Why understanding chronic illness improves community health

[Music]

[Music]

let’s talk about

charles you may have seen charles

sleeping in the park asking for change

on the sidewalk

opening the convenience store door

karate fighting an invisible opponent

surrounded by police

charles has had 50 emergency room visits

in the last year

43 police encounters 37 ems

transports and more than a hundred days

in jail

just in one year charles lives in the

bushes

in the park i’ve had the privilege

of working with people like charles for

the last 10 years

here’s the facts 5 of our population

utilizes 50 of the costs and resources

and health care

think about that that’s a stunning

number and it affects

everyone in this room and everyone in

our country

whether it’s employers trying to cover

the cost of health care for their

employees

the government shouldering the cost of

medicare and medicaid

individuals trying to afford health

insurance and health care

health care costs have risen to over 17

percent

of gdp

as a nurse i’ve been working with the

five percent

learning who they are what are their

stories

what really matters and how can we

change the system

to improve their lives when you see that

number you might be thinking

this has got to be wow a really big

group of

older people with lots of chronic

diseases

and maybe people near the end of their

life but what i’ve been seeing over the

last ten years

there’s definitely a very important

group of older people in the five

percent

but there’s also some very important

drivers

that are having a bigger and bigger

impact on everyone from 22 year olds

to 96 year olds

one of those drivers is safe housing

if you did not have a safe place to live

and you were trying to manage diabetes

and you were couch surfing

where would you store your medications

if you had anxiety and depression

where would you go to feel safe if you

had no home

if you had surgery where would you find

a clean place to recuperate

the second driver is behavioral health

in our country less than 50 percent of

the population

with mental illness or addiction are

accessing

treatment if you have anyone in your

family with these issues

you know this path what can happen

is a felony record which is followed by

stigma

the inability to get employment the

inability to get housing

and that spreads costs all across our

country in criminal justice and many

other systems

but the first place it shows up is the

safe harbor

of the emergency room

the third driver is social isolation

i was working with an older gentleman

who came over and over to the hospital

he had chest pain we brought him into

the er

we gave him all kinds of expensive

diagnostic tests

all kinds of procedures inpatient

admissions

we did the deluxe healthcare experience

until i stopped to actually ask him his

story

i had no idea his wife had died

he was coming to us with a broken heart

a simple question about someone’s story

can change the whole course not only for

the five percent

but all of us the fourth

complex driver is trauma

research clearly shows the correlation

between childhood trauma

and adult complex illness but i see a

very different face of trauma

and this may not surprise you if you

look in your own community

40 year old women coming to the er over

and over

with unexplained abdominal pain and the

real root cause

is domestic violence

veterans returning with chronic pain

over and over again

when the real root causes ptsd

understanding the five percent is like

tapping into the canaries in the coal

mine

of our social issues today compared to

other countries

the united states spends one of the

smallest amount on social services

four percent of gdp

that lack of investment then shows up

in health care and criminal justice in

other places

so one of the gifts of working with the

population

is seeing what makes a difference in

that

let’s go back to charles and his story

charles had

all four of those drivers not everybody

in the 4 percent does but charles did

and charles is a real person he taught

me a lot

about what makes a difference so the

first thing that happened for charles

is his community a police officer

and a social worker reached out directly

to see if charles would tell his story

of course the first time he said no who

would believe this

they went back a couple of more times

and charles

started to tell what his life story was

for charles what happened is he was had

the experience of being seen

and heard this is a transformative

moment

for people in the five percent here’s

what he said

charles had lived in the community for

25 years

he had a wife a child he had a

successful business

he’d actually even been an alcoholics

anonymous sponsor

things fell apart in pieces and he had

several losses and went into a downward

spiral

and one day found himself living under

the bushes in the park

when they asked his story they said what

matters most to you

what mattered most to charles was

getting well enough

to meet his first grandchild

being seen and heard is a two-way street

it’s not only important for the people

in the five percent

it’s important for the people taking

care of them

the police the nurses the doctors

the social workers the paramedics

all of those folks are trying to solve

social issues

in a system that was designed to

diagnose

treat transport and maybe even arrest

that’s not why they all went into their

professions

people want to do the right thing and if

you want to change the system

and change care for the five percent you

also need to attend to those folks

what happened in charles community is

they did just that

they looked around the community and

this is not a magical perfect community

where

everyone gets along and it’s a

disney song there were old rifts in this

community some of the worst

health outcomes in their state some of

those

complex addiction and lack of resource

issues

but that community looked around and

said

who else is in this boat with me the

police

fire ems social services

behavioral health health care and they

sat around a table together

and talked about being seen and heard

amongst each other about what they were

carrying and trying to solve they

created a collaborative

called project restoration where they

worked on things as a community

they shared charles story together they

organized care around charles goals

what mattered most to him charles got

addiction treatment

and transitional housing and most

importantly

a sense of belonging he was no longer

alone

the same thing happened for the

community belonging

was critically important as they sat at

this table

and stepped out of their silos and they

stopped competing

for limited resources and they actually

walked outside of their buildings

and worked together on a shared

community problem

they create had a sense of belonging

with each other

this started to really change the game

the pivotal part for charles came when

he was

in housing the way they set up their

housing unit

is everyone who lives there is part of

running it

not only do they run it once they’re

more stable

they become a mentor and appear to the

new people

there and then once they’re stable

enough they join the collaborative

and they bring their voice to the table

about what they think

will change things for the community

this shifted to the third

key principle for healing in the system

and people

with the five percent charles had a

sense of connection

a sense of agency he could make

change and he was part of we

the same thing happened for the

community they shared resources

they stopped competing for dollars they

got a lot done

they opened a transitional housing unit

they fixed the transportation system

they created an agency for co-located

agencies

but most importantly and the most

valuable change that happened for them

is they also had a sense of connection a

sense of agency

a sense of we can change this and they

did i can show hard numbers from that

community

and i want you to know how much that

it’s

bigger than just this community the same

approach is being taken

in in a range of environments from

rural california to urban memphis

some of the numbers from those programs

are 82 reduction

in criminal justice costs 70 percent

reduction

in health care costs 40 reduction in

hospital visits

but the most valuable change is a return

to dignity

a health care system reimagined

around what matters most and sure

there’s

policy and education and funding and

regulatory changes we can make

to make that happen but the fastest way

it will happen is if we turn to each

other

and ask what matters

most

[Applause]

