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Fri, 09/10/2021 - 11:08

Hospital administrators recognize the efficiencies

A year after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the United States was getting a reprieve in new cases from its winter surge, the opposite was happening in the rest of the world. In India, a deadly second wave hit, crippling the health care system in the country for months.

Yugandhar Bhatt, MBBS, MD, a consultant pulmonologist with Yashoda Hospital–Malakpet in Hyderabad, India, told this news organization that someone looking at his hospital before the pandemic – a 400-bed multispecialty care unit – would see patients being treated for respiratory failure secondary to exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchial asthma, community-acquired pneumonia, and heart failure. About 30-40 patients per day were treated on an outpatient basis, and more than 30 people were admitted as inpatients.

“After [the] COVID-19 surge, our hospital totally divided into COVID and non-COVID [wards], in which COVID patients occupied 70% of [the] total,” he said. About half of COVID-19 patients were in the ICU, with half of those patients requiring supplemental oxygen.

During the first wave in India, which lasted from May to December 2020, 50% of patients who were intubated were discharged. The percentage of extubated patients decreased to 20% in the second wave, Dr. Bhatt said.

The death toll during the second wave of COVID-19 cases was unlike anything India has seen previously. Between March 1 and June 29, 2021, an estimated 19.24 million individuals were newly infected with COVID-19 and 241,206 patients died, according to Our World in Data, a project of the Global Change Data Lab. When the second wave peaked on May 22, more than 4,000 people were dying each day.

“All hospitals [in India] were treating COVID-19 more than any other acute or chronic disease,” Ramesh Adhikari, MD, MS, SFHM, a hospitalist with Franciscan Health in Lafayette, Ind., said in an interview.

Challenges arose in treating COVID-19 in India that ran counter to how medicine was usually performed. Physicians were seeing more inpatient cases than usual – and more patients in general. The change, Dr. Adhikari said, forced health care providers to think outside the box.
 

An ‘on-the-fly’ hospitalist model

Patients in India access health care by visiting a hospital or primary health center and then are referred out to consultants – specialist doctors – if needed. While India has universal health coverage, it is a multi-payer system that includes approximately 37% of the population covered under the government plan, a large number of private health care facilities and no caps on cost-sharing for the patient. Initiatives like Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana in 2008 and Ayushman Bharat-Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana in 2018 have attempted to close the gap and raise the number of lower-income individuals in India covered under the government plan and reduce out-of-pocket spending. Out-of-pocket payments still consist of about 70% of total health expenditures, according to the Commonwealth Fund.

Dr. Shyam Odeti

“There is not much scope for a hospitalist because it’s so cash driven,” Shyam Odeti, MD, SFHM, section chief, hospital medicine, at the Carilion Clinic in Roanoke, Va., said in an interview. “For a hospitalist, there is no urgency in getting them out of the hospital. There was no need for much efficiency before.”

The first issue during the second wave was figuring out which consultants would care for COVID-19 patients. As there is no dedicated specialty for infectious disease in India, the responsibilities fell to internists and critical care medicine consultants who volunteered. Both are considered small specialties in India. They became “makeshift hospitalists” who learned as they went and became the experts in COVID-19 care, treating their own patients while making themselves available for consultations, Dr. Odeti said.

While no official hospital medicine model in India exists like in the United States, the second COVID-19 surge caused these consultants to begin thinking like hospitalists. Tenets of hospital medicine – like team-based treatment across specialties – arose out of necessity during the crisis. “They were trying to implement a hospitalist model because that’s the only way they could treat COVID-19,” said Dr. Adhikari, an editorial advisory board member for the Hospitalist.

“Even in the U.S. when we started the hospitalist model, it started out of necessity. It’s a combination of creating efficiencies and improving quality,” Dr. Odeti said. “It’s the same thing in India. It’s borne of necessity, but it was [done] at a rapid pace.”
 

 

 

Problems with patient flow

The next issue was triaging patients in the hospital based on COVID-19 severity. When the second wave began, hospitals in India ran out of beds and experienced staff shortages like in many countries. But this situation “was unusual for the health system,” according to Dr. Odeti, who is also an editorial board member for the Hospitalist.

“We never had that issue. There were so many patients wanting to come to the hospital, and so there was this rush.” There was no process to triage patients to determine who needed to stay. “Everybody got put into the hospital,” he said.

Once it was determined who would take care of patients with COVID-19, access to supplies became the primary problem, Dr. Adhikari explained. Lack of oxygen, ventilators, and critical medicines like the antiviral drug remdesivir were and continue to be in short supply. “I had friends who [said] they could not admit patients because they were worried if their oxygen supply [went] low in the middle of the night. They will treat the patients who were already admitted versus taking new patients. That had caused problems for the administrators,” Dr. Adhikari added.

