9 Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity: A Guide for Healthcare Professionals and Patients
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Nine Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity: A Guide for Healthcare Professionals and Patients by Dr. Beverley presents actionable strategies to transform health disparity into health equity. Drawing from her extensive interactions with over 1,000 diverse patients, Dr. Beverley introduces innovative approaches, like "The Brid
Mauvareen Beverley
Mauvareen Beverley, M.D. is the President of Mauvareen Beverley, M.D., PLLC, Patient Engagement and Cultural Competence Specialist. She is an executive-level physician and a fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine (NYAM) with over twenty years of experience advocating for improving patient engagement and cultural competence for all populations, especially African American communities. As Assistant Vice President, Physician Advisor for NYC Health + Hospitals, she sponsored the first Conference on Improving the Health of the Elderly Black Population. Under her leadership as Deputy Executive Director of Kings County Hospital, she led her team to implement innovative strategies for improved equitable health outcomes and decreased Congestive Heart Failure readmission from 30 percent to 18.7 percent in less than two years. Dr. Beverley is a national thought leader and expert in patient engagement and health equity. She has lectured extensively on health disparities, patient engagement and valuing the human experience. She collaborated with Westchester County Medical Society, Westchester Academy of Medicine, and Putnam County Medical Society in developing the Patient Engagement and Cultural Competence Training Program with CME credits and served as faculty of an education session for ACHE's Thomas C. Dolan Executive Diversity Program. Her notable publications include "Patient Engagement and Cultural Sensitivity as a Strategy to Improve Health Inequities," which was published in the Journal of the National Medical Association. Her thought leadership paper on "Health Disparities and Epidemics: Perception vs. Reality" was selected for presentation at the New York Academy of Medicine's twelfth annual History of Medicine and Public Health Night in 2021. She received the Excellence in Medicine Award from the Bronx County Medical Society in 2021. She also made a scientific poster presentation on Solutions to Health Disparities: The Common Thread, The Human Experience presented at the American Hospital Association (AHA) Conference in Chicago, March 2022. Another poster, "Improving Health Disparities, The Common Thread: The Human Experience," was accepted to be displayed at the Institute of Healthcare Improvement ( IHI) Forum December 13-15, 2022.Dr. Beverley received her Bachelor of Science degree in biological sciences from Boston University and a medical degree from Jacob School of Medicine and Biomedical Science at the University of Buffalo School of Medicine. She trained in Internal Medicine at Harlem Hospital-NY Columbia Presbyterian. Dr. Beverley is a Member of The National Medical Association (NMA), The National Association of Health Service Executives (NAHSE), the American Medical Association (AMA), and the Medical Society, State of NY (MSSNY).
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9 Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity - Mauvareen Beverley
9 Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity
A Guide for Healthcare Professionals and Patients
Mauvareen Beverley, MD
Copyright © 2024 by Mauvareen Beverley, MD
All rights reserved.
No portion of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher or author, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.
ISBN (paperback): 979-8-218-44668-0
ISBN (ebook): 979-8-218-44679-6
Book design and production by www.AuthorSuccess.com
My book is dedicated to the individual patients of all races, ethnicities, and nationalities who are in our hospital beds and not in the history books . . . those who were instrumental in providing boots-on-the-ground solutions to achieve health equity.
Praise from a patient
My name is Cassandra Dobson, PhD. I am a patient with Sickle cell disease (SCD). The lack of human value,empathy, caring that Dr.Beverley talks about in her book, is what I experienced when I was hospitalized. I truly believe if the perception vs. the reality of the individual is not correct, poor health outcomes are highly likely. In my case it had nothing to do with social determinants of health as I am an African American Professor and fully insured. I am so thankful that Dr.Beverley intervened on my behalf and as a result I am here today to tell my story as a validation of her book! Please make sure everyone reads her book as it’s a game changer for all communities, particularly the AfricanAmerican/Black community.
"It is more important to know the person who has the
disease than the disease who has the person."
—Hippocrates
In Jamaica, I Feel Like A Human Being.
—Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1965)
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Section I
1. A Brief History of the Health Crisis of Blacks in the United States
2. Harlem on My Mind
3. Queens Health Network: Care Management Program Ahead of its Time
4. Kings County Hospital—Merging of The African Diaspora
5. Medications and Adherence
6. Two Illuminating Patient Stories
Section II
7. Nine Simple Solutions for Addressing Health Disparities and Achieving Health Equity
8. Improving the Patient Engagement and Cultural Competence Experience Training: A Road Map
9. Six Scenarios for Health Systems and Healthcare Providers to Implement and Address
10. Conclusion
Section III
Resources
Acknowledgments
Contact Information
Endnotes
About the Author
prefaceThroughout my professional medical career, I have been fortunate to have worked in various hospitals, and alongside other amazing healthcare professionals who have shaped my values on patient engagement and Care Management. I have had the privilege and humbling experiences of caring for, and learning from patients, caregivers, and families from diverse cultures and social backgrounds in New York City. Achieving the best patient outcomes requires more than practicing good medicine. It also requires an understanding and appreciation of a non-judgmental patient engagement, and a mindset that values the patient as a human being and not as a disease or condition. The unique engagements I had with various staff, those encounters I experienced with patients and their families, and the resulting initiatives I implemented, led me to create this guide. All these experiences have been a major testament to the contents of this book.
