Title: Taking%20Care%20of%20You
1- Taking Care of You
- Becoming the CEO of Your Health
Michael Anderson, MDChief Medical Officer - UH
Case Medical CenterChief Medical Officer -
University HospitalsAssociate Professor,
Pediatrics - CWRU School of Medicine
Raymond Krncevic, Esq.Associate General Counsel
Shanna McIntosh MSN BSN RNSupervisor, Clinical
Applications Analyst IIIT Department -
Ambulatory EMR
Zachary Brott, BSN, RNIT Clinical Application
Analyst I
Roy Buchinsky, MD, ABIHMSenior Clinical
Instructor, Medicine-CWRU School of
MedicineDirector of wellness, Primary Care
InstituteRobert and Susan Hurwitz Master
Clinician in Wellness
Meghan M. Ramic, BSN, RN, CPHQManagerClinical
Risk ManagementUniversity Hospitals Case Medical
Center
Laurie Joyce BSN, RNSenior Quality Improvement
NurseQuality Institute University Hospitals
Case Medical Center
Susan Semrau BSN, RN, CPHQSenior Quality
Improvement NurseQuality Institute University
Hospitals Case Medical Center
2Disclosures
- Speakers in this presentation have no disclosures.
3Objectives
- Understanding the effect of the external
environment on the internal environment - Effect of lifestyle on disease causation
- Smoking, diet, nutrition, exercise, stress,
sleep, and sex - Understand the different modalities of stress
management - Discuss the Critical Incident Management Team
(Second Victim) and available resources for staff
- Overview of the physician wellness committee
- Brainstorming of future growth for the program
4Self Care - Becoming the CEO of Your Health
- Roy Buchinsky, MD,ABIHM
- Director of Wellness, PCI
- Robert and Susan Hurwitz Master Clinician in
Wellness
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6Wellness Statistics Cost
- 75 of Health Care are spent on four chronic
conditions - Obesity
- Diabetes
- Cardiovascular Disease
- Cancer
7Wellness Statistics Cause
- 75 of Chronic Health conditions are due to
- Smoking
- Poor nutrition (choices and portions)
- Physical inactivity
- Unmanaged stress
8Behavior is a Powerful Determinant of Health
Outcomes
Schroeder SA. N Engl J Med 20073571221-1228.
9Optimal Health 3Fs 3 Ss
Sleep Stress Sex
Feet Fingers Fork
10Epigenetics
- Nature vs. Nurture
- Genes load the gun, but epigenetics pulls the
trigger - 30 Genetics
- 70 Lifestyle
11Reshuffling the Genetic Deck
- All genes do is make proteins or watch other
genes - Which genes are on or off are largely under OUR
control - 90 of genes are actually gene switches
- Epigenetic studies reveal that genes can be
turned off and on
12Mechanisms of Changing Gene Function
- 1. Proteins production
- 2. Terrific telomeres
13Lifestyle and Cell Age
- Telomere length affects longevity
- Smoking, obesity and stress shorten telomeres
- Relaxation lengthens telomeres by 30
8/6/2019
13
University Hospitals Ahuja Medical Center
14Why Physician Self Care Matters
15Why Now?
16Shakespeare on Self-Care
17Self-Care vs. No Self-Care for Self and Patients
- Self-care No self-care
- Satisfaction
Fatigue - Well being
Weakened immune system - Sense of purpose
Interpersonal distress - Mental clarity Burnout
- Emotional awareness Depression
- Social attunement Substance
use/abuse
18The Exercise Prescription Frequency
Intensity Type Time
19Benefits of Exercise
- Lower risk of
- Early death
High BP - Colon cancer
Metabolic Synd - Coronary heart disease Abnormal
Lipids - Breast cancer
- Stroke
- T2 Diabetes
- US HHS, 2008 Physical guidelines activity for
Americans
20Stress Management
- Between 60-90 of
- healthcare visits are related to
- Stress!!!!!!
21Effects of Stress on Performance
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24Mindful Practice Mindfulness
- Paying attention with purpose to the moment at
hand - Being in the now with total acceptance
- Noticing your present experience-thoughts and
feelings - Being fully and totally aware
- Mind full, or Mindful
- Various breathing techniques
25Mindfulness
26Mindfulness Practice and Tools
- Breathe - the 10 count technique
- Notice five things in the moment
- Immerse yourself in sensation using an object of
focus - chocolate - Walk purposefully in meditation
- Practice mindful eating
27Stress Busters- No Single Prescription
- Diaphragmatic breathing
- Yoga classes
- Guided Imagery purposeful dreaming
- Take a walk/jog/spin/swim
- Look out the window watch the clouds/stars
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29Out With the Old
30In With The New
31So, Lets Start At the Beginning
- The Confusion starts with Diets
- Low Fats
- Low Carbs
- High Protein/ High Fat
- High Fat(?)
- Vegan
32JUST TELL ME WHAT TO EAT!!