It is also a source of additional stress for the physicians. Where patients flow through a hospital medicine model in the United States, a system that might include case managers, social workers, pharmacists, physician advocates, and other professionals to keep a patient’s care on track, the physician is the go-to person in India for patient care. While physicians provide access to medications and remain available to a patient’s family, those duties become much harder when caring for a greater number of patients during the pandemic. “That has led to some unrealistic expectations among the patients,” Dr. Adhikari said.

Dr. Bhatt said “more than half” of a physician’s time in India is spent counseling patients on concerns about COVID-19. “Awareness about the disease is limited from the patient and patient’s family perspective, as [there is] too much apprehension toward the nature of [the] disease,” he added. “Theoretical discussions collected from social media” obstruct the physician from executing his or her duties.

Physicians in India have had to contend with physical violence from patients and individuals on the street, Dr. Adhikari added. Workplace violence was already a concern – for years, the Indian Medical Association has cited a statistic that 75% of doctors in India have experienced violence at work (Indian J Psychiatry. 2019 Apr;61[Suppl 4]:S782-5). But the threat of violence against physicians has sharply increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Disruptions to daily life through lockdowns “made people fearful, anxious, and sometimes they have found it difficult to access emergency treatment,” according to a letter published by Karthikeyan Iyengar and colleagues in the Postgraduate Medical Journal. In response to the restlessness, irritation, and despair resulting from hospitals closing their doors, “people have shown their frustration by verbally abusing and threatening to physically assault doctors and other health care workers,” the authors wrote.
 

A telemedicine boon in India

Back in the United States, hospitalists with family and friends in India were trying to figure out how to help. Some were working through the day, only to answer calls and WhatsApp messages from loved ones at night. “Everyone knows a physician or someone who’s your colleague, who owns a hospital or runs a hospital, or one of the family members is sick,” Dr. Adhikari said.

These U.S.-based hospitalists were burning the candle at both ends, helping with the pandemic in both countries. Physicians in India were posing questions to U.S. colleagues who they saw as having the most recent evidence for COVID-19 treatment. Out of the 180 physicians he trained with in India, Dr. Odeti said 110 of the physicians were in a large WhatsApp group chat that was constantly exchanging messages and serving as “kind of a friendly support group.”

In Dr. Odeti’s group chat, physicians helped one another find hospital beds for patients who reached out to them. “The first couple of weeks, there was no proper way for people to know where [patients] were based. There was no way to find if this hospital had a bed, so they reached out to any doctors they knew,” he said.

While he said it was emotionally draining, “at the same time, we felt a responsibility toward colleagues in India,” Dr. Odeti said, noting that as COVID-19 cases have decreased in India, the requests have been less frequent.

Because of concerns about traveling to India during the pandemic while on a J-1, H-1B, or other visa with the United States, directly helping friends and family in India seemed out of reach. But many hospitalists of Indian origin instead turned to telemedicine to help their colleagues. Telemedicine had already been steadily growing in India, but was accelerated by the pandemic. The current ratio of doctors to patients in India is 0.62 to 1,000 – lower than recommendations from the World Health Organization. That makes telemedicine a unique opportunity for one physician in India to reach many patients regardless of location.

Dr. Adhikari said he helped out his colleagues in India by performing consults for their patients. “They were just worried because they did not ‘know where to go, or what to get,” he said. “I was treating more patients in India than I was actually treating here.”

In March 2020, the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare released telemedicine practice guidelines for the country, which relaxed regulations on privacy requirements and has been credited in part for giving telemedicine an additional boost during the pandemic. “That makes it easy for people to reach out but also has its own problems,” Dr. Adhikari said.

Monitoring of milder COVID-19 cases that don’t require hospitalization can be performed by a nurse who calls every few hours to check on a patient, make recommendations, and text treatment plans. “The telemedicine platforms are being adopted really fast,” Dr. Adhikari said. “The platforms were built in no time.”

According to NewZoo, a games market data analytics company, India has 345.9 million smartphone users as of 2019 – the second highest number of users in the world after China. Dr. Odeti said he believes telemedicine will be widely adopted.

“In India, they are very proactive in accepting these kinds of methods, so I’m sure they will,” he said. “Governments were trying to do it before the pandemic, because access to care is a problem in India. There are villages which are very, very remote.”
 

 

 

Reversion to old systems

After the peak in late May, new COVID-19 cases in India began to decrease, and the second wave waned on a national level. Hospitals began to get the supplies they needed, beds are available, and patients aren’t as sick as before, according to Dr. Adhikari. The federal government has begun issuing supplies to patients in each state, including COVID-19 vaccines. “The peak for the second wave is gone,” he said.

