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Throughout much of the spring, Central Oregonians stepped up and supported St. Charles Health System in a variety of ways: by donating money for caregivers on the front line of the fight against COVID-19, by delivering a bounty of food and drinks to essential workers at the organization’s hospitals and by hand-crafting more than 10,000 cloth masks to supplement the system’s supply of medical-grade masks.

So when it came time to thank the community through action, St. Charles leadership zeroed in on Gov. Kate Brown’s plan to place paid and volunteer contact tracers in each Oregon county. Ensuring adequate contact tracing, Brown has said, will allow the state’s public health system to effectively identify and treat new cases of COVID-19, trace contacts to identify those at risk of infection and contain new outbreaks before community spread can occur.

“Throughout this pandemic, our health system has been buoyed by an outpouring of community support,” said Dr. Jim Guyn, senior vice president of population health. “Offering some of our caregivers to help with contact tracing felt like one way we could give back to Central Oregon. We want people to stay well and for local businesses to stay open.”

After discussions with public health officials in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties, St. Charles identified six Community Health Educators from family care clinics in Bend, Madras, Prineville and Redmond to take the Oregon Health Authority’s online contact tracing training. Those six caregivers have not yet started working with the counties – that’s expected to start in July, after a few final details are nailed down – but they’re ready when the call comes, said Maggie O’Connor, manager of community health strategy for St. Charles.

“Everyone on this team was so willing to sign up for the training session and to get going,” she said. “It’s definitely a great opportunity for us to serve the community in a new capacity.”

The CHEs who’ll take on contact tracing work are Nancy Burham in Redmond, Molly Christopher in Madras and Sisters, Catalina Gibson and Molly Olheiser in Prineville, and Gabrielle Gilmore and Rachel Nelles in Bend. The six are uniquely qualified to do contact tracing because of the parallels to their normal daily duties, which include serving as an extra layer of social support for patients who are struggling with housing, food insecurity, transportation, finances, domestic safety and so on.

“If our providers or behavioral health counselors have a concern about a patient, we get pulled in to help wrap around them in the context of those social needs,” said Olheiser. “The really cool thing about our job is that we’re able to establish relationships with people, and we’re with them through some of the most stressful times of their lives as a resource and a source of support.”

CHEs work with patients both in the clinic and at their home, and they are trained to communicate with patients in a way that makes them feel comfortable talking openly about their lives. That skill should translate seamlessly to contact tracing, said Gilmore.

“We’ll be getting names of people who have come into contact with someone who has COVID-19, and we’ll interview them and follow up with them to make sure they understand the disease and what they should be doing,” she said. “That extended interaction with them will give us an opportunity to assess their resource needs and make sure they’re being met. And that’s obviously something we’re used to doing on a daily basis.”

In other words, both community health education and contact tracing require not just specific health-related knowledge, but also people skills, cultural competency, compassion and empathy.

“It’s a little nerve-wracking because I know COVID-19 can be a really scary thing for people, but we’re trained to deal with delivering that type of news and information,” Olheiser said.

Burham concurred: “You need to be able to think on the fly and to know what resources are available. We’re all highly trained and well-connected within Central Oregon.”

No one is sure how long the CHEs will assist the counties with contact tracing, but the aim is to have them in place well ahead of flu season, when COVID-19 could surge, O’Connor said.

Until they are asked to stand down, contact tracing will be the CHEs’ top priority, she said. And that’s OK with them.

“I’m excited because I really think that this is a way our team can help the community by helping to curb the spread of the virus and keep it contained,” Burham said. “We know COVID-19 spreads from one person to another to another, and if we can cut off some of those connections and slow the virus, that’s a great thing to be a part of.”

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The COVID-19 pandemic has forced health systems like St. Charles to make rapid changes in a matter of days that previously would have taken months or years – and that’s a good thing.

“We know the health care industry needs to change,” said Joe Sluka, president and CEO of St. Charles. “People should have the right to access care the way they want to and at a price they can afford.”

Yet, the ability to change quickly has often been difficult in a complex, highly regulated system that doesn’t control most of its own costs or how it is paid for services. Because health systems, like other businesses, had to adapt quickly during the COVID-19 pandemic, now is a good time to evaluate the changes made, focus on what worked and on sustaining positive forward momentum.

To that end, St. Charles is asking patients and community members for help redesigning health care. The organization has put together a short survey and is asking for feedback on the current health care system and ideas for improvement.

“I hope we hear from thousands of Central Oregonians with their thoughts on how we can improve,” Sluka said. “We want all your wildly creative ideas along with information on your specific experiences to help us reframe the way we think about the services we provide.”

Those who are willing could also have the chance to participate in a virtual focus group to provide more detailed information and discussion on the topic of health care improvement.

Take the survey  Encuesta española

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Most Thursdays, Angelina Zamboni and her family make a trip to the Colima Market in Bend to buy fresh tamales and carnitas.

“It’s a fun little ritual for us,” said Zamboni, a family nurse practitioner with St. Charles whose husband is Salvadoran. “The food is wonderful and it brings in a lot of Spanish-speaking folks, so it’s a nice chance to connect with our community.”

A few weeks ago, however, Zamboni noticed something when she was inside the store.

