Why this round of COVID-19 feels worse

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Thu, 10/07/2021 - 12:33

Exhaustion. Defeat. Hopelessness. Physicians, nurses, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners are overwhelmed with burnout.

Ilaria Gadalla

The recent round of COVID-19 is more frustrating than the first, with scientific evidence supporting ways we can prevent disease and disease progression. The health care team is no longer viewed as heroes but as the enemy, fraudulently proposing a vaccine and painting a fictional story of death, though it’s all true. The daily educational battle with patients and family members creates a challenging environment that cultivates hopelessness.

Clinicians are physically exhausted from the numerous COVID cases. Gone are the medical patients we trained for, who either remain home and risk their health or lack access to medical providers because of excessive wait times. Empathy for COVID patients is being tested even more with this new surge, and without the two-way bond of trust, clinicians are running out of fuel. Anger and distrust regarding vaccination guidance dominate the interaction when patients present demanding urgent intervention, while clinicians know that more than 95% of hospitalized patients are unvaccinated.

The struggle to find the commitment to medicine and serving patients is made worse by the pandemic fog and loss of trust from patients. Every day, health care teams risk their personal well-being to provide medical care and intervention. Not by choice do we gown up, mask up, and glove up. Each time we enter a COVID patient’s room, we expose ourselves and risk our own lives and the lives of our families for the patients who have elected to ignore medical guidance.

This national wave of resistance to vaccination is spurring an exodus from health care. Physicians are retiring early and physician assistants and nurse practitioners are seeking non–patient-facing positions to improve their own wellness and balance. A national nursing shortage is impacting patients seeking care in every medical discipline. The underlying wave of exhaustion and frustration has not completely destroyed their empathy but has depleted their drive.

How can we regain this drive amid exhausting work hours and angry patients?

As much as we have heard it, we need to protect our time to recharge. The demand to pick up extra shifts and support our colleagues has affected our personal health. Setting boundaries and building time for exercise, meditation, and connecting with family is essential for survival. Mental health is key to retaining empathy and finding hope. Education is one path to reigniting the fires of critical thinking and commitment to patient care – consider precepting students to support the growth of health care teams. Memories of patient care before this pandemic give us the hope that there is light at the end of this tunnel.

Dr. Gadalla is a hospitalist at Treasure Coast Hospitalists in Port St. Lucie, Fla. She is a member of the Hospitalist’s editorial advisory board and also serves as a physician assistant program director at South University in West Palm Beach, Fla. She disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Exhaustion. Defeat. Hopelessness. Physicians, nurses, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners are overwhelmed with burnout.

Ilaria Gadalla

The recent round of COVID-19 is more frustrating than the first, with scientific evidence supporting ways we can prevent disease and disease progression. The health care team is no longer viewed as heroes but as the enemy, fraudulently proposing a vaccine and painting a fictional story of death, though it’s all true. The daily educational battle with patients and family members creates a challenging environment that cultivates hopelessness.

Clinicians are physically exhausted from the numerous COVID cases. Gone are the medical patients we trained for, who either remain home and risk their health or lack access to medical providers because of excessive wait times. Empathy for COVID patients is being tested even more with this new surge, and without the two-way bond of trust, clinicians are running out of fuel. Anger and distrust regarding vaccination guidance dominate the interaction when patients present demanding urgent intervention, while clinicians know that more than 95% of hospitalized patients are unvaccinated.

The struggle to find the commitment to medicine and serving patients is made worse by the pandemic fog and loss of trust from patients. Every day, health care teams risk their personal well-being to provide medical care and intervention. Not by choice do we gown up, mask up, and glove up. Each time we enter a COVID patient’s room, we expose ourselves and risk our own lives and the lives of our families for the patients who have elected to ignore medical guidance.

This national wave of resistance to vaccination is spurring an exodus from health care. Physicians are retiring early and physician assistants and nurse practitioners are seeking non–patient-facing positions to improve their own wellness and balance. A national nursing shortage is impacting patients seeking care in every medical discipline. The underlying wave of exhaustion and frustration has not completely destroyed their empathy but has depleted their drive.

How can we regain this drive amid exhausting work hours and angry patients?