What remains is a group of physicians trained in how to triage patients and create efficiencies in a hospital setting. Could those skills be put to use elsewhere in India after the pandemic?

According to Dr. Bhatt, the patient care model is likely to revert to the system that existed before. “Whatever the changes, interims of bed occupancy, cost of ICU will be temporary [and] will change to normal,” he said. “But awareness about masks [and] sanitizing methods will be permanent.”

Dr. Adhikari believes that not utilizing the skills of newly minted hospitalists in India would be a missed opportunity. “This is a silver lining from COVID-19, that hospital medicine plays a vital role in the sickest patients, whether it is in India or the U.S. or anywhere,” he said. “I think the model of hospital medicine should be adopted. It’s not: ‘Should it really be adopted or not?’ It should be. There is a huge potential in doing inpatient coordinated [care], having people dedicated in the hospital.”

There are tangible benefits to creating efficiencies in India’s health system, Dr. Odeti said. Length of stay for sicker patients “was much longer” at 10-14 days during the second wave, compared with the United States, before lowering to around 5 days. “These hospitals right now are learning the efficient ways of doing it: when to send [patients] out, how to send them out, how to [perform] service-based practices, creating processes which were nonexistent before.”

While he doesn’t personally believe physicians will adopt a full-fledged hospitalist model unless the payer structure in India changes, “these people are at an advantage with this extra set of skills,” he said. “I think all the knowledge that these people have are going to come in handy.”
 

Opportunities for growth

Dr. Odeti sees the potential for the hospitalist model to grow in India – if not into its own specialty, then in how critical care consultants handle sicker patients and handoffs.

“The critical care clinician cannot keep the patient from the time they are admitted to the ICU until the discharge, so there will be a need for the transition,” Dr. Odeti said. “In the past, there were not many capabilities in Indian health systems to take care of these extremely sick patients, and now it is evolving. I think that is one more thing that will help.”

Dr. Adhikari said hospital systems in India are beginning to realize how having dedicated hospital physicians could benefit them. In India, “if you’re sick, you go to your doctor, you get treated and you disappear,” he said. The next time, you may see the same doctor or a completely different doctor. “There’s no system there, so it’s really hard for hospital medicine as such because patients, when they are very sick, they just come to the ER. They’re not followed by their primary care.”

Anecdotally, Dr. Odeti sees patients already adapting to having access to a physician for asking questions normally answered by primary care physicians. “I think primary care will come into play,” he said. “When I was doing a Zoom call for patients, they were asking me questions about sciatica. I think they are getting comfortable with this technology.”

A hospitalist model could even be applied to specific diseases with a large population of patients. Hospital administrators “have seen this for the first time, how efficient it could be if they had their own hospitalists and actually run it. So that’s the part that has crossed their minds,” Dr. Adhikari said. “How they will apply it going forward, other than during the COVID-19 pandemic, depends on the size of the hospital and the volume of the patients for a particular disease.”

“You can see in certain areas there is large growth for hospital medicine. But to rise to the level of the United States and how we do it, India needs bigger health systems to adopt the model,” Dr. Adhikari said.

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Hospital administrators recognize the efficiencies

Hospital administrators recognize the efficiencies

A year after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the United States was getting a reprieve in new cases from its winter surge, the opposite was happening in the rest of the world. In India, a deadly second wave hit, crippling the health care system in the country for months.

Yugandhar Bhatt, MBBS, MD, a consultant pulmonologist with Yashoda Hospital–Malakpet in Hyderabad, India, told this news organization that someone looking at his hospital before the pandemic – a 400-bed multispecialty care unit – would see patients being treated for respiratory failure secondary to exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchial asthma, community-acquired pneumonia, and heart failure. About 30-40 patients per day were treated on an outpatient basis, and more than 30 people were admitted as inpatients.

“After [the] COVID-19 surge, our hospital totally divided into COVID and non-COVID [wards], in which COVID patients occupied 70% of [the] total,” he said. About half of COVID-19 patients were in the ICU, with half of those patients requiring supplemental oxygen.

During the first wave in India, which lasted from May to December 2020, 50% of patients who were intubated were discharged. The percentage of extubated patients decreased to 20% in the second wave, Dr. Bhatt said.

The death toll during the second wave of COVID-19 cases was unlike anything India has seen previously. Between March 1 and June 29, 2021, an estimated 19.24 million individuals were newly infected with COVID-19 and 241,206 patients died, according to Our World in Data, a project of the Global Change Data Lab. When the second wave peaked on May 22, more than 4,000 people were dying each day.