“I was the only person wearing a mask,” she said. “There was a line down the aisle of Latino families, and not a single person was wearing a mask. So I came home and shot Emily an email and said, ‘Here’s my proposal.’ And she wrote me back immediately and said, ‘Let’s do it.’”

The Emily who emailed back was Emily Salmon, St. Charles’ director of Population Health, who saw Zamboni’s idea — to set up a table outside Colima Market, talk to people and hand out cloth masks — as a natural extension of St. Charles’ mission: Creating America’s healthiest community, together.

In the space of a few days, a small team of caregivers at St. Charles pulled together what Zamboni needed, including 25 cloth masks donated to St. Charles by local mask-makers and Spanish instructions on how to use and care for them. Zamboni called Colima Market and asked permission to set up near their door, and she even put a mask on a cardboard cutout of famous Mexican singer and actor Vicente Fernandez in hopes of drawing people to the table.

On May 21, Colima opened its doors for “Tamale Thursday” and Zamboni was there with her son Angelo, ready to talk to whoever showed up. It took some work to engage with people, she said, but once they realized Zamboni could fluently speak their language — and that the masks were free — most warmed up to the message.

“We had an older man who was hesitant at first, but eventually he asked for one for himself and his wife and he left so thankful,” she said. “As he was driving out of the parking lot, he rolled down his window and said, ‘This makes people so happy!’ And I thought, ‘OK! We can do this.’”

Zamboni handed out 25 cloth masks and estimated she spoke to about 50 people. And she hopes that effort will have a ripple effect among a population that tends to live and work closely together in large groups.

“We know there’s a cultural barrier there and we know there’s a lack of access to masks within that population,” she said. “So to be able to address those issues is so valuable, never mind the fact that they have now seen St. Charles come into their environment to try to help. It can have such a huge impact to feel recognized and supported by the health system.”

Zamboni’s afternoon at Colima Market isn’t the only way St. Charles has increased and improved communications with Spanish speakers during the COVID-19 crisis. Early on, the health system worked with Deschutes County to set up a COVID-19 hotline, including a dedicated line for those who speak Spanish. Zamboni has staffed that line for weeks and has taken a wide array of calls from people asking about symptoms, how to register their car when the DMV is closed, and how to handle a positive case and possible exposure at a local business.

Additionally, St. Charles has been working to translate more of its printed communications into Spanish, and it’s currently working to place one or more Spanish-speaking caregivers into training to become a contact tracer, Salmon said.

“We’ve seen elsewhere in the country that COVID-19 exponentially impacts ethnic and racial minority groups, so it’s imperative that we reach out to those populations however we can,” she said. “When we talk as an organization about caring for all, this is how you get there.”

 

La mayoría de los jueves, Angelina Zamboni y su familia hacen un viaje al mercado de Colima en Bend para comprar tamales y carnitas frescas.

"Es un pequeño ritual divertido para nosotros", dijo Zamboni, una enfermera practicante familiar de St. Charles cuyo esposo es salvadoreño. "La comida es maravillosa y atrae a muchas personas de habla hispana, por lo que es una buena oportunidad para conectarse con nuestra comunidad".

Sin embargo, hace unas semanas, Zamboni notó algo cuando estaba dentro de la tienda.

"Yo era la única persona que llevaba una máscara", dijo. “Había una fila en el pasillo de las familias latinas, y ni una sola persona llevaba una máscara. Así que llegué a casa y le envié un correo electrónico a Emily y le dije: "Aquí está mi propuesta". Y ella me respondió de inmediato y dijo: "Hagámoslo".

La Emily que envió un correo electrónico fue Emily Salmon, directora de Población de San Carlos, quien vio la idea de Zamboni: colocar una mesa frente al mercado de Colima, hablar con la gente y repartir máscaras de tela, como una extensión natural de San Carlos. misión: crear la comunidad más saludable de Estados Unidos, juntos.

En unos pocos días, un pequeño equipo de cuidadores en St. Charles reunió lo que Zamboni necesitaba, incluidas 25 máscaras de tela donadas a St. Charles por fabricantes locales de máscaras e instrucciones en español sobre cómo usarlas y cuidarlas. Zamboni llamó a Colima Market y pidió permiso para instalarse cerca de su puerta, e incluso puso una máscara en un recorte de cartón del famoso cantante y actor mexicano Vicente Fernández con la esperanza de atraer a la gente a la mesa.

El 21 de mayo, Colima abrió sus puertas para "Tamale Thursday" y Zamboni estaba allí con su hijo Angelo, lista para hablar con quien apareciera. Dijo que les tomó un poco de trabajo interactuar con la gente, pero una vez que se dieron cuenta de que Zamboni podía hablar su idioma con fluidez, y que las máscaras eran gratuitas, la mayoría se animó al mensaje.

"Al principio teníamos un hombre mayor que dudaba, pero finalmente pidió uno para él y su esposa y se fue muy agradecido", dijo. "Cuando salía del estacionamiento, bajó la ventanilla y dijo:" ¡Esto hace que la gente sea tan feliz! "Y pensé:" ¡Está bien! Podemos hacer esto.'"