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聊聊

查尔斯 你可能见过 查尔斯

睡在公园里

在人行道上要求找零

打开便利店的门

空手道与被警察包围的隐形对手搏斗

查尔斯在过去一年里有 50 次急诊室就诊

43 警察在一年内遇到了 37 次紧急

运输和一百多天

监禁 查尔斯住在公园的

灌木丛

中 在过去的 10 年里,我

有幸与像查尔斯这样的人一起工作

这是我们人口中的 5 个

事实 50 的成本和资源

以及医疗保健

认为这是一个惊人的

数字,它影响

到这个房间里的每个人以及我们国家的每个人,

无论是雇主试图

为其雇员支付医疗保健费用,

还是政府承担

医疗保险费用和 作为一名护士,

试图负担医疗

保险和医疗

保健费用的医疗补助个人已上升到 GDP 的 17

% 以上

一直在与

5% 的

人合作,了解他们是谁 他们的

故事

什么是真正重要的以及我们如何

改变系统

以改善他们的生活 当你看到这个数字时,

你可能会认为

这一定是哇一大群

老年人 患有许多慢性病

,也许还有人接近生命的尽头,

但我在

过去十年

中看到的 5% 中肯定有一群非常重要

的老年人,

但也有一些非常重要的

驱动因素

对从 22 岁

到 96 岁的

每个人

的影响越来越

大 你有焦虑和抑郁

如果你没有家 你会去哪里感到安全 如果你

了手术 你会在哪里找到

一个干净的地方

休养 第二个司机是行为他

在我们国家,只有不到 50% 的

患有精神疾病或成瘾的人口正在

接受治疗 如果您的家人中有任何人

有这些问题

您知道这条道路 可能发生的事情

是重罪记录,随之而来的是

耻辱 无法找到工作

无法获得住房

,这使得

刑事司法和许多

其他系统的成本在全国范围内分摊,

但它首先出现的

是急诊室

的安全港第三个驱动因素是社会孤立

我和一位来的老绅士一起工作

一遍又一遍地去医院

他胸痛 我们把他带进

了急诊室

我们给了他各种昂贵的

诊断测试

各种程序 住院

入院

我们提供了豪华的医疗保健体验

直到我停下来真正问他他的

故事

我不知道 他的妻子去世了

他带着一颗破碎的心来找我们 一个

关于某人故事的简单问题

可以改变整个过程

百分之五,

但我们所有人的第四个

复杂驱动因素是创伤

研究清楚地表明了

童年创伤

和成人复杂疾病之间的相关性,但我看到了一个

非常不同的创伤面貌,

如果你看看你自己的社区,这可能不会让你感到惊讶

40 岁 女性一遍

又一遍地

带着无法解释的腹痛来到急诊室,

真正的根本原因

是家庭暴力

退伍军人一次又一次带着慢性疼痛

回来

,而真正的根本原因 ptsd

理解这 5% 就像

在煤矿中挖掘金丝雀

我们今天的社会问题 与

其他

国家相比,美国

在社会服务上的

花费是最少

国家之一

看看有什么不同

让我们回到查尔斯和他的故事

查尔斯拥有

所有四个司机 不是

4% 中的每个人都这样做,但查尔斯确实如此,

而且查尔斯是一个真实的人,他教会了

我很多

关于什么是不同的

事情,所以对查尔斯来说发生的第一件事

是他的社区一名警察

和一名社会工作者直接伸出手

来看看是否 查尔斯当然会讲述他的

故事,当他第一次说不时,

谁会相信这一点,

他们又回去了几次