“All hospitals [in India] were treating COVID-19 more than any other acute or chronic disease,” Ramesh Adhikari, MD, MS, SFHM, a hospitalist with Franciscan Health in Lafayette, Ind., said in an interview.

Challenges arose in treating COVID-19 in India that ran counter to how medicine was usually performed. Physicians were seeing more inpatient cases than usual – and more patients in general. The change, Dr. Adhikari said, forced health care providers to think outside the box.
 

An ‘on-the-fly’ hospitalist model

Patients in India access health care by visiting a hospital or primary health center and then are referred out to consultants – specialist doctors – if needed. While India has universal health coverage, it is a multi-payer system that includes approximately 37% of the population covered under the government plan, a large number of private health care facilities and no caps on cost-sharing for the patient. Initiatives like Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana in 2008 and Ayushman Bharat-Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana in 2018 have attempted to close the gap and raise the number of lower-income individuals in India covered under the government plan and reduce out-of-pocket spending. Out-of-pocket payments still consist of about 70% of total health expenditures, according to the Commonwealth Fund.

Dr. Shyam Odeti

“There is not much scope for a hospitalist because it’s so cash driven,” Shyam Odeti, MD, SFHM, section chief, hospital medicine, at the Carilion Clinic in Roanoke, Va., said in an interview. “For a hospitalist, there is no urgency in getting them out of the hospital. There was no need for much efficiency before.”

The first issue during the second wave was figuring out which consultants would care for COVID-19 patients. As there is no dedicated specialty for infectious disease in India, the responsibilities fell to internists and critical care medicine consultants who volunteered. Both are considered small specialties in India. They became “makeshift hospitalists” who learned as they went and became the experts in COVID-19 care, treating their own patients while making themselves available for consultations, Dr. Odeti said.

While no official hospital medicine model in India exists like in the United States, the second COVID-19 surge caused these consultants to begin thinking like hospitalists. Tenets of hospital medicine – like team-based treatment across specialties – arose out of necessity during the crisis. “They were trying to implement a hospitalist model because that’s the only way they could treat COVID-19,” said Dr. Adhikari, an editorial advisory board member for the Hospitalist.

“Even in the U.S. when we started the hospitalist model, it started out of necessity. It’s a combination of creating efficiencies and improving quality,” Dr. Odeti said. “It’s the same thing in India. It’s borne of necessity, but it was [done] at a rapid pace.”
 

 

 

Problems with patient flow

The next issue was triaging patients in the hospital based on COVID-19 severity. When the second wave began, hospitals in India ran out of beds and experienced staff shortages like in many countries. But this situation “was unusual for the health system,” according to Dr. Odeti, who is also an editorial board member for the Hospitalist.

“We never had that issue. There were so many patients wanting to come to the hospital, and so there was this rush.” There was no process to triage patients to determine who needed to stay. “Everybody got put into the hospital,” he said.

Once it was determined who would take care of patients with COVID-19, access to supplies became the primary problem, Dr. Adhikari explained. Lack of oxygen, ventilators, and critical medicines like the antiviral drug remdesivir were and continue to be in short supply. “I had friends who [said] they could not admit patients because they were worried if their oxygen supply [went] low in the middle of the night. They will treat the patients who were already admitted versus taking new patients. That had caused problems for the administrators,” Dr. Adhikari added.

It is also a source of additional stress for the physicians. Where patients flow through a hospital medicine model in the United States, a system that might include case managers, social workers, pharmacists, physician advocates, and other professionals to keep a patient’s care on track, the physician is the go-to person in India for patient care. While physicians provide access to medications and remain available to a patient’s family, those duties become much harder when caring for a greater number of patients during the pandemic. “That has led to some unrealistic expectations among the patients,” Dr. Adhikari said.

Dr. Bhatt said “more than half” of a physician’s time in India is spent counseling patients on concerns about COVID-19. “Awareness about the disease is limited from the patient and patient’s family perspective, as [there is] too much apprehension toward the nature of [the] disease,” he added. “Theoretical discussions collected from social media” obstruct the physician from executing his or her duties.

Physicians in India have had to contend with physical violence from patients and individuals on the street, Dr. Adhikari added. Workplace violence was already a concern – for years, the Indian Medical Association has cited a statistic that 75% of doctors in India have experienced violence at work (Indian J Psychiatry. 2019 Apr;61[Suppl 4]:S782-5). But the threat of violence against physicians has sharply increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Disruptions to daily life through lockdowns “made people fearful, anxious, and sometimes they have found it difficult to access emergency treatment,” according to a letter published by Karthikeyan Iyengar and colleagues in the Postgraduate Medical Journal. In response to the restlessness, irritation, and despair resulting from hospitals closing their doors, “people have shown their frustration by verbally abusing and threatening to physically assault doctors and other health care workers,” the authors wrote.
 