Zamboni entregó 25 máscaras de tela y calculó que habló con unas 50 personas. Y espera que el esfuerzo tenga un efecto dominó entre una población que tiende a vivir y trabajar estrechamente en grandes grupos.

"Sabemos que hay una barrera cultural allí y sabemos que hay una falta de acceso a las máscaras dentro de esa población", dijo. “Por lo tanto, poder abordar esos problemas es tan valioso, no importa el hecho de que ahora han visto a San Carlos entrar a su entorno para tratar de ayudar. Puede tener un impacto tan grande sentirse reconocido y respaldado por el sistema de salud ”.

La tarde de Zamboni en Colima Market no es la única forma en que St. Charles ha aumentado y mejorado las comunicaciones con los hispanohablantes durante la crisis de COVID-19. Al principio, el sistema de salud trabajó con el condado de Deschutes para establecer una línea directa COVID-19, que incluye una línea dedicada para aquellos que hablan español. Zamboni ha atendido esa línea durante semanas y ha recibido una amplia gama de llamadas de personas que preguntan sobre los síntomas, cómo registrar su automóvil cuando el DMV está cerrado y cómo manejar un caso positivo y una posible exposición en un negocio local.

Además, St. Charles ha estado trabajando para traducir más de sus comunicaciones impresas al español, y actualmente está trabajando para capacitar a uno o más cuidadores de habla hispana para convertirse en un rastreador de contactos, dijo Salmon.

"Hemos visto en otras partes del país que COVID-19 impacta exponencialmente a los grupos minoritarios étnicos y raciales, por lo que es imperativo que lleguemos a esas poblaciones como podamos", dijo. "Cuando hablamos como organización sobre el cuidado de todos, así es como se llega allí".

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Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been thinking a lot about how fortunate we are here at St. Charles that even during these difficult times, local companies and individuals have stepped up to support us throughout this pandemic.

In addition to donations of personal protective equipment, gifts to our Hero Fund and notes of appreciation and encouragement, we have received so many deliveries of food, drinks, self-care items and more to help our caregivers during this stressful time. I can assure you these donated items were greatly appreciated. They have helped our people care for this community, and they will continue to do so as we navigate the next several months.

With many Central Oregon businesses starting to reopen, it’s time for all of us to think about how we can give back. We know that restaurants and retailers are suffering from the severe economic impact of COVID-19. Last week, I emailed our army of 4,500 caregivers and urged them to go out and support them as they have supported us. And I hope you’ll recognize that by supporting us, those restaurants and retailers were supporting you – our community. Please join us in returning the favor.

Here are just a few ideas on how you can help:

  • The list of businesses that have donated to St. Charles over the past couple of months is very long, and if we tried to compile one, we run the risk of leaving some out. So instead, I simply want to encourage you to pick a local company to support – safely, while wearing a mask – by buying something you need or ordering a take-out dinner. When you do, snap a photo and post it to social media with a note of gratitude. (Please be sure to tag @STChealth so we can “like” it.)
  • Visit SOS Bend and purchase gift cards to a business of your choice.
  • Buy a T-shirt from the Here for Good - Oregon effort of a local screen printer in Sisters, where proceeds also go to support local businesses of your choice.
  • Visit Central Oregon SOS for other resources and information on how to help.

In addition to these ideas, St. Charles as an organization is sharing information with our local health departments on how to reopen businesses safely. We are working with those same departments to provide additional staff resources and assist with contact tracing throughout the region. And now that our stockpile of PPE is more robust, we have been able to donate excess supplies to our community partners in need through the tri-county emergency operations center.

Thank you in advance for helping us show businesses across Central Oregon how much St. Charles cares about rebuilding a vibrant, thriving local economy. They have had our backs through this crisis. Rest assured, we will have theirs for as long as it takes.

One last thing: This coming weekend, May 30-31, Oregon State University will bring a COVID-19 research project called TRACE to Bend. With support from Deschutes County Health Services, the TRACE team will visit 30 Bend neighborhoods to conduct random, door-to-door COVID-19 testing. Note: The swabs used for these tests collect material from inside the entrance of the nose and are less invasive than those that collect secretions from the throat and the back of the nose.

Results from the project will help us understand how prevalent the virus is in Bend, and at this point, everything we can learn about COVID-19 is absolutely vital. So if you get a knock on your door Saturday or Sunday, I want to encourage you to please consider participating in the project. You can learn more about TRACE here.

Sincerely,
Joe

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Physicians who treated Central Oregon’s first COVID-19 patient to receive a transfusion of convalescent plasma cannot say with certainty how much the blood product helped 53-year-old Liliana Locke, who is now recovering at home.

But anecdotal results and early findings by the Mayo Clinic, which is coordinating the national expanded access protocol used to provide the plasma, are positive enough to encourage recovered COVID-19 patients to consider a donation, said Dr. Anna Dolezal, a pathologist with Central Oregon Pathology Consultants and acting medical director of the St. Charles Blood Bank.

