Marshall Health Expands Community Health Worker Program

A new investment in community health workers could help West Virginians with chronic diseases better manage their conditions through the community health worker model.

A new investment in community health workers could help West Virginians with chronic diseases better manage their conditions through the community health worker model.

Marshall Health received a $750,000 grant from Aetna Better Health of West Virginia, which will be used to integrate community health workers at 10 new sites to support patients with chronic conditions, including hypertension, diabetes, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cancer and metabolic syndrome.

“The Marshall model is unique to Marshall, because it is a medical model. And so the community health worker becomes a member of the chronic care management team,” Deb Koester, an assistant professor and director of the Division of Community Health at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, said. “Their purpose is to really support the providers plan of care and serve as a linkage between clinical community linkage. So, when they are doing weekly visits in the home, they see many things we don’t see in the clinic.”

Community health workers work closely with local health care providers, regularly follow up with patients in their homes and communities to help them navigate clinical services and facilitate linkages to other non-clinical, community-based services.

This model has shown improved health outcomes in the more than 25 counties in West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky where it has been used because community health workers help remove barriers to transportation, food instability, financial instability and other barriers to health.

“This will directly add it’s really a workforce development opportunity to expand the number and sites that have community health workers that can be serving,” Koester said. “It really reinforces the physician’s plan of care. And so it reduces hospitalizations, it reduces the emergency department visits, it addresses those social determinants of health that can be barriers to following that plan of care. And it helps them follow the physician’s plan.”

The Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine’s Department of Family and Community Health initiated the community health worker model nearly a decade ago with support from the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation.

Congressional Earmarks Secure Millions For Two State Health Programs

The state stands to benefit from another 10 million dollars in federal funding to support community health initiatives.

The state stands to benefit from another $10 million in federal funding to support community health initiatives.

Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito announced $5 million Monday for the New River Health Association in Fayette County.

The money will go towards combining and expanding New River’s services in one large medical complex in the former Oak Hill Kmart.

“The facility will house primary medical and dental services, behavioral health services, substance abuse treatment services, pulmonary rehabilitation services, chiropractic services, and a pharmacy with a drive through window,” said New River Health Association CEO John Schultz.

“The creation of a conference center is also part of the project. We believe that a state of the art conference center located near the New River Gorge National Park will be a natural draw for national, regional, state and local conferences.”

On Friday the senators also announced close to $5 million for the Marshall University Center Of Excellence For Recovery to support its efforts to help West Virginians suffering from substance use disorder or behavioral health issues.

““The Marshall University Center of Excellence for Recovery is on the frontlines of the fight against the devastating drug epidemic that continues to ravage our state,” Manchin said. “The funding announced today will support Marshall University’s work to address mental and behavioral health needs in rural and underserved areas across the state.”

Both projects are funded through Congressionally Directed Spending requests, better known as earmarks, that allow state and local governments, non-profits, and other public entities to apply for targeted funding for projects.

New Rural Surgical Residency Program Accredited At Marshall

A first of its kind rural medicine program at Marshall University has received initial accreditation.

A first of its kind rural medicine program at Marshall University has received initial accreditation.

The new joint rural surgery residency program at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine and Logan Regional Medical Center earned initial accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.

The new residency pioneers a training model designed to address specific benchmarks unique to surgeons practicing in a rural setting. It was developed in part with a $750,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The Marshall Community Health Consortium partnered with Logan Regional Medical Center to develop curriculum, recruit faculty and address the clinical and learning environment needs required to obtain accreditation.

As a rural program, residents have to spend at least 50 percent of their five-year program in Logan.

The Association of American Medical Colleges expects a shortage of between 23,100 and 31,600 general surgeons by 2025.

The rural surgery residency program will officially launch and welcome its first residents in July 2023.

W. Va. Doctor Makes Sport Injury Advancements

A new surgery technique created by a West Virginia doctor and studied in the state is now catching the attention of athletes and surgeons around the United States.

The technique, developed by lifelong state resident Dr. Chad Lavender, helps to improve successes in orthopedic cases like ACL tears.

