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Xenophobia and the Cost to Adolescents

Increasing xenophobia affects adolescents of all communities

The May, 2018 issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health has a commentary entitled, “The Negative Health Consequences of Anti-Immigration Policies.” In it, author Marissa Raymond-Flesch, MD, MPH writes about the increasing xenophobia and the rise of hate groups in the United States. The research article she references found that immigrants with Temporary Protection Status (TPS), surprisingly, did not have a protective effect against the stress and anxiety of family separation, negative impacts on children, and concern about children’s educational attainment.

Adolescent Boys

Image courtesy of Davidlohr Bueso, used by Creative Commons license

In my own adolescent practice the level of anxiety among teens is skyrocketing. School shootings, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids, deportation and the breakup of families are certainly playing a role. I worry about the hidden underbelly, however. How many teens are foregoing preventive health services and interventions at an early stage because of the loss of trust in the system designed to protect the public health of all Americans.

I don’t ask about immigration status of my patients any more. There have been too many breaches of trust in the health care system, and I would hate to be the one that actually causes harm (primum non nocere). This unspoken stressor, however, likely plays a greater role in health of the teen and their family than many of the other psycho-social questions I do ask – whether it be domestic violence, sex trafficking, bullying, or suicidal ideation. How can I, as an MD and as a public health practitioner ignore the evidence that’s out there and not intervene?

Advocacy is important, but increasingly it seems that the divide in the US over ideological differences is wider than it’s ever been. Yet, for most of us, our goals are the same. Our immigrant families are coming here because they want a better life for themselves and their family. Isn’t that the philosophy on which our country was founded? They aren’t taking our jobs, yet if we lock them out of our communities they do weigh down our social service safety nets. If we lock them out of healthcare they become the vectors by which disease spreads. Teens without access to education become our illiterate and impoverished adults. Without preventive care they become teen parents who deliver preemie babies who become legal citizens yet cost us millions in their first years of life.

Common Goals

I think all of us, regardless of our political ideology need to consider what is important to us and the health of our adolescents. I would propose the following values (and please add to this in the comments below):

1. We want our teens to be healthy
2. We want our kids to go to a good school and get an education
3. We want our children to be safe
4. We don’t want our children to have children of their own until their life trajectory is firmly established
5. We want our teens to grow up to be contributing members of a health community, not a drain on social resources

Living in a community is a social contract. Together we can be better than any one of us alone. Our society is increasingly interconnected and dependent. I accept having to stop at a traffic signal so that I can safely walk across a street without being hit by a car. I enjoy an iced coffee in a community coffee shop which I could not create on my own. Each of us has our own gifts to contribute to a greater whole.

It is especially apparent how priorities play out as I transfer my community membership from Minneapolis, where I’ve lived for the last 23 years to my new community of Indianapolis. There is evidence of investment in both, yet also evidence of benign neglect. I don’t want this piece to be about politics, but I am pleased to see some of the values the community I join here is trying to grow.

As we each reflect on our values, let us each think of how we can grow together as a community. Let’s try to leave the xenophobia behind, and let our elected leaders know the value of our immigrant brothers and sisters. The fear and uncertainty of our current practices hurt us all.

 

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The Cost of Documentation in the American Healthcare System

Healthcare Documentation

Image courtesy of anankkml at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

One of my colleagues today over lunch suggested that if we only had body cameras like the police, we could see more patients. We wouldn’t have to spend all of the time we do creating documentation of visits.

Of course that wouldn’t work, because documentation of visits serves a number of purposes:

  1. Reference for other care providers on the health care team
  2. Reference for me (I can’t possibly remember details on all of the patients I’ve seen in 19+ years of practice)
  3. Documentation of the visit supporting insurance claims
  4. Documentation of my practice style for peer review
  5. A legal document of the visit for future lawsuits (either against me, an employer or someone who caused an injury, or even for a class action suit against a pharmaceutical company or medical device company)
  6. Documentation for quality improvement efforts
  7. Possible documentation supporting retrospective research (patients typically sign a document initially allowing or disallowing this use when they first join a practice, and can revoke it in the future at any point)

Because of all of these uses, it is critical that my documentation accurately reflect the visit. Unfortunately, a complex visit often has complex documentation. In my practice, because of the complexity of patients I work with, I am afforded the luxury of 60 or 90 minute appointments. 6 follow-up patients at 60 minutes a piece, though, is 6 hours out of my day. Add in a noon meeting, prescription refills, telephone follow-up and a few emails, and it’s a long day already. Adolescent medicine is a uniquely feeling field – as an introvert by nature, I’ve found that spending the day intuiting implied responses and sensing the unsaid leaves me quite tired. It’s difficult to force myself to revisit each of those visits to complete the documentation (I’ve described it to some colleagues as PTSD inducing to relive each visit) that same day.

One of my colleagues recently resigned her position because of difficulty keeping up with documentation. A number of my other colleagues have asked for a medical scribe to assist with the documentation chore. The police camera idea is what we all wish it could be (but not really, of course). Many primary care colleagues describe taking work home to complete after the kids have gone to bed, or regularly staying for 3-4 hours after clinic has closed. I had one, somewhat misguided, medical director tell the providers (in a past practice) that full-time was expected to be, be definition, 60 hours a week.

What is the answer? Electronic health record vendors would like us to believe that their software will improve our life and increase productivity. Unfortunately, the only ones that seem to deliver on that promise are ones that fail the above purposes. I have seen templates that are blown in to a visit that introduce so many errors, that the record is unusable (which gives a savvy lawyer grist to question all of our documentation). All it takes is one medical student to document that my patient with cerebral palsy instead has spina bifida. Suddenly, all the consultants are auto-populating an incorrect problem list, and it looks like my patient suddenly developed a hole in their back. A recent enteroscope through an ileostomy described entering through the rectum and advancing to the proximal jejunum. Now that would take a skilled gastroenterologist! Especially since this patient did not have a connection between their rectum and their small bowel.

Perhaps, then, the interim answer really is scribes. At least until technology catches up with the needs of the profession. I’ve always said that medicine was 10 years behind business in utilizing computer technology – not in all areas (radiation oncology, for example, is quite advanced, as are parts of radiology) – but in most. When was the last time you had to think about losing your document if the computer crashed? I still do.

Scribes are not inexpensive, however. In most settings where they are used their cost can be justified by increased productivity. Medicine, however, is largely built on scientific enquiry, and there is little published on the cost effectiveness. Certainly in high pressure or high volume circumstances, the ROI is fairly easy. Unfortunately, my 60 or 90 minute visits don’t even cover the overhead. We stay in the black because my services prevent negative outcomes and result in referrals to other more lucrative services. It’s a difficult ask.

 

For more discussion on medical scribes, see a nice article by blogger, Kevin Pho, MD who blogs under the twitter handle of @kevinmd: “The disturbing confessions of a medical scribe”

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Why The Teen Whisperer?

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photo credit: vanessa_hutd via photopin cc

A colleague of mine last week described a conversation with another colleague. This other provider apparently described me as, “The Teen Whisperer.” Although that’s somewhat flattering, I did, at the time think, “Wow! There’s the name for the blog I’ve been meaning to put together.”

So here it is – the musings of an Internist / Pediatrician who sub specializes in adolescents. Expect that this blog will wander all over the place – from formal adolescent medicine topics, to topics of teens and young adults with disability, to general pediatrics, general adult medicine, and likely the use of technology in healthcare. This is my personal blog, so I will likely be sporadic in posting, but I encourage the engagement of others who share my interests and I will try to respond to feedback.

 

Thank you for indulging me! Stay safe, Eric.

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