“Among the first 5,000 patients who received convalescent plasma through that program, the incidence of serious adverse events was very low,” Dolezal said. “So what we can take from that is that infusing COVID-19 patients with convalescent plasma appears to be a safe procedure, and this initiative will continue nationally.”
In fact, the American Red Cross recently expanded its criteria for who can donate convalescent plasma. Until late April, donors must have tested positive for COVID-19 and fully recovered. (People who have fully recovered from the virus have antibodies in their plasma that can attack the virus and may help people fight the disease.) On April 27, however, the Red Cross began allowing people who don’t have a positive test but are certain they had COVID-19 to donate plasma. Those donations are tested for antibodies, allowing the Red Cross to simplify the eligibility process and qualify more potential donors.

Earlier data available from studies indicated that a single 200 mL dose of convalescent plasma showed benefit for some patients, leading to improvement. And while the Mayo Clinic’s program isn’t a randomized clinical trial and is designed primarily to ensure safety, data from the first 5,000 patients enrolled in the protocol did show some promising results and also noted "with optimism the relatively low mortality in treated patients." This included a trend toward decreased mortality at seven days (14.9%) compared to average mortality for patients with COVID-19 in the hospital (15-20%) and ICU (57%).

Dolezal emphasized: “While there is still much work to be done to tease out the true efficacy of this treatment – as is true at this time with all treatments being explored for COVID-19 – the initial report from Mayo looks promising to me. If we can make convalescent plasma available to more COVID patients earlier in their hospital course, I’m hopeful that it can make a potentially life-saving difference in their outcome.”

Use of convalescent plasma has been studied in outbreaks of other respiratory infections, including the 2003 SARS-CoV-1 epidemic, the 2009-2010 H1N1 influenza virus pandemic and the 2012 MERS-CoV epidemic, according to the FDA.

Given the severity of the pandemic and lack of other available treatments for COVID-19, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved its use as an investigational new drug in late March. Since that time, blood suppliers have been working tirelessly to increase the pool of available plasma.

To schedule an appointment to donate COVID-19 convalescent plasma or other blood products, contact American Red Cross Blood Services at 1-800-RED-CROSS or https://www.redcrossblood.org/. More information can be found at the following links:

Eligibility requirements and a donor eligibility form

Frequently asked questions, including sections on COVID-19 and donating convalescent plasma.

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There are a couple of new elements in the outdoor healing garden that sits at the center of St. Charles Madras. To the untrained eye, they may appear to simply be new decor, added to the space to give it more character.

But there’s more to the story.

Mounted on a stone at the south end of the garden is an artistic rendering of a face based on “She Who Watches,” a famous piece of Native American Indian (NAI) rock art located in the Columbia River Gorge. And on the garden’s north end, an existing water feature has been adorned with a sculpture of three salmon, which symbolizes abundance, fertility, prosperity and renewal in NAI culture.

The two pieces are the most visible evidence of a major effort underway at St. Charles Madras to make sure the hospital is providing care that is culturally appropriate for the diverse community it serves. That effort reaches not only the artwork throughout the hospital, but also into its training programs, care practices and policies, patient interactions and beyond.

The ultimate goal is for hospital staff and providers to mirror the demographics of Madras and Jefferson County, where the population is approximately a third NAI, a third Latino and a third white.

A hospital that looks like its community can take better care of its community, said Candy Canga-Picar chief nursing officer (CNO) in Madras, who has led the effort.

“Research has shown that in order for an organization to be culturally competent -- to minimize the gap in health care available to different ethnicities -- you want your workforce to be a reflection of the communities you serve,” she said. “If you walk around right now and look at our nursing workforce in Madras, I have one registered nurse who is Latino and one who is Native American Indian. The rest are all white. And the community is diverse. So there’s a huge disparity here.”

Canga-Picar has been the CNO at St. Charles Madras for about 5 years. She became interested in culturally competent care after hearing from caregivers who were concerned about running afoul of patients’ cultural preferences, as well as patients who felt their culture was being overlooked or disrespected -- not maliciously, necessarily, but because of ignorance and implicit bias.

“I’m Filipino, so there are things that I do and believe that may be difficult to understand no matter how much I try to explain it to you,” she said. “In health care, that translates into, ‘Your way of doing things that you think are right for the patient may be wrong for my culture.’ For example, the fast-paced environment of the hospital and how we usually interact with patients is uncomfortable and counter to the Native American Indian culture, which is much slower paced.’”

Canga-Picar started studying culturally competent care as part of her pursuit of a doctorate in nursing, and there are three major components to her work: how to grow cultural competency among current caregivers, how to empower and involve members of the community from diverse cultural backgrounds, and how to create an organization that, as a whole, understands cultural differences and how they affect care.

As you might guess, some of the more ambitious goals of Canga-Picar’s project will take a long time to come to fruition.

“We’re doing it slowly,” she said, “because you can’t boil the ocean.”

But you can start with things like installing NAI art in the healing garden, and replacing art elsewhere in the hospital that’s well-intentioned, but does not reflect the people of the three tribes in Jefferson County. And last year, Canga-Picar organized St. Charles’ first Transcultural Care Conference, featuring keynote speaker Dr. Josepha Campinha-Bacote.

The hospital followed up the conference with cultural competency training for its caregivers, as well as self-assessments before and after the training, Canga-Picar said. St. Charles’ nurse leadership team worked with human resources to rewrite nursing job descriptions to include required participation in cultural competency activities. And, in concert with Oregon Health & Science University, a clinical protocol has been established to flag Native American children who have a potentially deadly genetic condition known as CPT1.