A telemedicine boon in India

Back in the United States, hospitalists with family and friends in India were trying to figure out how to help. Some were working through the day, only to answer calls and WhatsApp messages from loved ones at night. “Everyone knows a physician or someone who’s your colleague, who owns a hospital or runs a hospital, or one of the family members is sick,” Dr. Adhikari said.

These U.S.-based hospitalists were burning the candle at both ends, helping with the pandemic in both countries. Physicians in India were posing questions to U.S. colleagues who they saw as having the most recent evidence for COVID-19 treatment. Out of the 180 physicians he trained with in India, Dr. Odeti said 110 of the physicians were in a large WhatsApp group chat that was constantly exchanging messages and serving as “kind of a friendly support group.”

In Dr. Odeti’s group chat, physicians helped one another find hospital beds for patients who reached out to them. “The first couple of weeks, there was no proper way for people to know where [patients] were based. There was no way to find if this hospital had a bed, so they reached out to any doctors they knew,” he said.

While he said it was emotionally draining, “at the same time, we felt a responsibility toward colleagues in India,” Dr. Odeti said, noting that as COVID-19 cases have decreased in India, the requests have been less frequent.

Because of concerns about traveling to India during the pandemic while on a J-1, H-1B, or other visa with the United States, directly helping friends and family in India seemed out of reach. But many hospitalists of Indian origin instead turned to telemedicine to help their colleagues. Telemedicine had already been steadily growing in India, but was accelerated by the pandemic. The current ratio of doctors to patients in India is 0.62 to 1,000 – lower than recommendations from the World Health Organization. That makes telemedicine a unique opportunity for one physician in India to reach many patients regardless of location.

Dr. Adhikari said he helped out his colleagues in India by performing consults for their patients. “They were just worried because they did not ‘know where to go, or what to get,” he said. “I was treating more patients in India than I was actually treating here.”

In March 2020, the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare released telemedicine practice guidelines for the country, which relaxed regulations on privacy requirements and has been credited in part for giving telemedicine an additional boost during the pandemic. “That makes it easy for people to reach out but also has its own problems,” Dr. Adhikari said.

Monitoring of milder COVID-19 cases that don’t require hospitalization can be performed by a nurse who calls every few hours to check on a patient, make recommendations, and text treatment plans. “The telemedicine platforms are being adopted really fast,” Dr. Adhikari said. “The platforms were built in no time.”

According to NewZoo, a games market data analytics company, India has 345.9 million smartphone users as of 2019 – the second highest number of users in the world after China. Dr. Odeti said he believes telemedicine will be widely adopted.

“In India, they are very proactive in accepting these kinds of methods, so I’m sure they will,” he said. “Governments were trying to do it before the pandemic, because access to care is a problem in India. There are villages which are very, very remote.”
 

 

 

Reversion to old systems

After the peak in late May, new COVID-19 cases in India began to decrease, and the second wave waned on a national level. Hospitals began to get the supplies they needed, beds are available, and patients aren’t as sick as before, according to Dr. Adhikari. The federal government has begun issuing supplies to patients in each state, including COVID-19 vaccines. “The peak for the second wave is gone,” he said.

What remains is a group of physicians trained in how to triage patients and create efficiencies in a hospital setting. Could those skills be put to use elsewhere in India after the pandemic?

According to Dr. Bhatt, the patient care model is likely to revert to the system that existed before. “Whatever the changes, interims of bed occupancy, cost of ICU will be temporary [and] will change to normal,” he said. “But awareness about masks [and] sanitizing methods will be permanent.”

Dr. Adhikari believes that not utilizing the skills of newly minted hospitalists in India would be a missed opportunity. “This is a silver lining from COVID-19, that hospital medicine plays a vital role in the sickest patients, whether it is in India or the U.S. or anywhere,” he said. “I think the model of hospital medicine should be adopted. It’s not: ‘Should it really be adopted or not?’ It should be. There is a huge potential in doing inpatient coordinated [care], having people dedicated in the hospital.”

There are tangible benefits to creating efficiencies in India’s health system, Dr. Odeti said. Length of stay for sicker patients “was much longer” at 10-14 days during the second wave, compared with the United States, before lowering to around 5 days. “These hospitals right now are learning the efficient ways of doing it: when to send [patients] out, how to send them out, how to [perform] service-based practices, creating processes which were nonexistent before.”

While he doesn’t personally believe physicians will adopt a full-fledged hospitalist model unless the payer structure in India changes, “these people are at an advantage with this extra set of skills,” he said. “I think all the knowledge that these people have are going to come in handy.”
 