Dr. Seth Baublitz, an orthopedic surgeon in Lancaster, Pennsylvania doesn’t typically perform surgery on relatives, but he used Lavender’s technique on his own daughter last spring.

“I wanted to be the one that was going to do her surgery because I certainly felt like I could give her the best ACL,” he said.

The ACL, which is an acronym for anterior cruciate ligament, is one of the key ligaments that help stabilize your knee joint. Some awkward movements can tear this ligament, in which case it might need to be replaced through surgery.

Baublitz’s daughter played lacrosse in high school. During her senior year, out in the field, she tore her ACL.

“She went down, I happened to be on the sidelines… And I knew right away, it wasn’t a good situation,” Baublitz said.

She would need an ACL reconstruction and have to sit out the rest of the season. But Baublitz had started using Lavender’s technique of surgery, and he hoped it would get his daughter back on her feet quickly.

“So I successfully did the procedure in April, and she was wearing high heels to prom two weeks later and certainly was running in about eight weeks,” he said.

Lavender, who created the surgical technique, works for Marshall Health Orthopedics in Scott Depot.

“It’s really exciting for me, and for us here at Marshall, to hear these stories,” Lavender said.

Lavender grew up in Chesapeake, West Virginia. He attended medical school at Marshall University and got his bachelor’s degree at West Virginia University. There he played football, an experience that informed his medical career.

“I saw athletes get hurt, and how it affected their life, not just that year, but maybe the future,” Lavender said.

To treat a torn ACL, surgeons often use tendon from the patient’s kneecap to create a new ligament.

Lavender wanted to improve upon this surgery to hopefully lessen postoperative pain and shorten recovery time. He brought in representatives from Arthrex, a medical device company.

“We sat down initially and we said ‘Here’s our problem. How do we fix it?’” Lavender said.

His answer was the “fertilized ACL” technique. It uses stem cells taken from a patient’s bone marrow and an internal brace. The stem cells help with healing, and the brace helps with stability.

Lavender says most patients receiving this surgery are high school athletes.

“No matter whether somebody just needs to go back to work, or they need to play soccer next year, football next year, they all need to get back to doing what they love to do,” Lavender said.

Sholten Singer
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Marshall Health
Dr. Chad Lavender consults with a patient regarding ACL surgery.

Lavender has performed this surgery on about 150 patients. And he’s teaching the method to doctors across the globe.

Marshall Health is more than a year into a clinical trial that compares the healing of those who had a conventional ACL reconstruction with Lavender’s new method. The study isn’t published yet, but Lavender says preliminary data shows a difference. Typically, full recovery time with traditional ACL surgery is more than six months.

“We’ve tested every patient functionally at 12 weeks. The fertilized group is around 80% of their normal knee function at that time frame. The other group is around 30% of their normal knee function,” Lavender said.

This clinical study is still underway, but findings should be published within the next six months.

Lavender always envisioned that his technique would be created and studied in his home state. He said about one in 10 patients come from other states to receive this surgery.

“This is a technique that we think everybody in the state should be proud of,” Lavender said. “When you have people traveling to West Virginia for medical care, I think that’s an outstanding thing.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

What More Can Be Done For Huntington's Opioid Crisis?

The City of Huntington and Cabell County are in federal court, taking prescription opioid distributors to task. If the city and county win their lawsuit, that could result in a payout of tens of millions of dollars. And in theory, that money could help fix the problem.

Dr. Lyn O’Connell works with the City of Huntington to tackle the substance use crisis through clinical services, research and program development.

She was also part of a team that produced a “resiliency plan” in 2020 for Huntington. The plan outlines a continuum of care her community could implement to stomp out the opioid crisis.

Health reporter June Leffler asked O’Connell how much a big settlement could loosen the grip opioids have on her community.

This interview was lightly edited for clarity.

Leffler: Do tell me what more we could see in a place like Huntington that already has so many different groups trying to tackle this issue?

O’Connell: I think what many folks imagine is that if an individual wants help, they just pick up the phone, or they just go to the doctor, or they walk in somewhere. It’s really not that easy.