“We put them in (our electronic medical record) and it creates an alert so that when this kid shows up, the physician knows exactly what to do,” Canga-Picar said.

Additionally, the hospital now has a Patient Family Advisory Council (PFAC) focused on NAI issues. Since August of 2018, the group has been working to identify gaps in care for tribal members, and changes are already happening: St. Charles has switched from a mailed patient satisfaction survey to a telephone survey at the PFAC’s suggestion.

“Participation has jumped from a small handful of people per month to upwards of 25 respondents per quarter,” Canga-Picar said.

“They’re an oral tradition people, so if it requires writing, they won’t fill it out. We were spending lots of money sending mailers and they were just getting thrown away,” she said. “And all we had to do was ask. They’re saying: ‘Involve us. We’re your patients.’”

That message is resonating with people at St. Charles Madras besides Canga-Picar. David Golda, St. Charles’ vice president and hospital administrator in Madras, said he’s “all in” on improving the organization’s cultural competency. He said it’s important that St. Charles work to create “better balance” among its caregivers, and that that journey begins with recognizing the cultural differences that exist within the hospital.

“That’s really one of the most important things about the work (Candy is) doing -- that purposeful effort to get all caregivers on the same page,” Golda said, “but also to involve the community in identifying and understanding what those differences look like.”

The people who work at the Madras hospital care deeply about their patients and have been happy to participate in cultural training, he said. “They want to do the best job they can for the people who come here,” Golda said. “So I think simply having access to this kind of information has been seen as a positive.”

There is still work to do, of course. Canga-Picar would like to require all caregivers visit the Warm Springs museum and the Indian Health Services clinic, and she wants cultural competency to be part of St. Charles’ standard onboarding program. Plans are being made to renovate the Madras Family Birthing Center with colors and artwork that reflect both Latino and NAI culture. And a Latino PFAC is set to launch in November.

Madras resident Mayra Benitez has expressed interest in serving on the Latino PFAC. She called Canga-Picar’s work “awesome” but said she still accompanies her mother to appointments because too much information gets lost in translation between caregivers and patients.

“Spanish-speaking patients still walk out of there feeling like they weren’t understood, or that their needs weren’t met. As a child of a migrant family that didn’t speak any English, I’ve seen that,” Benitez said. “Because of our culture, a Latino patient will go deep into the background of how they ended up at the hospital or the doctor’s office, and a lot of that still gets dismissed.”

She said she knows it’s going to take time for St. Charles Madras to reflect the community it serves, and that while staffers work on important improvements behind the scenes, she’s hopeful that members of the Latino community will soon be able to see themselves represented in more public-facing ways.

“You walk in and you don’t see a Hispanic face at the front, so there’s still a barrier there,” Benitez said. “There are a lot of good things happening that patients aren’t seeing. But we also need representation right when you walk in the door so people know that, ‘Yes, it’s going to take time, but we’re trying. We’re making these changes because we want you to feel welcome here.’”

People are taking notice of St. Charles Madras’ efforts outside Central Oregon, too. Recently, Canga-Picar received a call from Nicole Krishnaswami, executive director of the Oregon Medical Board, who invited her to present her work to the statewide regulatory agency sometime next year.

“The Oregon Medical Board is committed to promoting culturally competent care among the physicians, physician assistants and acupuncturists it licenses. I was intrigued to read about Ms. Canga-Picar’s work at St. Charles Madras in a recent news article,” Krishnaswami said. “Her dedication to the community is inspiring, and I am thrilled that she will present her important work to the Oregon Medical Board members and staff at an upcoming board meeting.”

Back in Madras, Canga-Picar recently thumbed through a well-worn three-ringed binder that contains page after page of findings on culturally sensitive care, as well as goals for the Madras hospital and St. Charles as a whole. Completed tasks are highlighted in green, “in progress” tasks are yellow, and items still to be tackled are white. There are plenty of each, but Canga-Picar knows not to get bogged down in day-to-day accomplishments.

“I told the managers, ‘Look guys, we have to give ourselves time to get from knowledge to translation to behaviors,’” she said. “Just because we have a cultural summit and a PFAC doesn’t mean we change overnight. This is an ongoing thing. Cultural competency is not a destination. It’s an ongoing journey.”

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Last summer, after 14 years as a stay-at-home mom, Amy Stewart started looking for a job that would provide a second income for her family. Her preferred field? Health care.

“It’s something I’ve always wanted to do,” Stewart said. “Caring for people is close to my heart, so I looked at (St. Charles), just hoping to get a foot in the door.”

Less than a year later, Stewart is one of eight St. Charles caregivers who recently completed a new internal training program to become a level-one Certified Nursing Assistant, also known as a CNA 1. In a matter of months, her foot in the door has turned into a full-time job working with patients.

“I’m still pinching myself because I just can’t believe this opportunity came along,” Stewart said. “I can’t wait to go to work because it doesn’t feel like work to me.”

