCER Steering Committee Member)
When we tell future generations about 2020, how will we remember it? Will we remember it as a “rough year,” a year of death and injustice? Or as the year that prompted the renewal of a revolution to move our ideals of health equity for all forward? We, as healthcare providers and institutions, have the power and privilege to dismantle systemic racism in medicine and society and to have a meaningful impact on the well-being of the communities we serve, if we all commit to continuously work toward