As much as we have heard it, we need to protect our time to recharge. The demand to pick up extra shifts and support our colleagues has affected our personal health. Setting boundaries and building time for exercise, meditation, and connecting with family is essential for survival. Mental health is key to retaining empathy and finding hope. Education is one path to reigniting the fires of critical thinking and commitment to patient care – consider precepting students to support the growth of health care teams. Memories of patient care before this pandemic give us the hope that there is light at the end of this tunnel.

Dr. Gadalla is a hospitalist at Treasure Coast Hospitalists in Port St. Lucie, Fla. She is a member of the Hospitalist’s editorial advisory board and also serves as a physician assistant program director at South University in West Palm Beach, Fla. She disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Exhaustion. Defeat. Hopelessness. Physicians, nurses, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners are overwhelmed with burnout.

Ilaria Gadalla

The recent round of COVID-19 is more frustrating than the first, with scientific evidence supporting ways we can prevent disease and disease progression. The health care team is no longer viewed as heroes but as the enemy, fraudulently proposing a vaccine and painting a fictional story of death, though it’s all true. The daily educational battle with patients and family members creates a challenging environment that cultivates hopelessness.

Clinicians are physically exhausted from the numerous COVID cases. Gone are the medical patients we trained for, who either remain home and risk their health or lack access to medical providers because of excessive wait times. Empathy for COVID patients is being tested even more with this new surge, and without the two-way bond of trust, clinicians are running out of fuel. Anger and distrust regarding vaccination guidance dominate the interaction when patients present demanding urgent intervention, while clinicians know that more than 95% of hospitalized patients are unvaccinated.

The struggle to find the commitment to medicine and serving patients is made worse by the pandemic fog and loss of trust from patients. Every day, health care teams risk their personal well-being to provide medical care and intervention. Not by choice do we gown up, mask up, and glove up. Each time we enter a COVID patient’s room, we expose ourselves and risk our own lives and the lives of our families for the patients who have elected to ignore medical guidance.

This national wave of resistance to vaccination is spurring an exodus from health care. Physicians are retiring early and physician assistants and nurse practitioners are seeking non–patient-facing positions to improve their own wellness and balance. A national nursing shortage is impacting patients seeking care in every medical discipline. The underlying wave of exhaustion and frustration has not completely destroyed their empathy but has depleted their drive.

How can we regain this drive amid exhausting work hours and angry patients?

As much as we have heard it, we need to protect our time to recharge. The demand to pick up extra shifts and support our colleagues has affected our personal health. Setting boundaries and building time for exercise, meditation, and connecting with family is essential for survival. Mental health is key to retaining empathy and finding hope. Education is one path to reigniting the fires of critical thinking and commitment to patient care – consider precepting students to support the growth of health care teams. Memories of patient care before this pandemic give us the hope that there is light at the end of this tunnel.

Dr. Gadalla is a hospitalist at Treasure Coast Hospitalists in Port St. Lucie, Fla. She is a member of the Hospitalist’s editorial advisory board and also serves as a physician assistant program director at South University in West Palm Beach, Fla. She disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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PAs can do more under new laws, coast to coast

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Wed, 08/25/2021 - 12:51

Another frustrated patient awaits transfer from the hospital to a nursing home. The do-not-resuscitate form must be signed by a physician. I – a physician assistant (PA) – am available, but the physician is with a medically unstable patient. Another patient in the ED waits for this hospital bed, lying uncomfortably on a stretcher in the hallway.

As a Florida PA who has practiced in other states with far fewer barriers to medical care, I applaud the advancement of HB 431. PAs can now sign certain documents, ensuring accelerated access to therapeutic interventions and honoring end-of-life wishes with timely do-not-resuscitate orders. Children now have improved access to psychiatric medications without a lengthy wait for an appointment with a psychiatrist, given the demand for mental health services and limited physician availability.

HB 431 expands medical care to patients in a state experiencing exponential growth in patient health care demands. HB 431 removes the following barriers to patient care as summarized by the Florida Academy of Physician Assistants. HB 431:

  • Changes the physician:PA ratio from 1:4 to 1:10
  • Allows PAs to authenticate documents such as death certificates and involuntary examinations; to order durable medical equipment, home health services, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language therapy
  • Allows do-not-resuscitate orders, workers’ compensation claims, and school physical examinations with the exception of medical marijuana documents and maximum medical improvement/impairment rating documents for workman’s compensation
  • Allows a fully licensed PA to procure medical devices and drugs
  • Codifies that a PA can supervise a medical assistant
  • Allows PAs to receive direct payment for services rendered
  • Removes the long-standing restriction of PAs to prescribe any controlled psychiatric medication to patients aged under 18 years, and now allows PAs working with a pediatrician, family practice physician, internal medicine physician, or psychiatrist to prescribe a 14-day supply of schedule II psychiatric medications for those aged under 18 years
  • Removes the requirement that a PA must inform a patient that they have the right to see the physician before a prescription is prescribed or dispensed
  • Removes outdated language regarding prescriber number
  • Improves the supervision data form submission process

Oregon HB 3036, also passed this year, significantly expands medical care provided by PAs. The Oregon legislation allows collaborative agreements with physicians at the practice level and removes the submission requirement for board approval. In contrast to Florida, Oregon completely eliminated PA ratios, improved PA prescriptive and dispensing regulations, and developed an environment that fosters team-based collaboration with accelerated patient access to quality care.

Many other states reduced these supervisory barriers during the pandemic. Even before the pandemic, federal systems such as the Veterans Affairs Medical Centers and the military had removed supervisory restrictions, which subsequently reduced the overall cost of care.

PAs are trained to be flexible and meet the needs of the patient through a medical rather than nursing model. By allowing PAs to determine how best to collaborate with their clinical teams, patients are provided more efficient, patient-centered health careTeam members rely on each other for operational and clinical support through a degree of autonomy that contributes to effective patient management. These skills are expanded with the modernization of PA clinical practice and the removal of legislative barriers. A benefit to physicians through collaborative practice agreements is the reduction of their own liability for the care that PAs provide. Unlike Oregon, the state of Florida has not approved collaborative practice agreements and has retained physician supervisory barriers.

There are misconceptions in the medical community regarding the PA profession’s legislative goals. These efforts are not aimed at replacing physicians and competing for employment. The goal is to expand access and reduce barriers to patient care. There are not enough providers available to support comprehensive patient care. This is a fact.

Gaps in medical care exist and have existed since the PA profession was developed in the 1970s. Our vision has been to expand medical care through collaboration with physicians and assist with recruitment and retention challenges in various medical disciplines, particularly primary care. This is why all PA programs are based on a primary care medical model to care for patients across the lifespan, from infant care to geriatrics.

The spirit of collaboration in a team-based environment is challenged by these misconceptions and compounded by supervisory legislative and outdated practice requirements. PAs not only collaborate but also consult with and refer patients to other health care providers whenever the patient›s condition falls outside the PA’s education, training, and experience.

The changes in Florida’s HB 431 do not remove the requirement to clearly identify our roles. PAs still continue to identify themselves as physician assistants, and should a patient refuse to see a PA, they have the right to see any other provider they choose. Finally, patients are safe in the hands of a PA, as supported by numerous patient studies comparing PA clinical skills with other providers, including nurse practitioners, medical students, residents, fellows, and physicians.

Nonetheless, Florida is still behind other states in providing patients access to collaborative, team-based medical care with skilled PAs practicing as trained. Removing the remaining legislative barriers, hospital credentialing barriers, and health care perspectives will successfully provide patients superior medical care and improve the health outcomes of Florida residents.

Ilaria Gadalla, DMSc, PA-C, is a hospitalist at Treasure Coast Hospitalists in Port St. Lucie, Fla., a member of the Hospitalist’s editorial advisory board, and also serves as a physician assistant program director at South University in West Palm Beach, Fla.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Another frustrated patient awaits transfer from the hospital to a nursing home. The do-not-resuscitate form must be signed by a physician. I – a physician assistant (PA) – am available, but the physician is with a medically unstable patient. Another patient in the ED waits for this hospital bed, lying uncomfortably on a stretcher in the hallway.

As a Florida PA who has practiced in other states with far fewer barriers to medical care, I applaud the advancement of HB 431. PAs can now sign certain documents, ensuring accelerated access to therapeutic interventions and honoring end-of-life wishes with timely do-not-resuscitate orders. Children now have improved access to psychiatric medications without a lengthy wait for an appointment with a psychiatrist, given the demand for mental health services and limited physician availability.