Opportunities for growth

Dr. Odeti sees the potential for the hospitalist model to grow in India – if not into its own specialty, then in how critical care consultants handle sicker patients and handoffs.

“The critical care clinician cannot keep the patient from the time they are admitted to the ICU until the discharge, so there will be a need for the transition,” Dr. Odeti said. “In the past, there were not many capabilities in Indian health systems to take care of these extremely sick patients, and now it is evolving. I think that is one more thing that will help.”

Dr. Adhikari said hospital systems in India are beginning to realize how having dedicated hospital physicians could benefit them. In India, “if you’re sick, you go to your doctor, you get treated and you disappear,” he said. The next time, you may see the same doctor or a completely different doctor. “There’s no system there, so it’s really hard for hospital medicine as such because patients, when they are very sick, they just come to the ER. They’re not followed by their primary care.”

Anecdotally, Dr. Odeti sees patients already adapting to having access to a physician for asking questions normally answered by primary care physicians. “I think primary care will come into play,” he said. “When I was doing a Zoom call for patients, they were asking me questions about sciatica. I think they are getting comfortable with this technology.”

A hospitalist model could even be applied to specific diseases with a large population of patients. Hospital administrators “have seen this for the first time, how efficient it could be if they had their own hospitalists and actually run it. So that’s the part that has crossed their minds,” Dr. Adhikari said. “How they will apply it going forward, other than during the COVID-19 pandemic, depends on the size of the hospital and the volume of the patients for a particular disease.”

“You can see in certain areas there is large growth for hospital medicine. But to rise to the level of the United States and how we do it, India needs bigger health systems to adopt the model,” Dr. Adhikari said.

A year after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the United States was getting a reprieve in new cases from its winter surge, the opposite was happening in the rest of the world. In India, a deadly second wave hit, crippling the health care system in the country for months.

Yugandhar Bhatt, MBBS, MD, a consultant pulmonologist with Yashoda Hospital–Malakpet in Hyderabad, India, told this news organization that someone looking at his hospital before the pandemic – a 400-bed multispecialty care unit – would see patients being treated for respiratory failure secondary to exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchial asthma, community-acquired pneumonia, and heart failure. About 30-40 patients per day were treated on an outpatient basis, and more than 30 people were admitted as inpatients.

“After [the] COVID-19 surge, our hospital totally divided into COVID and non-COVID [wards], in which COVID patients occupied 70% of [the] total,” he said. About half of COVID-19 patients were in the ICU, with half of those patients requiring supplemental oxygen.

During the first wave in India, which lasted from May to December 2020, 50% of patients who were intubated were discharged. The percentage of extubated patients decreased to 20% in the second wave, Dr. Bhatt said.

The death toll during the second wave of COVID-19 cases was unlike anything India has seen previously. Between March 1 and June 29, 2021, an estimated 19.24 million individuals were newly infected with COVID-19 and 241,206 patients died, according to Our World in Data, a project of the Global Change Data Lab. When the second wave peaked on May 22, more than 4,000 people were dying each day.

“All hospitals [in India] were treating COVID-19 more than any other acute or chronic disease,” Ramesh Adhikari, MD, MS, SFHM, a hospitalist with Franciscan Health in Lafayette, Ind., said in an interview.

Challenges arose in treating COVID-19 in India that ran counter to how medicine was usually performed. Physicians were seeing more inpatient cases than usual – and more patients in general. The change, Dr. Adhikari said, forced health care providers to think outside the box.
 

An ‘on-the-fly’ hospitalist model

Patients in India access health care by visiting a hospital or primary health center and then are referred out to consultants – specialist doctors – if needed. While India has universal health coverage, it is a multi-payer system that includes approximately 37% of the population covered under the government plan, a large number of private health care facilities and no caps on cost-sharing for the patient. Initiatives like Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana in 2008 and Ayushman Bharat-Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana in 2018 have attempted to close the gap and raise the number of lower-income individuals in India covered under the government plan and reduce out-of-pocket spending. Out-of-pocket payments still consist of about 70% of total health expenditures, according to the Commonwealth Fund.

Dr. Shyam Odeti

“There is not much scope for a hospitalist because it’s so cash driven,” Shyam Odeti, MD, SFHM, section chief, hospital medicine, at the Carilion Clinic in Roanoke, Va., said in an interview. “For a hospitalist, there is no urgency in getting them out of the hospital. There was no need for much efficiency before.”

The first issue during the second wave was figuring out which consultants would care for COVID-19 patients. As there is no dedicated specialty for infectious disease in India, the responsibilities fell to internists and critical care medicine consultants who volunteered. Both are considered small specialties in India. They became “makeshift hospitalists” who learned as they went and became the experts in COVID-19 care, treating their own patients while making themselves available for consultations, Dr. Odeti said.