For a variety of reasons, recruiting and retaining CNA 1s has historically been a major challenge for St. Charles. So earlier this year, the health system offered, in simple terms, to pay caregivers to become a CNA. That means current employees were taken out of their roles – in registration and admitting, environmental services and other non-medical units – and placed in a four-week training program paid for by St. Charles. The caregivers were also paid an hourly wage while going through the training, which featured both classroom and hands-on instruction at St. Charles Bend and strictly followed Oregon State Board of Nursing guidelines and processes.

 “An in-house CNA training program is something we’ve wanted for a long time because there really is no downside to it,” said Janice Pendroy, the Clinical Practice and Professional Development specialist overseeing the program. “It’s an incredible opportunity for growth and development for our caregivers. It teaches them new skills and gives them a path to advance their careers without having to leave the organization. It’s an investment in our people, and it strengthens our team by keeping proven and experienced employees here.”

Stewart was happy with her initial job at St. Charles on the Central Processing team, which works closely with the Operating Room to prepare and process surgical instruments and carts ahead of surgeries. She absorbed a ton of information as part of that job’s onboarding process and felt proud of her important role in the hospital’s surgical service.

“It’s the most indirect (form of) direct patient care you can have, because the success of the surgeries depends on, yes, the surgeons, but it also requires that the instruments are sterilized and working properly,” she said. “I would’ve stayed there but I just really, really, really wanted to be on the other side of patient care, and then a co-worker (showed me the CNA program) and I thought, ‘Oh no way. This is too good to be true.’”

Sierra Pfingsten felt the same way. She’d worked in Patient Access Admitting at the St. Charles Madras Emergency Department for more than a year when she learned of the CNA program and saw an opportunity to make progress on a long-held goal.

“I’d wanted to get my CNA certification but have been struggling to find extra time to complete the program,” Pfingsten said. “So getting the opportunity to do that while still working was absolutely amazing.”

Pfingsten said she was overwhelmed by the support and encouragement she received from fellow caregivers across the health system. “I’d recommend it to anyone seeking a different career path within St. Charles,” she said.

All eight members of the first CNA trainee cohort were passionate about patient care, dedicated to learning and enthusiastic about the opportunity, Pendroy said. Tara Estes, formerly a Patient Service Representative at the Bend South Immediate Care Clinic, said she “immediately applied” for the program because she had long wanted to be more involved in patient care but had never been able to schedule more schooling. Skye Buck, who was registering patients at the Bend Emergency Department, said she was “so excited” to be a part of the health system’s first CNA program. And Jordan Johnson, a former member of the Environmental Services (EVS) team at St. Charles Madras, commuted more than an hour each way from her home in Warm Springs to Bend every day of the program, in part because she believes it is her gateway to a nursing career.

“I’ve been interested in health care since I was young and I took my EVS job hoping it would lead to something like this,” she said. “I’m going to try to get into the CNA 2 course and then the goal is to go for the nursing program at Central Oregon Community College.”

St. Charles is planning to offer a similar program for level-two CNAs, or CNA 2s, later this year, Pendroy said.

Stewart is interested in future programs, but even if she never pursues them, going through the CNA 1 program has already changed her life in ways she could never have expected, she said.

“Being a stay-at-home mom, your life revolves around your kids – which is such a hard and important job, don’t get me wrong. But this has changed the way they view me. All of a sudden, Mom’s not just a mom. She can help people. She has all this new knowledge. They ask me questions about my work now,” she said. “It’s given me so much more confidence than I had before. It’s like, ‘Yes, I am a productive member of society.’ I’m helping people. I’m making sure people feel cared for. It’s awesome.”

St. Charles Health System’s first CNA training cohort:

Timothy Arguijo
Skye Buck
Gavin Campbell
Tara Estes
Jordan Johnson
Sierra Pfingsten
Tanner Schild
Amy Stewart

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For the past several weeks, I’ve been sending out an email on Mondays detailing St. Charles’ efforts to prepare for and respond to the COVID-19 outbreak and to care for our community through unprecedented times.

If you’d like to read those emails, here’s an archive. And if you’d like to sign up to receive future missives, you can do that here.

My Monday emails tend to be long and full of information, because there is a lot to say. I’ve written about our work to expand COVID-19 testing and our plans to handle a surge of patients. I’ve emphasized the importance of social distancing and urged people to follow Gov. Kate Brown’s stay-at-home order. I’ve shared the latest data models and discussed the development of a roadmap for recovery.

I also try to take an opportunity in each email to say “thank you” to whoever’s reading for whatever role that particular person has played in the fight against this dangerous new virus, whether they're working face-to-face with patients, ringing up groceries at the supermarket or simply staying home and helping to flatten the curve.

Here, though, I want to take a moment to be more specific with my gratitude. There certainly is enough to go around.

Thank you to our partner agencies, both locally and at the state and federal levels, with a special kudos to health officials in Warm Springs and at Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties, who have capably pursued the important work of identifying COVID-19 cases, conducting contact investigations and providing valuable guidance for our communities. And to the firefighters, emergency medical personnel and law enforcement officers on the front lines, thank you for putting your own health at risk for the good of Central Oregon as a whole.