There may be legal issues that need to be handled, there may be child or custodial issues that need to be handled. There may be wait lists that prevent them from doing any of those things. And so what we want to make sure is that we have a system that when someone says “I am ready and willing to enter treatment,” that there are no roadblocks. That transportation is not an issue, insurance is not an issue, that we’re coordinating across all of our systems to ensure that they have easy access. Because we know that when someone is ready and willing, that is the best time to intervene with that individual.

But we also know that it’s not just the individual, it’s the system, the family and the community. It’s a multi-factorial need. Every time that you quote solve one issue, you realize that there’s 10 more sitting behind it.

Leffler: What you think big settlement for the county and the city could accomplish? And what can any amount of money still not get done?

O’Connell: It’s such a challenge, because how do you value a single life lost? How do you place a value on those long-term negative impacts? I, for one, don’t know how to do that. And what can $1 do? Everything and nothing, simultaneously.

We have had grant funding that has allowed us to set up programs like PROACT, that make a concrete difference every day in the lives of people in our community. And things like Project Hope for Women and Children. But to some of the larger sort of systemic and philosophical issues that we’re facing, we will probably always be facing those.

If we take stigma, for example, if we don’t address people’s beliefs that other people aren’t as worth saving, we’re still going to have these fights and these issues, because we’ll have barriers. We’ll have providers who maybe don’t want to work with an individual with a substance use history, or employers that don’t want to hire someone with a substance use history, or judges that may not want to give someone a second chance, whether that’s remaining out of jail or prison or gaining greater custody and access to their children.

We can set up programs and improve access. But we also need to slowly work to educate that no one wakes up one day and hopes to enter a life of substance use disorder. Ideally, multi-millions of dollars being returned to this community could be used to comprehensively address both the concrete issues, but also start to address the philosophical needs as well.

Staying Home Doesn’t Mean You Can’t Stay Healthy – Experts Promote Telehealth During Coronavirus

Medical experts have spent years promoting telehealth as an option for rural areas with little access to in-person care.

Now, after West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice issued a “stay home” order that took effect on Tuesday, March 24, some medical providers are offering telehealth as a way to keep more people healthy at home during the coronavirus. 

Dr. Jennifer Mallow at WVU Medicine describes telehealth as “the use of communication and information technology to share information.”

“We can provide clinical care,” Mallow said. “We can provide education, we can provide public health, we can provide administrative services at a distance.”

Telehealth spans several methods and types of technology, most prominently phone and video conferencing.

Mallow and Dr. Steve Davis, a WVU associate professor, are working on a pilot to provide telehealth options to patients with traumatic brain injuries, disabilities and the elderly.  

Davis said he foresees elements of the project helping those who are particularly vulnerable to the coronavirus.

“The patient can [stay] at home, because we don’t want them to come in and be exposed, or expose other people, to COVID-19,” Davis said.

Virtual Urgent Care Visits, Free Of Charge

WVU Medicine is offering video urgent care appointments at no cost, for anyone more than five years old who is experiencing symptoms potentially related to the coronavirus. The WVU-owned Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown also has been operating a 24-hour phone line, at 304-598-6000, option 4, since mid-March.

On Thursday, March 26, WVU reported going from six to 538 video visits in the course of three weeks. Their phone appointments experienced a similar spike, from 20 to 671 in the same length of time. 

In Kanawha County, the Charleston Area Medical Center is opening up its 24/7 Care app for urgent video appointments to the public.

“As a nation, as a world actually, you’re trying to flatten the curve and get ahead of this virus,” said Rebecca Harless with CAMC’s ambulatory services. 

Normally, Harless said an urgent care visit at CAMC would cost $49 out of pocket. Right now, anyone who may be displaying coronavirus symptoms can use a “COVID” coupon to get a free appointment.

“They’re able to speak to a provider, one of our employee providers, and understand where they fall, where their symptoms fall in that algorithm of, you know, ‘Am I okay to stay home?’” Harless said. “A lot of people are really scared out there right now.

Rather than everyone flood the hospitals and clinics at once, West Virginia Commissioner for Public Health Dr. Cathy Slemp recommends people stay at home if they are experiencing symptoms at a non-life-threatening level. 