HB 431 expands medical care to patients in a state experiencing exponential growth in patient health care demands. HB 431 removes the following barriers to patient care as summarized by the Florida Academy of Physician Assistants. HB 431:

  • Changes the physician:PA ratio from 1:4 to 1:10
  • Allows PAs to authenticate documents such as death certificates and involuntary examinations; to order durable medical equipment, home health services, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language therapy
  • Allows do-not-resuscitate orders, workers’ compensation claims, and school physical examinations with the exception of medical marijuana documents and maximum medical improvement/impairment rating documents for workman’s compensation
  • Allows a fully licensed PA to procure medical devices and drugs
  • Codifies that a PA can supervise a medical assistant
  • Allows PAs to receive direct payment for services rendered
  • Removes the long-standing restriction of PAs to prescribe any controlled psychiatric medication to patients aged under 18 years, and now allows PAs working with a pediatrician, family practice physician, internal medicine physician, or psychiatrist to prescribe a 14-day supply of schedule II psychiatric medications for those aged under 18 years
  • Removes the requirement that a PA must inform a patient that they have the right to see the physician before a prescription is prescribed or dispensed
  • Removes outdated language regarding prescriber number
  • Improves the supervision data form submission process

Oregon HB 3036, also passed this year, significantly expands medical care provided by PAs. The Oregon legislation allows collaborative agreements with physicians at the practice level and removes the submission requirement for board approval. In contrast to Florida, Oregon completely eliminated PA ratios, improved PA prescriptive and dispensing regulations, and developed an environment that fosters team-based collaboration with accelerated patient access to quality care.

Many other states reduced these supervisory barriers during the pandemic. Even before the pandemic, federal systems such as the Veterans Affairs Medical Centers and the military had removed supervisory restrictions, which subsequently reduced the overall cost of care.

PAs are trained to be flexible and meet the needs of the patient through a medical rather than nursing model. By allowing PAs to determine how best to collaborate with their clinical teams, patients are provided more efficient, patient-centered health careTeam members rely on each other for operational and clinical support through a degree of autonomy that contributes to effective patient management. These skills are expanded with the modernization of PA clinical practice and the removal of legislative barriers. A benefit to physicians through collaborative practice agreements is the reduction of their own liability for the care that PAs provide. Unlike Oregon, the state of Florida has not approved collaborative practice agreements and has retained physician supervisory barriers.

There are misconceptions in the medical community regarding the PA profession’s legislative goals. These efforts are not aimed at replacing physicians and competing for employment. The goal is to expand access and reduce barriers to patient care. There are not enough providers available to support comprehensive patient care. This is a fact.

Gaps in medical care exist and have existed since the PA profession was developed in the 1970s. Our vision has been to expand medical care through collaboration with physicians and assist with recruitment and retention challenges in various medical disciplines, particularly primary care. This is why all PA programs are based on a primary care medical model to care for patients across the lifespan, from infant care to geriatrics.

The spirit of collaboration in a team-based environment is challenged by these misconceptions and compounded by supervisory legislative and outdated practice requirements. PAs not only collaborate but also consult with and refer patients to other health care providers whenever the patient›s condition falls outside the PA’s education, training, and experience.

The changes in Florida’s HB 431 do not remove the requirement to clearly identify our roles. PAs still continue to identify themselves as physician assistants, and should a patient refuse to see a PA, they have the right to see any other provider they choose. Finally, patients are safe in the hands of a PA, as supported by numerous patient studies comparing PA clinical skills with other providers, including nurse practitioners, medical students, residents, fellows, and physicians.

Nonetheless, Florida is still behind other states in providing patients access to collaborative, team-based medical care with skilled PAs practicing as trained. Removing the remaining legislative barriers, hospital credentialing barriers, and health care perspectives will successfully provide patients superior medical care and improve the health outcomes of Florida residents.

Ilaria Gadalla, DMSc, PA-C, is a hospitalist at Treasure Coast Hospitalists in Port St. Lucie, Fla., a member of the Hospitalist’s editorial advisory board, and also serves as a physician assistant program director at South University in West Palm Beach, Fla.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Another frustrated patient awaits transfer from the hospital to a nursing home. The do-not-resuscitate form must be signed by a physician. I – a physician assistant (PA) – am available, but the physician is with a medically unstable patient. Another patient in the ED waits for this hospital bed, lying uncomfortably on a stretcher in the hallway.

