What if our healthcare system kept us healthy Rebecca Onie

so my freshman year of college I signed

up for an internship in the housing unit

at greater Boston Legal Services showed

up the first day ready to make coffee

and photocopies but was paired with this

righteous deeply inspired attorney named

Jeff Purcell who thrust me on to the

front lines from the very first day and

over the course of nine months I had the

chance to have dozens of conversations

with low-income families in Boston who

would come in presenting with housing

issues but always had an underlying

health issue so I had a client who came

in about to be evicted because he hasn’t

paid his rent but he hasn’t paid his

rent of course because he’s paying for

his HIV medication and just can’t afford

both we had moms who had come in

daughter has asthma wakes up covered in

cockroaches every morning and one of our

litigation strategies was actually to

send me into the home of these clients

with these large glass bottles and I

would collect the cockroaches hot glue

gun them to this poster board that we

bring to court for our cases and we

always won because the judges were just

so grossed out far more effective I have

to say than anything I later learned in

law school but over the course of these

nine months I grew frustrated with

feeling like we were intervening too far

downstream and the lives of our clients

that by the time they came to us they

were already in crisis and at the end of

my freshman year of college I read an

article about the work that dr. Barry

Zuckerman was doing as chair of

pediatrics at Boston Medical Center and

his first hire was a legal services

attorney to represent the patients so I

called Barry and with his blessing in

October 1995 walked into the waiting

room of the Pediatrics clinic at Boston

Medical Center I’ll never forget the

TV’s played this endless reel of

cartoons and the exhaustion of mothers

who had taken two three sometimes four

buses to bring their child to the doctor

was just palpable the doctors had seen

never really had enough time

for all the patients try as they might

and over the course of six months I

would corner them in the hallway and ask

them a sort of naive but fundamental

question if you had unlimited resources

what’s the one thing you would give your

patients and I heard the same story

again and again a story we’ve heard

hundreds of times since then they said

every day we have patients that come

into the clinic

child has an ear infection I prescribe

antibiotics but the real issue is

there’s no food at home the real issue

is that child is living with 12 other

people in a two-bedroom apartment and I

don’t even ask about those issues

because there’s nothing I can do I have

13 minutes with each patient patients

are piling up in the clinic waiting room

I have no idea where the nearest food

pantry is and I don’t even have any help

in that clinic even today there are two

social workers for 24,000 pediatric

patients which is better than a lot of

the clinics out there so health leads

was born of these conversations a simple

model where doctors and nurses can

prescribe nutritious food heat in the

winter and other basic resources for

their patients the same way they

prescribed medication patients then take