Thank you to the St. Charles Foundation for quickly establishing our new Hero Fund, which will benefit frontline caregivers at St. Charles, and for making the 2020 Heaven Can Wait 5K a benefit for COVID-19 relief efforts. It is never easy to ask people for money, but ultimately, donating money is the best way to help our efforts and our caregivers. (Heaven Can Wait is going virtual this year, by the way. Sign up here.)

Thank you to the many businesses and individuals across Central Oregon and beyond that have donated non-medical items and services such as food and drink over the past several weeks. Yes, our caregivers need personal protective equipment, proper training, strong leadership and emotional support along the way. But I can tell you that when a stack of pizzas shows up at the hospital these days, it is greeted with open arms and giant smiles. Simple things matter.

Thank you to the essential workers who are out there risking their own health to ensure our society continues to function as normally as possible. Times of crisis tend to illuminate the occupations that play an indispensable role in the world as we know it, and that’s certainly true right now. To the delivery drivers, postal employees, cashiers, gas station attendants, garbage collectors, retail workers, those on the food-supply chain and all others doing jobs we depend on: We appreciate you and we value your work.

Thank you to the vast army of skilled sewists across the region who have been busily crafting cloth masks for caregivers at St. Charles and other health care providers. On April 1, we announced our 10,000 Mask Challenge in hopes of collecting enough masks to give our people two each. Just over three weeks later, we surpassed that goal, and we’re still going so we can share with others. What an incredible thing it has been to watch this group mobilize and focus its efforts on helping the folks on the front lines.

Last but certainly not least, thank you to the 4,500+ caregivers at St. Charles Health System who have worked tirelessly over the past few months as we engage in an uncertain fight against an invisible enemy that doesn’t seem to play by the usual rules. My full-hearted gratitude goes to the doctors and nurses, of course, but also the pharmacists, respiratory therapists, medical techs, lab scientists, food services workers, environmental services staff, facilities crew and so many more in other support areas who keep our hospitals running smoothly. Thanks also to the administrators at St. Charles, who have spent countless hours setting up new services, honing policies, updating processes, pursuing solutions to new problems and otherwise supporting those on the front lines. We are not done yet, but for now, please know that I could not be more proud to lead such a terrific organization.

Finally, if you’ve read this far, thank you for taking the time to understand what’s happening at St. Charles and how our operation intersects with Central Oregon in this challenging time. It is vitally important that members of this community get their information from trusted sources so we’re all working from the same page and pulling in the same direction.

I’ve said it in my Monday emails and I’ll say it here: We are truly all in this together. Thanks for doing your part.

Sincerely,
Joe

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Community Newsletter - March 27, 2020

At St. Charles Health System, we’ve understood the threat of COVID-19 for months, and we’ve been planning accordingly. Our caregivers have worked tirelessly over the past several weeks to enact new policies, adjust workflows and optimize our available resources, all with three major goals in mind: To preserve critical supplies, to prepare for a surge of patients and to protect our caregivers so they can care for the communities we serve.

With 18 positive cases in the region (as of Friday afternoon), the virus is here, and it will spread. Below is a list of the things we’ve done and the things we’re doing to get ready for COVID-19’s arrival in Central Oregon, with links to more information.

Our main message to Central Oregonians right now:

STAY HOME, SAVE LIVES

Watch our President and CEO, Joe Sluka, explain why this is so important.

A summary:

  • Our hospitals are not the solution for this disease. They are the war zone.
  • Our caregivers and first responders are on the front lines. They will come to work to care for you and your loved ones.
  • The fight has already begun. It’s a fight in which we have to do everything in our power to win.
  • The only way we are going to slow the spread of COVID-19 right now is by self-isolating at home.
  • Stay home now. If you have kids at home – including teens – please enforce this directive for them.
  • This means:
    • Leave the house only for essential reasons, like to get food and medicine.
    • Socialize only with people who live in your house.
    • No picnics, camping, visits to the dog park or trips to the coast.
    • If you exercise outside, go alone or with someone from your household. Keep six feet apart from others.
    • No playdates for kids or hanging out for teens, except through digital means.
  • We need you to stay home so we will have the capacity – hospital beds, ventilators, trained staff – to care for those who need it most. If people don’t stay home, COVID-19 will spread more quickly and our hospitals will be overwhelmed. Here’s a good video on how this works:


WHERE TO GET INFORMATION

Resist misinformation. Do not spread rumors. Look to trusted local sources for facts:

Do you have questions about COVID-19?
Call our hotline: 541-699-5109. It’s open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.


TESTING

There is a nationwide shortage of medical supplies used to collect samples to test for COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses. As a result, we cannot test everyone. We must conserve supplies for the sickest and most vulnerable people.

We’ve established certain criteria that people must meet in order to be tested and are actively working to expand our testing capabilities.

Important: If you have symptoms of COVID-19 (cough, fever, shortness of breath) but you are not so sick you need hospitalization, the best thing you can do is stay home and call your primary care physician or your county’s public health department.


VISITOR RESTRICTIONS AND HOSPITAL ACCESS

To protect patients and caregivers and to preserve critical safety supplies, St. Charles has adopted significant changes in both visitor restrictions and care guidelines at all of its hospitals. You can review those restrictions by clicking here.

As an alternative to visiting a family member or friend at a St. Charles facility, please telephone or video call them.