“If you are waiting for test results, or you are thinking you might have this, or you know you have it, you want to treat it as if you do,” Slemp said at the governor’s March 24 press briefing. “So what you do is, first, you want to stay home. If you need to go to the grocery story, someone else goes for you. At the pharmacy, you don’t want to be around other folks.”

Efforts To Loosen Federal Restrictions On Reimbursement

Slemp told the press on Wednesday she and the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources are working on educating providers throughout the state about telehealth, and what options providers have for implementation.

Traditionally, getting paid for telehealth has been a challenge. Regulations from the federal Department of Health and Human Services, which regulates Medicare for people 65 years old and up, only reimburse telehealth services when there’s an available video option.

This makes it difficult for most providers to offer phone-only services, which could aid elderly patients living in rural areas without reliable broadband access.

The West Virginia Bureau for Medical Services, which oversees Medicaid for low-income people and families, normally enforces the same requirement for telehealth.

According to Commissioner Cindy Beane, the state already allows Medicaid to reimburse phone and audio-only appointments, to keep more people at home.

“Truly, we’re in an emergency. We’re waiving all your normal things that you have to worry about, as providers,” Beane said. “Especially when we know that the person’s sick, we don’t want them going to the ER. We want you to call, and route them the appropriate way.”

The coronavirus response bill that passed the Senate on Thursday, March 26, gives federal officials the authority to waive the video-only requirement. 

The U.S. Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services already announced on March 17 it temporarily waiving certain HIPAA requirements, such as restrictions that forbidding patients and providers from using “everyday communications technologies” such as Skype and Facetime, and other restrictions barring certain patients from taking their calls in-home, versus an approved facility. 

The Struggle With Broadband

“Broadband, I mean, is an issue, pandemic or no pandemic for us,” said Williamson Health and Wellness chronic care director Amy Reed.

The Williamson Health and Wellness Center in Mingo County is a federally qualified health center that offers patients a range of services including behavioral, dental and pediatric. It recently began offering and promoting video and phone appointments to its patients who are technologically able, as Medicare and Medicaid allow.

Reed said she and others at Williamson Health have noticed the development making a difference for some.

“We know that our population, the patients that we serve, are more vulnerable, they’re more at risk,” she said. 

The U.S. Census estimated in 2018 almost 19 percent of the Mingo County population was over 65 years old. That same year, the U.S. Census estimated almost 20 percent of the entire state was over 65. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports people older than 65, and those with pre-existing health conditions like HIV and asthma, are at a higher risk for catching the coronavirus than others. 

“So, it’s made a huge difference in being able to provide them what they need, and not send them to the hospital, not send them to the emergency rooms,” Reed said. “We’re actually able to look at them and have those conversations.” 

Reed says she wishes telemedicine was something she could offer to every patient year-round, due to the age, health needs and lack of transportation of the population they serve. But she’s worried the waivers won’t remain in place after the pandemic ends, and that these services won’t be allowed to continue. 

Reed also said the health center would have more requirements to meet, as a federally qualified health center offering several types of practice, than other primary care providers in the state. 

“There’s a huge risk just because, you know, you get your patients dependent on that, they see that it’s there. ‘Oh, you’re doing it now, why can’t you do it later?’” Reed said.

Davis at WVU said he hopes once the pandemic subsides, some of the changes in federal regulations will remain in place. 

“As we look at sustainability,” Davis said, “one of my hopes is that, one of the good things about the COVID-19 is that we’ll come out of it and will realize, ‘ah, we can use telehealth for all of these things, and we ought to be paying for it.’”

Marshall Health through Marshall University is partnering with the Mountain Health Network in Cabell County to develop telehealth options for residents there. 

Mon Health in and around Monongalia County is collaborating on services with CAMC. As of Friday, March 27, Mon Health announced that entails virtual video visits for primary care, psychiatry, behavioral health and urology with plans to expand into neurology, obstetrics and cardiology appointments. 

This service requires reliable internet access and is for patients with minor medical conditions. Mon Health said Friday they are waiving associated patient fees for this service. 

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 

 

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