their prescriptions to our desk in the

clinic waiting room where we have a

corps of well-trained college student

advocates who work side by side with

these families to connect them out to

the existing landscape of community

resources so we began with a card table

in the clinic waiting room totally

lemonade stand style but today we have a

thousand college student advocates who

are working to connect nearly nine

thousand patients and their families

with the resources that they need to be

healthy so 18 months ago I got this

email that changed my life and the email

was from dr. Jack Geiger who had written

to congratulate me on hopefully it’s in

to share as he said a bit of historical

context in 1965 dr. Geiger founded one

of the first two community health

centers in this country and a brutally

poor area in the Mississippi Delta and

so many of his patients came in

presenting with malnutrition that he

began prescribing food for the

and they would take these prescriptions

to the local supermarket which would

fill them and then charge the pharmacy

budget of the clinic and when the Office

of Economic Opportunity in Washington DC

which was funding Giger’s clinic found

out about this they were furious and

they sent this bureaucrat down to tell

Geiger that he was expected to use their

dollars for medical care

  • which Geiger famously and logically

responded but last time I checked my

textbooks the specific therapy for

malnutrition was food so when I got this

email from dr. Geiger I knew I was

supposed to be proud to be part of this

history but the truth is I was

devastated

here we are 45 years after Geiger has

prescribed food for his patients and I

have doctors telling me on those issues

we practice a Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

policy 45 years after Geiger healthly

it’s has to reinvent the prescription

for basic resources so I have spent

hours upon hours trying to make sense of

this weird Groundhog Day how is it that

if for decades we had a pretty

straightforward tool for keeping

patients and especially low-income

patients healthy that we didn’t use it

if we know what it takes to have a

health care system rather than a sick

care system why don’t we just do it

these questions in my mind are not hard

because the answers are complicated they

are hard because they require that we be

honest with ourselves my belief is that

it’s almost too painful to articulate

our aspirations for our healthcare

system or even admit that we have any at

all because if we did they would be so

removed from our current reality but

that doesn’t change my belief that all

of us deep inside here in this room and

across this country share a similar set

of desires that if we are honest with

ourselves and listen quietly that we all

Harbor one fiercely held aspiration for

our health care that it keep us healthy

this aspiration that our healthcare keep

us healthy is an enormous leap our

–fill and you know the way I think

about this is that health care is like

any other system it’s just a set of

choices that people make what if we

decided to make a different set of

choices what if we decided to take all

the parts of health care that have

drifted away from us and stand firm and

say no these things are ours they will

be used for our purposes they will be