While no official hospital medicine model in India exists like in the United States, the second COVID-19 surge caused these consultants to begin thinking like hospitalists. Tenets of hospital medicine – like team-based treatment across specialties – arose out of necessity during the crisis. “They were trying to implement a hospitalist model because that’s the only way they could treat COVID-19,” said Dr. Adhikari, an editorial advisory board member for the Hospitalist.

“Even in the U.S. when we started the hospitalist model, it started out of necessity. It’s a combination of creating efficiencies and improving quality,” Dr. Odeti said. “It’s the same thing in India. It’s borne of necessity, but it was [done] at a rapid pace.”
 

 

 

Problems with patient flow

The next issue was triaging patients in the hospital based on COVID-19 severity. When the second wave began, hospitals in India ran out of beds and experienced staff shortages like in many countries. But this situation “was unusual for the health system,” according to Dr. Odeti, who is also an editorial board member for the Hospitalist.

“We never had that issue. There were so many patients wanting to come to the hospital, and so there was this rush.” There was no process to triage patients to determine who needed to stay. “Everybody got put into the hospital,” he said.

Once it was determined who would take care of patients with COVID-19, access to supplies became the primary problem, Dr. Adhikari explained. Lack of oxygen, ventilators, and critical medicines like the antiviral drug remdesivir were and continue to be in short supply. “I had friends who [said] they could not admit patients because they were worried if their oxygen supply [went] low in the middle of the night. They will treat the patients who were already admitted versus taking new patients. That had caused problems for the administrators,” Dr. Adhikari added.

It is also a source of additional stress for the physicians. Where patients flow through a hospital medicine model in the United States, a system that might include case managers, social workers, pharmacists, physician advocates, and other professionals to keep a patient’s care on track, the physician is the go-to person in India for patient care. While physicians provide access to medications and remain available to a patient’s family, those duties become much harder when caring for a greater number of patients during the pandemic. “That has led to some unrealistic expectations among the patients,” Dr. Adhikari said.

Dr. Bhatt said “more than half” of a physician’s time in India is spent counseling patients on concerns about COVID-19. “Awareness about the disease is limited from the patient and patient’s family perspective, as [there is] too much apprehension toward the nature of [the] disease,” he added. “Theoretical discussions collected from social media” obstruct the physician from executing his or her duties.

Physicians in India have had to contend with physical violence from patients and individuals on the street, Dr. Adhikari added. Workplace violence was already a concern – for years, the Indian Medical Association has cited a statistic that 75% of doctors in India have experienced violence at work (Indian J Psychiatry. 2019 Apr;61[Suppl 4]:S782-5). But the threat of violence against physicians has sharply increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Disruptions to daily life through lockdowns “made people fearful, anxious, and sometimes they have found it difficult to access emergency treatment,” according to a letter published by Karthikeyan Iyengar and colleagues in the Postgraduate Medical Journal. In response to the restlessness, irritation, and despair resulting from hospitals closing their doors, “people have shown their frustration by verbally abusing and threatening to physically assault doctors and other health care workers,” the authors wrote.
 

A telemedicine boon in India

Back in the United States, hospitalists with family and friends in India were trying to figure out how to help. Some were working through the day, only to answer calls and WhatsApp messages from loved ones at night. “Everyone knows a physician or someone who’s your colleague, who owns a hospital or runs a hospital, or one of the family members is sick,” Dr. Adhikari said.

These U.S.-based hospitalists were burning the candle at both ends, helping with the pandemic in both countries. Physicians in India were posing questions to U.S. colleagues who they saw as having the most recent evidence for COVID-19 treatment. Out of the 180 physicians he trained with in India, Dr. Odeti said 110 of the physicians were in a large WhatsApp group chat that was constantly exchanging messages and serving as “kind of a friendly support group.”

In Dr. Odeti’s group chat, physicians helped one another find hospital beds for patients who reached out to them. “The first couple of weeks, there was no proper way for people to know where [patients] were based. There was no way to find if this hospital had a bed, so they reached out to any doctors they knew,” he said.

While he said it was emotionally draining, “at the same time, we felt a responsibility toward colleagues in India,” Dr. Odeti said, noting that as COVID-19 cases have decreased in India, the requests have been less frequent.

Because of concerns about traveling to India during the pandemic while on a J-1, H-1B, or other visa with the United States, directly helping friends and family in India seemed out of reach. But many hospitalists of Indian origin instead turned to telemedicine to help their colleagues. Telemedicine had already been steadily growing in India, but was accelerated by the pandemic. The current ratio of doctors to patients in India is 0.62 to 1,000 – lower than recommendations from the World Health Organization. That makes telemedicine a unique opportunity for one physician in India to reach many patients regardless of location.