Reflecting on my experiences as an intern and resident in the Department of Medicine at Harlem Hospital where excellence in healthcare for all patients was the expectation and the norm. Under the leadership of Director of Medicine Dr. Gerald E. Thomson, we all had to provide excellent and quality care to all patients irrespective of race, gender, or employment status. Under Dr. Thomson’s leadership, we understood and recognized the mandate to provide excellent care, regardless of circumstances. As one of the public hospitals in New York City, we took care of patients from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds, including severely ill patients with challenging health conditions. There was a relative lack of resources at public health hospitals compared to the well-funded private institutions, such that as interns we also had to transport patients from the emergency department to the inpatient unit and to radiology for needed X-rays for diagnostic purposes and rotate inpatient beds to accommodate admissions in male and female rooms. This was all in addition to our clinical duties. Despite the environment of scarce hospital resources, Dr. Thomson inspired and encouraged us to provide the highest quality care for all patients.
Nine Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity describes some of the innovative and unique initiatives I developed for promoting patient-centered quality care, including the first Care Management Program at NYC Health and Hospitals, Queens Health Network (QHN). The cornerstone of this innovative program was to foster better communication and engagement between healthcare clinical teams and patients. An impactful initiative of the Care Management program was the establishment of The Bridge Team. The goal of the Bridge Team was to bridge the gaps in care for the patient population and their families, and in particular, for those that were most vulnerable to adverse experiences and worse health outcomes.
Dr. Thomson was a visionary leader who embedded ideals of equality,
specifically our responsibility as physicians, to treat and value all patients alike, without regard to race, ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, physical, mental health, or substance abuse status. I had the opportunity to pose a question to several physicians that trained with me at Harlem Hospital. I asked, "If there were more leaders like Dr. Thomson, in the current roles of chief medical officers (CMO) or chief executive officers (CEO) in our hospitals today, would we be talking about addressing health disparity or about achieving health equity?"
All of them responded, Health equity.
So, what is in this book? This book is my attempt to share boots-on-the-ground simple solutions as well as an outside-the-box innovative approach to moving from tackling health disparities to achieving health equity within healthcare settings. I try to frame a roadmap in stages so that anyone can implement it effectively. I provide stories and examples of scenarios to make them relevant and applicable. I share some of the complex challenges we see within healthcare, resulting from the perception versus the reality of experiences, information, and true perspectives of the population served. The resulting false perceptions and missed communication leads to misunderstanding, contributing to poor health outcomes. I share the need to recognize that there are simple solutions to prevent escalation to the need for complex solutions, if we choose to accept and address them in a non-judgmental, humane, and empathetic manner.
This book is intended to educate all healthcare professionals, practitioners, and patients. It is important to understand that a patient is more than being just an individual with a disease condition. The individual who happens to be a patient may also be a mother, a father, a grandparent, a devoted church member, a minister, or an accomplished teacher in their community.
I also focus on the importance of patient engagement and cultural competence for English-speaking, limited English-speaking, and non-English-speaking populations. Equally important is the fact that the English-speaking Black patient population is not included in the need for cultural competence. It is important to ensure that the doctors, as well as the entire clinical or Care Management team, appreciate patients as individuals, with values and beliefs shaped by their culture or lived experiences.
Finally, I provide some important historical highlights of the health crisis of the Black population. It is unconscionable, when one considers the atrocities that they have endured over the course of history, for the Black American population to continue to experience overall less access to quality care, with worse health outcomes. Whether it be pulmonary, cardiac, urology, infectious disease, kidney disease, or the COVID-19 pandemic—they have the worst health outcomes. We must fix this.
IntroductionOne week while working in the role as Deputy Executive Director of Care and Case Management at King’s County Hospital, I was notified about an eighty-two-year-old African American patient who had been admitted with heart failure. After a few days in the hospital, the woman had stopped eating, was not actively participating in her own care, and appeared to be depressed. The clinical team charged with her medical care was baffled by her decline and recommended that she receive a psychiatric evaluation for depression screening.
I agreed that a psych evaluation was warranted but wondered if something more might be affecting the patient’s condition. So, that Wednesday I visited her in her hospital room, introduced myself, and asked, What is important to you? What are you worrying about?
Expecting her to speak about her medical symptoms, I wasn’t surprised when she said, I am most concerned that I won’t be able to get to church on Sunday. It is especially important to me that I please God, and not going to church would make me feel guilty.
Based on that conversation, I had my team contact the woman’s minister and arrange a visit from him. He assured her that if she were not discharged from the hospital by Sunday, he himself would come back to pray with her. Once she received that reassurance, she resumed eating, became much more cooperative in her treatment, and appeared much less depressed.
This true story is an example of how health disparities often arise due to lack of cultural competence for care of the elderly Black population, which contributes to a lack of understanding of the individual patient. In this case, it was important for the clinical team to account for the significant role religion played in the patient’s life. As is true in most healthcare environments, hospitals do not necessarily have a system in place that recognizes the role of religion in the health and well-being of the Black population, as they do with other populations. The classical Greek physician Hippocrates, who lived from 460 to 370 B.C., once said, It’s more important to know the person who has the disease than the disease who has the person.
Thousands of years ago, he understood this basic medical truth that modern-day healthcare professionals are just now rediscovering.
This book, Nine Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity: A Guide for Healthcare Professionals and Patients, provides some approaches and solutions to address some of the long-standing health disparities experienced by the Black population in America. Health disparities impact various racial and ethnic population groups to different extents; however, poorer health status and adverse outcomes experienced by the Black population affect all ages, socioeconomic status, and disease categories. If we improve the health outcomes of African Americans, the group that historically experiences the worst health disparities and health outcomes, we can improve healthcare for all populations.
Nine Simple Solutions to Achieve Health Equity promotes health equity by recognizing the human value of all patients through the concept of the common thread: the human experience. This common thread, which applies to everyone, is the fact that once a disease is accurately diagnosed it is non-negotiable and cannot be given back, irrespective of the patient’s race, ethnicity, socioeconomic