used to realize our aspiration what if

everything we needed to realize our

aspiration for health care was right

there in front of us just waiting to be

claimed so that’s where health leads

began we started with the prescription

pad a very ordinary piece of paper and

we asked not what do patients need to

get healthy antibiotics and inhale or

medication but what do patients need to

be healthy to not get sick in the first

place and we chose to use the

prescription for that purpose so just a

few miles from here our Children’s

National Medical Center when patients

come into the doctor’s office they’re

asked a few questions they’re asked are

you running out of food at the end of

the month

do you have safe housing and when the

doctor begins the visit she knows height

weight is there food at home is the

family living in a shelter and that not

only leads to a better set of clinical

choices but the doctor can also

prescribe those resource for the patient

using health leads like any other

subspecialty referral the problem is

once you get a taste of what it’s like

to realize your aspiration for health

care you want more so we thought okay if

we can get individual doctors to

prescribe these basic resources for

their patients could we get an entire

healthcare system to shift its

presumption and we gave it a shot so now

at Harlem Hospital Center when patients

come in with an elevated body mass index

the electronic medical record

automatically generates a prescription

for health leads and our volunteers can

then work with them to connect patients

to healthy food and exercise programs in

their communities we’ve created a

presumption that if you’re a patient at

that hospital with an elevated BMI

the four walls of the doctor’s office

probably aren’t going to give you

everything you need to be healthy you

need more so on the one hand this is

just a basic recoding of the electronic

medical record and on the other hand

it’s a radical transformation of the

electronic medical record from a static

repository of diagnostic information to

a health promotion tool in the private

sector when you squeeze that kind of

additional value out of a fixed cost

investment it’s called a billion dollar

company but in my world it’s called

reduced obesity and diabetes

it’s called health care a system where

doctors can prescribe solutions to

improve health not just manage disease

same thing in the clinic waiting room so

every day in this country

three million patients pass through

about 150,000 clinic waiting rooms in

this country and what do they do when

they’re there they said they watch the

goldfish in the fish tank they read

extremely old copies of Good

Housekeeping magazine but mostly we all

just sit there forever waiting how did

we get here where we devote hundreds of

acres in thousands of hours to waiting

what if we had a waiting room where you

don’t just sit when you’re sick but

where you go to get healthy if airports

can become shopping malls and McDonald’s

can become playgrounds surely we can

reinvent the clinic waiting room and

that’s what health leads has tried to do

to reclaim that real estate and that

time and to use it as a gateway to

connect patients to the resources they

need to be healthy so it’s a brutal

winter in the Northeast your kid has