Reminder: St. Charles caregivers are performing respiratory illness screenings at the entrances of all St. Charles hospitals and clinics. Caregivers and approved visitors will be subject to these screenings by answering a series of questions.


CANCELLATIONS, POSTPONEMENTS AND CLOSURES

We have canceled events, postponed elective surgeries and other select non-urgent outpatient services and closed our outpatient rehab to free up as much space as possible in our facilities and to preserve critical supplies in case of a surge. Patients impacted by these decisions will be contacted by St. Charles or their physician.

We understand that postponed surgeries and other appointments are inconvenient and frustrating. Please know we’re doing these things to protect you and your loved ones, and we wouldn’t do them if we didn’t think it was an important part of our preparedness plan.


SURGE PREPARATION

In anticipation of an influx of patients and to best manage patient flow across the health system, St. Charles is changing how and where patients are cared for in our communities. That means:

  • High-acuity patients, as well as all pediatric patients, will be cared for at the Bend hospital.
  • Lower-acuity patients will be cared for at the Madras, Prineville and Redmond hospitals. This will include hospice patients, as well as patients who need long-term care but cannot be transferred to a skilled nursing facility. 

All four hospitals and some of our clinics have also set up triage and screening tents outside in parking lots.


CALL FOR DONATIONS OF PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT

Hospitals around the country are facing critical shortages of such supplies due to COVID-19 pandemic-related interruptions in manufacturing and distribution as well as a dramatic increase in global demand. As a result, St. Charles is actively working to both conserve and to acquire more protective equipment for its caregivers and patients.

Donations from the community are being accepted. Full boxes are preferable, but partial boxes are OK if they’re clean. Please do not bring donations to a hospital or clinic. Instead, you can find a list of needed items and donation drop-off sites by clicking here.


HOW TO HELP OUR CAREGIVERS

The Board of Directors of St. Charles Foundation approved a $200,000 grant to the St. Charles Cares Fund, which provides money to caregivers experiencing economic hardship beyond their control.

This $200,000 came from hundreds of people who gave through direct mail appeals, memorial donations and “grateful patient” gifts in honor of a physician, nurse or technician.

If you would like to be part of this group of donors supporting caregivers and St. Charles’ response to COVID-19, please give at https://foundation.stcharleshealthcare.org/Donate.

Every gift, no matter how large or small, is needed and appreciated.


E-VISITS, PHONE VISITS AND VIDEO VISITS NOW AVAILABLE

In response to the COVID-19 outbreak, St. Charles Health System’s outpatient clinics have transformed the way they care for patients. Earlier this week, the clinics rolled out a variety of options for remote visits with providers, including e-visits, phone visits and video visits.

Remote visits are designed to protect patients and caregivers, preserve critical medical supplies and conserve space in facilities in case of a surge of COVID-19 patients.

Learn more about e-visits, phone visits and video visits.

NOTE: Patients without a MyChart account are strongly encouraged to sign up for one today at stcharleshealthcare.org. COVID-19 test results are sent to patients via MyChart as soon as they are available. These tests are sent to centralized labs and results can take up to seven to nine days due to nationwide shortages.

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With winter transitioning into spring, all-season sports fans are left to lament the end of football and look forward to one of America’s great competitive events: college basketball’s NCAA tournament, also known as March Madness.

If you’re unfamiliar, March Madness pits 68 of the sport’s best teams against each other in a three-week pursuit of the national basketball championship. Win and you move on in the tournament. Lose and your season – and in many cases, your college playing career – is suddenly over.

The circumstances are different and the stakes are higher, but March Madness always reminds me of health care in a couple of ways.

First, there’s the fact that you cannot “take a day off” in the NCAA tournament. Where other sports use multi-game series to determine champions – a format that favors the better team – March Madness is a single-elimination event where underdogs routinely play the game of their lives and knock off a heavy favorite. One moment of sluggish play or lost focus can send you home, even against a team you might beat 99 out of 100 times.

Similarly, health care workers – including our top-notch crew at St. Charles – must bring their “A game” to work every day. That’s why everyone at our health system, from the frontline caregivers to our executive team, is constantly working to hone our policies, streamline our processes and improve our procedures, all in the name of better care. Our patients and their families expect nothing less, and neither do we.

The other parallel I see between March Madness and health care is the importance of excellent teamwork. Unlike in the NBA, where a couple of superstars can carry a team to a championship, the winner of the NCAA tournament is usually a collection of players with different skillsets who work closely together to accomplish a common goal.

That’s the beauty of the college game. It’s also the beauty of overseeing a health system, where every single person has a job to do, and every one of them should be doing that job with a common goal in mind: to best serve our patients. Certainly, our doctors and nurses get the most one-on-one time with patients, and their role in patient satisfaction is key. But your St. Charles experience starts with your first phone call or visit to our website, and it continues through registration, multiple visits to different departments and your post-procedural care. Your impression of our organization can be affected by your spouse’s visit to the cafeteria, or an interaction with our billing department, or the demeanor of the caregiver who arrives in your room to change your pillowcase.

The point is this: Any one person can provide great care, but it takes a team of great caregivers working together to be a world-class health care organization. I feel privileged to lead St. Charles in our pursuit of that goal.

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