| Literature DB >> 32525707 |
Ross Kristal1, Madden Rowell2, Marielle Kress3, Chris Keeley4, Hannah Jackson5, Katherine Piwnica-Worms6, Lisa Hendricks7, Theodore G Long8, Andrew B Wallach9.
Abstract
In early March 2020 an outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in New York City exerted sudden and extreme pressures on emergency medical services and quickly changed public health policy and clinical guidance. Recognizing this, New York City Health + Hospitals established a clinician-staffed COVID-19 hotline for all New Yorkers. The hotline underwent three phases as the health crisis evolved. As of May 1, 2020, the hotline had received more than ninety thousand calls and was staffed by more than a thousand unique clinicians. Hotline clinicians provided callers with clinical assessment and guidance, registered them for home symptom monitoring, connected them to social services, and provided a source of up-to-date answers to COVID-19 questions. By connecting New Yorkers with hotline clinicians, regardless of their regular avenues of accessing care, the hotline aimed to ease the pressures on the city's overtaxed emergency medical services. Future consideration should be given to promoting easy access to clinician hotlines by disadvantaged communities early in a public health crisis and to evaluating the impact of clinician hotlines on clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Ambulatory care; COVID-19; Clinician hotline; Diseases; Emergency departments; Emergency medical services; Health care providers; Health policy; Nurses; Pandemics; Patient testing; Public Health; Technology; coronavirus; hospitals
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32525707 DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2020.00902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Aff (Millwood) ISSN: 0278-2715 Impact factor: 6.301