asthma or he just got turned off and of

course you’re in the waiting room of the

ER because the cold air triggered your

child’s asthma but what if instead of

waiting for hours anxiously the waiting

room became the place where health leads

turned your heat back on and of course

all of this requires a broader workforce

but if we’re creative we already have

that too we know that our doctors and

nurses and even social workers aren’t

enough that the ticking minutes of

healthcare are too constraining health

just takes more time it requires a

non-clinical army of community

health workers and case managers and

many others what if a small part of that

next healthcare workforce were the 11

million college students in this country

unencumbered by clinical

responsibilities unwilling to take no

from an answer from those bureaucracies

that tend to crush patients and with an

unparalleled ability for information

retrieval honed through years of using

Google now lest you think it improbable

that a college volunteer can make this

kind of commitment I have two words for

you March Madness the average NCAA

division 1 men’s basketball player

dedicates 39 hours a week to his sport

now we may think that’s good or bad but

either case it’s real and health leads

is based on the presumption that for too

long we have asked too little of our

college students when it comes to real

impact in vulnerable communities college

sports teams say we’re gonna take dozens

of hours at some field across campus at

some ungodly hour of the morning and

we’re gonna measure your performance and

your team’s performance and if you don’t

measure up or you don’t show up we’re

gonna cut you off the team but we’ll

make huge investments in your training

and development and we’ll give you an

extraordinary community of peers and

people lined up out the door just for

the chance to be part of it so our

feeling is if it’s good enough for the

rugby team it’s good enough for health

and poverty health leads to recruits

competitively trains intensively coaches

professionally demand significant time

builds a cohesive team and measures

results I kind of Teach for America for

health care now in the top ten cities in

the US with the largest number of

Medicaid patients each of those has at

least 20,000 college students New York

alone has half a million college

students and this isn’t just a sort of

short-term work force to connect

patients to basic resources it’s a next

generation health care leadership

pipeline who have spent two three four

years in the clinic waiting room talking

to patients about their most basic

health needs and they leave with the

conviction the ability and the efficacy

to realize our most be

SiC aspirations for healthcare and the

thing is there’s thousands of these

folks already out there so me lazada is

chief resident of internal medicine at

UCSF Medical Center but for three years

as an undergraduate she was a health

leads volunteer in the clinic waiting

room at Boston Medical Center Mia says

when my classmates write a prescription

they think their work is done when I

write a prescription I think can the

family read the prescription do they

have transportation to the pharmacy do

they have food to take with the

prescription do they have insurance to