As a Florida PA who has practiced in other states with far fewer barriers to medical care, I applaud the advancement of HB 431. PAs can now sign certain documents, ensuring accelerated access to therapeutic interventions and honoring end-of-life wishes with timely do-not-resuscitate orders. Children now have improved access to psychiatric medications without a lengthy wait for an appointment with a psychiatrist, given the demand for mental health services and limited physician availability.

HB 431 expands medical care to patients in a state experiencing exponential growth in patient health care demands. HB 431 removes the following barriers to patient care as summarized by the Florida Academy of Physician Assistants. HB 431:

  • Changes the physician:PA ratio from 1:4 to 1:10
  • Allows PAs to authenticate documents such as death certificates and involuntary examinations; to order durable medical equipment, home health services, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language therapy
  • Allows do-not-resuscitate orders, workers’ compensation claims, and school physical examinations with the exception of medical marijuana documents and maximum medical improvement/impairment rating documents for workman’s compensation
  • Allows a fully licensed PA to procure medical devices and drugs
  • Codifies that a PA can supervise a medical assistant
  • Allows PAs to receive direct payment for services rendered
  • Removes the long-standing restriction of PAs to prescribe any controlled psychiatric medication to patients aged under 18 years, and now allows PAs working with a pediatrician, family practice physician, internal medicine physician, or psychiatrist to prescribe a 14-day supply of schedule II psychiatric medications for those aged under 18 years
  • Removes the requirement that a PA must inform a patient that they have the right to see the physician before a prescription is prescribed or dispensed
  • Removes outdated language regarding prescriber number
  • Improves the supervision data form submission process

Oregon HB 3036, also passed this year, significantly expands medical care provided by PAs. The Oregon legislation allows collaborative agreements with physicians at the practice level and removes the submission requirement for board approval. In contrast to Florida, Oregon completely eliminated PA ratios, improved PA prescriptive and dispensing regulations, and developed an environment that fosters team-based collaboration with accelerated patient access to quality care.

Many other states reduced these supervisory barriers during the pandemic. Even before the pandemic, federal systems such as the Veterans Affairs Medical Centers and the military had removed supervisory restrictions, which subsequently reduced the overall cost of care.

PAs are trained to be flexible and meet the needs of the patient through a medical rather than nursing model. By allowing PAs to determine how best to collaborate with their clinical teams, patients are provided more efficient, patient-centered health careTeam members rely on each other for operational and clinical support through a degree of autonomy that contributes to effective patient management. These skills are expanded with the modernization of PA clinical practice and the removal of legislative barriers. A benefit to physicians through collaborative practice agreements is the reduction of their own liability for the care that PAs provide. Unlike Oregon, the state of Florida has not approved collaborative practice agreements and has retained physician supervisory barriers.

There are misconceptions in the medical community regarding the PA profession’s legislative goals. These efforts are not aimed at replacing physicians and competing for employment. The goal is to expand access and reduce barriers to patient care. There are not enough providers available to support comprehensive patient care. This is a fact.

Gaps in medical care exist and have existed since the PA profession was developed in the 1970s. Our vision has been to expand medical care through collaboration with physicians and assist with recruitment and retention challenges in various medical disciplines, particularly primary care. This is why all PA programs are based on a primary care medical model to care for patients across the lifespan, from infant care to geriatrics.

The spirit of collaboration in a team-based environment is challenged by these misconceptions and compounded by supervisory legislative and outdated practice requirements. PAs not only collaborate but also consult with and refer patients to other health care providers whenever the patient›s condition falls outside the PA’s education, training, and experience.

The changes in Florida’s HB 431 do not remove the requirement to clearly identify our roles. PAs still continue to identify themselves as physician assistants, and should a patient refuse to see a PA, they have the right to see any other provider they choose. Finally, patients are safe in the hands of a PA, as supported by numerous patient studies comparing PA clinical skills with other providers, including nurse practitioners, medical students, residents, fellows, and physicians.

Nonetheless, Florida is still behind other states in providing patients access to collaborative, team-based medical care with skilled PAs practicing as trained. Removing the remaining legislative barriers, hospital credentialing barriers, and health care perspectives will successfully provide patients superior medical care and improve the health outcomes of Florida residents.

Ilaria Gadalla, DMSc, PA-C, is a hospitalist at Treasure Coast Hospitalists in Port St. Lucie, Fla., a member of the Hospitalist’s editorial advisory board, and also serves as a physician assistant program director at South University in West Palm Beach, Fla.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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