,查尔斯

开始讲述他的人生故事

对于查尔斯来说,发生的事情是他有

被看到

和听到的经历 这

对 5% 的人

来说是一个变革性的时刻 他说

查尔斯在社区生活了

25 年

他有一个妻子和一个孩子 他有一个

成功的企业

他甚至是一个酗酒者

匿名赞助人

事情分崩离析 他遭受

了几次损失并陷入了

恶性循环

,有一天

当他们问他的故事时,发现自己生活在公园的灌木丛中,他们说

对你最重要的是

什么 对查尔斯来说,最重要的是

已经康复

到可以见到他的第一个孙子

社会工作者 护理人员

所有这些人都试图

在一个旨在

诊断

治疗运输甚至逮捕的系统中解决社会问题

这不是他们都从事自己的

职业的原因

人们想做正确的事情,如果

你想做 改变系统

并改变对 5% 的关心 你

还需要照顾那些人

查尔斯社区发生的事情是

他们所做的只是

他们环顾社区,

这不是一个神奇的完美社区

每个人都相处融洽,这是一

首迪士尼歌曲 这个社区存在旧的裂痕,

他们所在州的一些最糟糕的健康结果,一些

复杂的成瘾和缺乏资源的

问题,

但 帽子社区环顾四周,

还有谁和我一起在这艘船上,

警察

解雇了 ems 社会服务

行为健康保健,他们

围坐在一张桌子旁

,谈论彼此看到和

听到他们

携带的东西和试图解决的问题 他们

创建了一个

名为 project restore 的合作项目,他们

以社区的形式开展工作

他们一起分享查尔斯的故事 他们

围绕查尔斯的目标组织关怀

对他来说最重要的事情 查尔斯得到了

成瘾治疗

和过渡性住房,最

重要的

是一种归属感 他不再

孤单

同样的事情发生在

社区归属感上

是至关重要的,因为他们坐在

这张桌子旁

,走出了自己的孤岛,

不再

为有限的资源而竞争,他们实际上

走出了自己的建筑

,共同

解决了

他们创造的共同社区问题。 彼此的归属感

这开始真的cha 开始游戏

查尔斯的关键部分来自于

在住房时 他们建立

住房单元的方式

是住在那里的每个人都是

运行它的一部分

他们不仅在他们

更稳定后运行它

他们成为导师并出现 到那里的

新人

,然后一旦他们

足够稳定,他们就会加入协作

,他们会提出

他们认为

会改变社区的事情的声音,

这转移到

了系统和人们康复的第三个关键原则

5% 的查尔斯有一种

联系感 有一种能动性 他可以做出

改变 他是我们

的一部分 社区也发生了同样的事情

他们共享资源

他们不再为美元而竞争 他们

完成了很多工作

他们开设了一个过渡性住房单元

他们 修复了交通系统,

他们为同地机构创建了一个机构,

但对他们来说最重要和最

有价值的变化

是他们也有一种共同的感觉 nnection 一种

代理感 一种我们可以改变这一点的感觉,他们

做到

了 从

加利福尼亚农村到孟菲斯城市

,这些计划

中的一些数字是 82

刑事司法费用减少 70%

医疗保健费用减少 40

医院就诊次数减少,

但最有价值的变化是

恢复尊严

围绕重要事项重新构想的医疗保健系统 最

肯定的是

,我们可以做出政策、教育、资金和

监管方面的改变

来实现这一目标,但最快的方式

是我们

互相求助

,问什么

最重要

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