fill the prescription those are the

questions I learned at healthly it’s not

in medical school now none of these

solutions the prescription pad the

electronic medical record the waiting

room the army of college students are

perfect but they are ours for the taking

simple examples of the vast

underutilized healthcare resources that

if we reclaimed and redeployed could

realize our most vast basic aspiration

of health care so I had been at legal

services for about nine months when this

idea of healthy had started perking in

my mind and I knew I had to tell Jeff

Purcell that my attorney that I needed

to leave and I was so nervous because I

thought he was going to be disappointed

in me for abandoning our clients for

some crazy idea and I sat down with him

and I said Jeff I have this idea that we

could mobilize college students to

address patients most basic health needs

and I’ll be honest all I wanted was for

him to not be angry at me but he said

this Rebecca when you have a vision you

have an obligation to realize that

vision you must pursue that vision and I

have to say I was like whoa that’s a lot

of pressure I just wanted a blessing I

didn’t want some kind of mandate but the

truth is I’ve spent every waking minute

nearly since then chasing that vision I

believe that we all have a vision for

healthcare in this country I believe

that at the end of the day when we

measure our healthcare it will not be by

the diseases cured but by the diseases

prevented

it will not be by the excellence of our

technologies or the sophistication of

our specialists but by how rarely we

needed them and most of all I believe

that when we measure healthcare it will

be not by what the system was but by

what we chose it to be thank you

you

所以我大学一年级的时候,我

报名参加了

大波士顿法律服务中心的实习,

第一天就出现了,准备煮咖啡

和复印,但与这位名叫杰夫

·珀塞尔的正义而深受启发的律师搭档,

他把我推到了

从第一天到前线,

在九个月的时间里,我

有机会

与波士顿的低收入家庭进行了数十次对话,他们

会提出住房

问题,但总是有潜在的

健康问题,所以我有一个客户 谁

进来即将被驱逐,因为他没有

支付房租,但他当然没有支付

房租,因为他正在支付

他的艾滋病毒药物,只是买

不起我们有进来的妈妈,

女儿患有哮喘病

每天早上都被蟑螂覆盖,我们的

诉讼策略之一实际上是

让我带着这些大玻璃瓶进入这些客户的家中

,我

会收集蟑螂热胶

把他们枪杀到这个我们

为我们的案件带到法庭的海报板上,我们

总是赢了,因为法官们

太恶心了,我

不得不说比我后来在法学院学到的任何东西都要有效,

但在这九个月的过程中

,我

感觉我们对下游的干预太远

了,我们的客户的生活感到沮丧,

当他们来找我们时,

他们已经处于危机之中,在

我大学一年级结束时,我读到了

一篇关于博士工作的文章。 Barry

Zuckerman

在波士顿医疗中心担任儿科主任,

他的第一个聘用是代表患者的法律服务

律师,所以我

打电话给 Barry,并在他的祝福下于

1995 年 10 月走进

波士顿医疗中心 I 儿科诊所的候诊室

永远不会忘记

电视播放着无穷无尽的

卡通片,母亲

们乘坐两三甚至四辆

公共汽车带孩子去看医生

的疲惫不堪,医生们

从未真正有足够的时间

让所有患者尝试 他们可能会

,在六个月的时间里,我

会把他们关在走廊里,问

他们一个天真的但基本的

问题,如果你有无限的资源

,你会给你的病人什么是什么

,我一遍又一遍地听到同样的故事

从那以后我们听了数百次的故事 他们说

每天我们都有病人

来诊所

孩子耳朵感染 我开了

抗生素 s 但真正的问题是

家里没有食物真正的问题

是孩子和其他 12

个人住在两居室公寓里,我

什至不问这些问题,

因为我无能为力 我有

13 分钟的时间 每个病人病人

都堆积在诊所候诊室

我不知道最近的食品

储藏室在哪里,我什至

在那个诊所也没有任何帮助,即使今天有两名

社会工作者为 24,000 名儿科

病人服务,这比很多人都好

那里的诊所,所以健康领导

者从这些对话中诞生了一个简单的

模型,医生和护士可以

在冬天为他们的病人开有营养的食物热量

和其他基本资源,

就像他们给

病人开药一样,然后把

他们的处方带到我们的办公桌上

诊所候诊室,我们有

一群训练有素的大学生

倡导者,他们与

这些家庭并肩工作,将他们

与现有的社区景观联系起来

资源,所以我们从诊所候诊室的卡片桌开始,

完全是

柠檬水摊的风格,但今天我们有

1000 名大学生倡导者,他们

正在努力将近

9000 名患者及其家人

与他们在 18 个月内保持健康所需的资源联系起来

以前我收到

这封改变了我生活的电子邮件,这封

电子邮件来自博士。 杰克盖格

写信祝贺我,希望能与

大家分享,因为他

在 1965 年博士中说了一点历史背景。 盖格

在这个国家和

密西西比三角洲的一个极其贫困的地区建立了最早的两个社区卫生中心之一

,他的许多病人都

出现营养不良,以至于他

开始为

他们开处方,他们会把这些处方

带到当地的超市 这将

填补他们,然后收取诊所的药房

预算,当

华盛顿

特区为吉格诊所提供资金的经济机会办公室

发现这一点时,他们非常愤怒,

他们派这个官僚下来告诉

盖格,他应该使用 他们

