Engaging parents in their kids’ mental health treatment can improve health outcomes. With digital health, it’s easier to do this, according to one mental health executive. By MARISSA PLESCIA Involving parents in the mental health treatment of their kids can greatly improve health outcomes. But it’s not always easy for parents to get involved in a traditional brick-and-mortar setting, according to one mental health expert. That’s why digital health has the opportunity to support suicide prevention for younger populations. “Getting to a brick-and-mortar multiple times a week [is hard]. Parents have to show up, leave work early, go and drive for half an hour, battle traffic, try and figure out the flexibility of finding a therapist who can actually meet with you at a time that works for you before you get home to make dinner for your three other kids. It’s really stressful to be involved in treatment in ...
Providers must abandon paternalism and treat patients like partners in the decision-making process when drawing up care plans, according to Chris Waugh, Sutter Health’s chief design and innovation officer. Instead of prescribing a major lifestyle overhaul without considering a patient’s unique life circumstances, providers should “recognize that it’s about the tiny things and the accumulation of marginal gains,” he said. By KATIE ADAMS Historically, healthcare providers have had a reputation of paternalism — as one might guess, this type of approach doesn’t support patient engagement or care plan adherence. Like many other innovators in the industry, Chris Waugh — Sutter Health’s chief design and innovation officer, believes providers need to abandon paternalism and pivot toward collaboration. They must start treating patients like partners in the decision-making process when drawing up care plans, he said during an interview last week at the Reuters Total Health conference in Chicago. “We’re often asking ...
Regenstrief Institute, the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA), the International Academy of Health Sciences Informatics (IAHSI) and the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) are hosting a mini-summit at the AMIA 2023 Annual Symposium to address how informatics can help resolve health issues caused by climate change. The event will bring together national and international experts to form an informatics infrastructure that will highlight and bring exposure to climate change’s effects on health. The event Mini-Summit 2023 — Climate and health: How can informatics help? was planned because of the growing awareness around the effects of climate change on health. Fittingly, the AMIA 2023 Annual Symposium will be in Louisiana, a state drastically affected by multiple manifestations of climate change, including heat waves, droughts, wildfires and saltwater intrusion. During the mini-summit, health informatics professionals will discuss lessons from current environmental challenges and the future of preparing for environmental disasters. Experts will ...
A Formula 1 racing car is no joke. It’s purpose built, at great cost, at state of the art facilities with wind tunnels to improve aerodynamic performance and speed. The goal is simple: to win on tracks like the iconic Silverstone. It would be dangerously pointless to take an F1 car to the desert, smashing it through sand and into rocks, and expect it to perform the same. But today in healthcare, a host of new entrants and stakeholders is doing exactly that.Companies built for other businesses are attempting to offroad their skills into a brand new field. These fairweather healthcare players are unprepared for the terrain. Meanwhile, the true disruptors of this industry are already in it. When you hear newbies and big tech brands hyping AI, for example, delivered via ChatGPT, Microsoft, and others, as a way to transform healthcare, listen up. The bluster is a giveaway. Sure, ...
From time to time, the FDA convenes an outside group of experts to weigh in on an experimental drug or medical device, or to offer insight on a scientific matter that raises questions. The FDA has 49 committees and panels oriented around various therapeutic areas and modalities. As regulatory submissions increasingly include digital components, the agency wants to ensure it is adequately informed about these technologies. It’s adding a digital health advisory committee charged with providing that perspective. The FDA expects the new advisory committee will become fully operational in 2024. It will discuss technologies such as artificial intelligence and machine learning, augmented reality, virtual reality, digital therapeutics, wearables, remote patient monitoring, and software. In addition, topics covered by this new committee could include decentralized clinical trials, patient-generated health data, and cybersecurity. The committee will consist of a core nine voting members, including the chair. Members serve terms of up ...
Walmart’s relationship with Included Health dates back to 2016 when its previous incarnation – Doctor on Demand – began providing virtual urgent care services to Walmart employees in three states. Nearly eight years later, the San Francisco company continues to be the only partner charged with delivering virtual primary care to almost 1 million people in 49 states. In announcing a large expansion of its virtual primary care program on Tuesday, Walmart strongly endorsed its health tech partner charged with providing that care to workers and their families enrolled in its health plans: Included Health. “They’re the partner,” responded Lisa Woods, vice president, physical & emotional wellbeing at the Bentonville, Arkansas retailer, when asked whether Included is simply one of the partners involved in the announcement. Through the expansion, 1 million people including Walmart associates and their family members will be able to access virtual care in 49 states. “Yesterday, ...
The World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Bank have published the 2023 Universal Health Coverage (UHC) Global Monitoring Report, which revealed some alarming statistics concerning out-of-pocket (OOP) health expenditure and the global health service coverage rate. The report showed that only 42 out of 138 countries have achieved progress in expanding UHC service coverage since 2000 while also reducing OOP spending for the population. Alternatively, 108 countries reported worsening to no significant changes in health coverage since 2015, the year when Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were adopted. All 108 countries that experienced slow progress in UHC service coverage are low-income countries (LICs) and lower-middle-income countries (LMICs). Despite that, the overall global UHC Service Coverage Index (SCI) score increased from 45 to 68 out of 100 between 2000 and 2021, but no change was reported in the global SCI score between 2019 and 2021. Notably, a significant variation in country-level ...
Recent research shows that about two-third of clinicians have felt physically unsafe at their job. This week, lawmakers introduced bipartisan legislation to address this concerning trend of violence waged against healthcare workers by giving them federal protections that mirror those for aircraft and airport workers. The bill, called the Safety from Violence for Healthcare Employees Act, would make it a federal crime to assault hospital workers. It was introduced by Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Florida) and Joe Manchin (D-West Virginia). The legislation can be thought of as the Senate’s rendition of the SAVE Act — the SAVE Act is a 2019 bipartisan bill that was reintroduced in Congress this year by Reps. Madeleine Dean (D-Pennsylvania) and Larry Bucshon (R-Indiana), but it has failed to advance. Even though nearly 40 states have passed laws to intensify penalties for violent acts committed against healthcare personnel, there is currently no federal law protecting hospital ...
UnitedHealthcare awarded grants to 66 nonprofits across 12 states. The grants will support those struggling with social isolation, behavioral health, food insecurity and other social determinants of health. UnitedHealthcare is providing $11.1 million in grants to 66 nonprofits in 12 states, the health insurer announced Tuesday. The grants will support those battling food insecurity, social isolation, behavioral health issues and other social determinants of health. The grants are part of Empowering Health, a program launched in 2018 that aims to improve access to care and address social determinants of health. To date, UnitedHealthcare has invested a total of $62 million in 30 states and the District of Columbia through the program. The newest round of grants will go toward organizations in Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas and Washington. Recipients include: Massachusetts-based Community Servings, which received $300,000 to create a program ...
Independent primary care practices are at risk of extinction. The U.S. must re-dedicate itself to the preservation of independent primary care over the long run and must undergo a radical reorientation of the health system toward primary care. The first step to repairing the U.S. healthcare system is focusing on primary healthcare workers and restoring their under-resourced ranks. Evidence shows that primary care teams are capable of remarkable health improvements when appropriately trained, paid, and given the capacity to reach out to every population they serve. Primary health workers deliver nearly all the services responsible for longer lives, including those services for potentially stopping the next pandemic. They are the backbone of a functional and effective health system. They also play a vital role in closing gaps in access to other kinds of lifesaving care. And, for those segments of the population that remain underserved by the ...
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