Dr. Adhikari said he helped out his colleagues in India by performing consults for their patients. “They were just worried because they did not ‘know where to go, or what to get,” he said. “I was treating more patients in India than I was actually treating here.”

In March 2020, the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare released telemedicine practice guidelines for the country, which relaxed regulations on privacy requirements and has been credited in part for giving telemedicine an additional boost during the pandemic. “That makes it easy for people to reach out but also has its own problems,” Dr. Adhikari said.

Monitoring of milder COVID-19 cases that don’t require hospitalization can be performed by a nurse who calls every few hours to check on a patient, make recommendations, and text treatment plans. “The telemedicine platforms are being adopted really fast,” Dr. Adhikari said. “The platforms were built in no time.”

According to NewZoo, a games market data analytics company, India has 345.9 million smartphone users as of 2019 – the second highest number of users in the world after China. Dr. Odeti said he believes telemedicine will be widely adopted.

“In India, they are very proactive in accepting these kinds of methods, so I’m sure they will,” he said. “Governments were trying to do it before the pandemic, because access to care is a problem in India. There are villages which are very, very remote.”
 

 

 

Reversion to old systems

After the peak in late May, new COVID-19 cases in India began to decrease, and the second wave waned on a national level. Hospitals began to get the supplies they needed, beds are available, and patients aren’t as sick as before, according to Dr. Adhikari. The federal government has begun issuing supplies to patients in each state, including COVID-19 vaccines. “The peak for the second wave is gone,” he said.

What remains is a group of physicians trained in how to triage patients and create efficiencies in a hospital setting. Could those skills be put to use elsewhere in India after the pandemic?

According to Dr. Bhatt, the patient care model is likely to revert to the system that existed before. “Whatever the changes, interims of bed occupancy, cost of ICU will be temporary [and] will change to normal,” he said. “But awareness about masks [and] sanitizing methods will be permanent.”

Dr. Adhikari believes that not utilizing the skills of newly minted hospitalists in India would be a missed opportunity. “This is a silver lining from COVID-19, that hospital medicine plays a vital role in the sickest patients, whether it is in India or the U.S. or anywhere,” he said. “I think the model of hospital medicine should be adopted. It’s not: ‘Should it really be adopted or not?’ It should be. There is a huge potential in doing inpatient coordinated [care], having people dedicated in the hospital.”

There are tangible benefits to creating efficiencies in India’s health system, Dr. Odeti said. Length of stay for sicker patients “was much longer” at 10-14 days during the second wave, compared with the United States, before lowering to around 5 days. “These hospitals right now are learning the efficient ways of doing it: when to send [patients] out, how to send them out, how to [perform] service-based practices, creating processes which were nonexistent before.”

While he doesn’t personally believe physicians will adopt a full-fledged hospitalist model unless the payer structure in India changes, “these people are at an advantage with this extra set of skills,” he said. “I think all the knowledge that these people have are going to come in handy.”
 

Opportunities for growth

Dr. Odeti sees the potential for the hospitalist model to grow in India – if not into its own specialty, then in how critical care consultants handle sicker patients and handoffs.

“The critical care clinician cannot keep the patient from the time they are admitted to the ICU until the discharge, so there will be a need for the transition,” Dr. Odeti said. “In the past, there were not many capabilities in Indian health systems to take care of these extremely sick patients, and now it is evolving. I think that is one more thing that will help.”

Dr. Adhikari said hospital systems in India are beginning to realize how having dedicated hospital physicians could benefit them. In India, “if you’re sick, you go to your doctor, you get treated and you disappear,” he said. The next time, you may see the same doctor or a completely different doctor. “There’s no system there, so it’s really hard for hospital medicine as such because patients, when they are very sick, they just come to the ER. They’re not followed by their primary care.”

Anecdotally, Dr. Odeti sees patients already adapting to having access to a physician for asking questions normally answered by primary care physicians. “I think primary care will come into play,” he said. “When I was doing a Zoom call for patients, they were asking me questions about sciatica. I think they are getting comfortable with this technology.”

A hospitalist model could even be applied to specific diseases with a large population of patients. Hospital administrators “have seen this for the first time, how efficient it could be if they had their own hospitalists and actually run it. So that’s the part that has crossed their minds,” Dr. Adhikari said. “How they will apply it going forward, other than during the COVID-19 pandemic, depends on the size of the hospital and the volume of the patients for a particular disease.”

“You can see in certain areas there is large growth for hospital medicine. But to rise to the level of the United States and how we do it, India needs bigger health systems to adopt the model,” Dr. Adhikari said.

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