的医疗保健费用

  • 盖革着名且合乎逻辑地

回应但上次我检查我的

教科书营养不良的具体疗法

是食物所以当我

收到博士的这封电子邮件时。 Geiger 我知道我

应该为成为这段历史的一部分而感到自豪,

但事实是,

在 Geiger

为他的病人开出食物 45 年后,我在这里被摧毁了,我

有医生告诉我关于

我们实践的那些问题不要 问不要告诉

政策 在盖革健康 45 年后,

它必须重新发明

基本资源的处方,所以我花了好

几个小时试图理解

这个奇怪的土拨鼠日,

如果几十年来我们有一个非常

简单的工具 保持

患者,尤其是低收入

患者的健康

如果我们知道建立

医疗保健系统而不是病假

医疗系统需要什么,我们就不会使用它 为什么我们不这样做

在我看来这些问题并不难

因为答案很复杂,

所以很难,因为它们要求我们

对自己诚实

因为如果我们这样做了,他们就会

远离我们目前的现实,

但这并没有改变我的信念,

即我们在这个房间的深处和

这个国家的所有人都有相似

的愿望,如果我们对

自己诚实并倾听 悄悄地,我们都

怀有一个对

我们的医疗保健的强烈愿望,它让我们保持健康

这个愿望,我们的医疗保健让

我们保持健康,这是一个巨大的飞跃,我们的

填充,你知道我的

想法是,医疗保健就像

任何 其他系统 它

只是人们做出的

一系列

选择 如果我们决定

做出不同的选择会怎么样

它们

将用于我们的目的 它们将

用于实现我们的愿望 如果

我们实现医疗保健愿望所需的一切

都在我们面前等待被

认领 健康线索

开始我们从处方垫开始,

一张非常普通的纸,

我们问的不是患者需要什么才能

获得健康的抗生素和吸入或

药物,而是患者

首先需要健康才能不生病

,我们选择了

为此目的使用处方,所以

离这里只有几英里,我们的

国家儿童医疗中心当病人

进入医生办公室时,他们

被问到几个问题,他们被问到

你在月底的食物用完

吗? 你有安全的住所,当

医生开始就诊时,她知道身高

体重家里有食物是

住在庇护所的家人,这

不仅会带来更好的临床

选择,而且医生还可以为

患者开出这些资源

像任何其他亚专科转诊一样使用健康线索

问题是,

一旦您体验了

实现您对医疗保健的愿望的感觉,

您就会想要更多,所以我们认为可以,如果

我们可以让个别医生

为他们的患者开出这些基本资源

我们是否可以让整个

医疗保健系统改变其

假设,我们试一试,所以现在

在哈莱姆医院中心,当患者

进来时体重指数升高时

,电子病历

自动生成

健康指导处方,然后我们的志愿者

可以与他们合作,将患者

与社区中的健康食品和锻炼计划联系

起来 医生办公室

可能不会为您

提供保持健康

所需的一切您需要更多所以一方面这

只是电子病历的基本重新编码

,另一方面

它是

电子医疗的彻底转变 当您压缩这种

信息时,从诊断信息的静态存储库记录到

私营部门的健康促进工具

从固定成本投资中获得额外价值

它被称为十亿美元的

公司,但在我的世界中,它被称为

减少肥胖和糖尿病

它被称为医疗保健系统,医生可以在该系统中

开出

改善健康的解决方案,而不仅仅是

在诊所候诊室管理疾病,所以

在这个国家,每天有

300 万患者经过这个国家

大约 150,000 个诊所候诊室

他们在那里做什么 他们说他们看

鱼缸里的金鱼 他们阅读

非常古老的《好

管家》杂志但大多数时候我们 所有人都

只是永远坐在那里等待

我们是如何到达这里的,我们

在数千小时内投入了数百英亩的土地来

等待如果我们有一个候诊室,你

不只是在生病时坐在那里,如果你生病了

,你可以去那里获得健康 机场

可以变成购物中心,麦当劳

可以变成游乐场,我们当然可以

改造诊所候诊室,

这就是健康领导力试图做

的事情 声明房地产和

时间,并将其用作

将患者与他们需要的健康资源联系起来的门户,

所以这是东北地区一个残酷的

冬天,你的孩子患有

哮喘,或者他刚刚被关闭,

当然你在 急诊室的候诊室,

因为冷空气引发了您

孩子的哮喘,但是如果

候诊室不是焦急地等待几个小时,而是

让健康引导

您重新开启热量,当然

所有这一切都需要更广泛的劳动力,

但是如果我们 ‘很有创意,我们也已经有了

,我们知道我们的医生和

护士甚至社会工作者都

不够,医疗保健的滴答作响时间

太限制健康

只是需要更多的时间它需要

社区

卫生工作者和病例的非临床大军 管理人员和

许多其他人如果

下一个医疗保健劳动力的一小部分

是这个国家的 1100 万大学生

,他们没有承担临床责任,不愿意承担任何责任,那该怎么

办? 来自那些倾向于压垮患者的官僚机构的回答,

以及通过多年使用谷歌磨练出来的

无与伦比的信息检索能力,

以免你

认为大学志愿者不可能做出

这种承诺我有两个词

要给你三月疯狂 NCAA

1 级男子篮球运动员平均

每周投入 39 小时从事这项运动

谈到

对弱势社区的真正影响 大学

运动队说,我们将在

早上的某个不虔诚的时间在校园的某个场地花费数十个小时,

我们将衡量你的表现

和团队的表现,如果你不这样做

达标,否则你不出现我们

会把你从团队中剔除,但我们会

在你的培训

和发展上进行大量投资,我们会给你一个

分机 普通的同龄人和

人们在门外排着队只是为了

有机会成为其中的一员,所以我们的

感觉是,如果它对

橄榄球队来说足够好,对健康

和贫困也足够好 健康导致新兵

竞争激烈 密集训练 教练

专业要求显着 时间

建立了一个有凝聚力的团队并衡量

结果 我有点像为美国教

医疗保健 现在

在美国医疗补助患者人数最多的十大城市中,

每个城市都有

至少 20,000 名大学生

仅纽约就有 50 万大学

学生,这不仅仅是一种

患者与基本资源联系起来的短期劳动力,它是

下一代医疗保健领导

管道,他们在诊所候诊室花了两三

四年时间

与患者谈论他们最基本的

健康需求 他们带着信念离开

了实现我们

对医疗保健的最大愿望的能力和

功效,事情是 这里

已经有成千上万的人了,所以我 lazada 是

UCSF 医疗中心内科的首席住院医师,但在

本科三年里,她是波士顿医疗中心

诊所候诊室的健康领导志愿者,

当我的同学写一篇文章时,米娅说 处方 当我开处方时,

他们认为他们的工作已经完成

我认为

家人可以阅读处方 他们

是否有交通前往药房

他们是否有食物可以

随处方服用 他们是否有保险来

填写处方 这些是

我学到的问题 健康 不是

在医学院 现在这些

解决方案都没有 处方板

电子病历

候诊室 大学生大军是

完美的,但他们是我们的,

因为

如果我们回收和重新部署大量未充分利用的医疗资源 可以

实现我们最基本

的医疗保健愿望,所以我一直从事法律

服务 大约九个月的时间里,这个

健康的想法开始在

我脑海中浮现,我知道我必须告诉杰夫·

珀塞尔,我的律师我

需要离开,我很紧张,因为我

认为他会对我感到

失望 为了

一些疯狂的想法而放弃我们的客户,我和他坐下来

,我说杰夫我有一个想法,我们

可以动员大学生

解决患者最基本的健康需求

,老实说,我只想让

他不要生气 在我,但他说

这丽贝卡当你有一个愿景你

有义务实现那个

愿景你必须追求那个愿景我

不得不说我就像哇那是很大

的压力我只是想要一个祝福我

不想要一些 有点任务,但

事实是,从那时起,我几乎每分每秒都在

追求这一愿景 我

相信我们都

对这个国家的医疗保健抱有远见

由d 疾病被治愈,但疾病被

预防,

这不是因为我们的技术的卓越性

或我们专家的复杂性,

而是我们很少

需要它们,最重要的是我相信

,当我们衡量医疗保健时,它

不会取决于系统 但是

我们选择它是谢谢你