- Eat real food, mostly plants, not too much
- If it comes from a plant, eat it-If its made in
a plant, avoid it - If its white, its just not right( with
exceptions) - Balanced diet, incorporating ALL food groups
- Stop drinking your calories
33The Bottom Line
34Deep Sleep
35Sleep and Disease Risk
- Chronic medical conditions
- Obesity
- High blood pressure
- Diabetes
- Heart disease
- Depression
36Sleep Deprivation
- Focus, attention, and vigilance drift
- Reduced ability to access previously learned
information - Interpretation and decision-making affected
- Judgment becomes impaired
- Chronic fatigue poor performance, accidents and
injuries - Low quality sleep poor mood, reduced energy and
learning
37Sex and Wellness- The Missing Link
- Sex is good for you!!!! ( DUH)
- One act of intercourse burns 180 calories
- Sexual hormones lower rates of
- Depression
- Anxiety
- Cancer
- Chronic medical illnesses
- Sexual hormones may boost immunity and promote
longevity - Release of oxytocin increase intimacy( bonding
hormone) - Krychmann M, Fall 2007 ISSWSH conference Dallas,
TX
38Sex is Important in Overall Life
Moderately / Very / Extremely Important (3 to 5)
40-80 years of age
83
63
Percentage of Respondents
Men
Women
5-point scale where 5 is extremely important and
1 is not at all important.
Laumann, et al. 2005
39How Frequently Have You Had Sex in the Past 12
Months?
Pfizer Global Health Survey
40Importance of Sexuality to QOL
Agreeing That Sex Is Important to QOL ()
Age (y)
Fisher L. AARP Survey. 2010.
41More Sex Longer Life- Maybe!!!
- Increasing orgasm frequency from one per week -
three per week decreases risk of dying by about
20 in males - Increasing frequency to one a day or about 350 a
year, decreases the risk by about 40 in males - Not sufficient data on women to link frequency to
longevity - Quality of sex correlates positively with better
health for women.
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43Summary
- Genes are not your destiny
- Lifestyle factors account for 75 of chronic
medical conditions - Feet,fork,fingers, sleep, stress, sex( love) are
the master levers of our medical destiny - Behavioral patterns account for 40 of premature
mortality - Practice self care !!!
- Practice what you preach, and preach what you
practice!!!
44Critical Incident Management Team (CIMT) Peer
Support Program
- Meghan Ramic, BSN, RN, CPHQ
- Clinical Risk Manager
45Agenda
- Overview of CIMT Program
- Review of CIMT model
- Review CIMT role
- Data for CIMT interventions from team
46Reason for the team
- We now believe that it is our moral
imperative to design and deploy a readily
accessible and effective support infrastructure
for all health care providers beginning the
moment that events causing anxiety and stress are
discovered and extending through years of
protracted litigation as necessary. - Joint Commission Statement
47Ripped from the headlines
48Reasons for the team
- Their concerns related to the patient and family
- Is the patient/family ok
- Will I be sued
- Will I be fired
- Will I lose my license
- Peers
- What will my colleagues think
- Will I ever be trusted again
- What happens next?
49Types of events/incidents in Healthcare
- Death (coworker or patient)
- Downsizing
- Suicide (coworker or patient)
- Quality/Risk management issue
- Conflict
- Workplace Violence
- Sentinel Event/Critical Event
50Purpose of CIMT
- Minimize risk of harm to employees and patients
- Assessment of who benefits and who might be at
risk from an abnormal event in the workplace - Restoring balance and resilience to the workplace
and employees - Promoting safety and well being of others
51Roles of CIMT Responder
- Provide consultation, individual or group
facilitation, and psycho-educator rather than
counselor - Promote recovery, return to work and function
- Consult with leadership when indicated to review
information about the event and reactions - Build group support
- Provide safe haven and promote confidentiality
- Provide/initial solutions to overcome immediate
return to work and return to life obstacles
52Roles of CIMT Responder
- Triage movement toward immediate business as
usual functioning or additional care - Focus on the strengths and resources of the
individual to return to adaptive functioning - Normalize symptoms to reduce anxiety (normal
reactions to an abnormal event) - Focus on resilience and recovery, not pathology
- Identify strategies for self care and reentry to
life and work
533 types of CIMT interventions
- Individual
- Small Group Briefings
- Large Group
54Critical Incident Management Peer Support
- Volunteer physicians, nurses, LISW, EAP
- Educated in Critical Incident Management
- Respond to Colleagues Incidents
- Sentinel Events
- Litigation
- Adverse Patient Outcomes
- Referral if needed
55Legal and Management
- Confidentiality and Privilege
- Program Management / Oversight
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57Current Goals
- Increase awareness of the team
- RMC
- Nursing education
- GME education
- Recruit new members
- Application process
- LMS education
58Promoting your own resiliency- Taking care of
yourself
- Check your readiness to respond before you go
- Understand nature of request
- Use support resources during response
- Discuss response afterwards
- Apply what you know about self care
- Be on guard for compassion fatigue, caregiver
burden, or burn out
59UH Physician Wellness Building a Culture of
Support and Professionalism
- Michael R Anderson, MD MBA FAAPChief Medical
Officer UH and UH Case Medical CenterAssociate
Professor, Pediatrics - CWRU School of Medicine
60Self
UH
CIMT
Wellness Committee
Wellness and Self Care
Physician
A Culture of Professionalism
61UH Building a Culture of Support and
Professionalism
- Medical Staff Wellness Committee
- UH Center on Ethics and Professionalism
62UH Medical Staff Wellness Committee
- Support the Medical Staff
- Confidential Referral to Support Network
- Review of Sensitive Matters for Clinical Council
(Med Exec) - Work in conjunction w center on Ethics and
Professionalism Center for Referrals - Aid Chairs and UH Leaders in Supporting a Culture
of Professionalism and Support - Define new avenues to support medical staff in
their important work
63UH Center on Ethics and Professionalism
- A foundation of the social contract for medicine
- Principles include patient welfare, patient
autonomy and social justice - Excellence in humanistic and patient-centered
care
64From Cruess R., Cruess S., Professionalism.
CanMEDS Train-the-Trainer Program on
Professionalism. 2009
65What is Professionalism?
- Commitments
- - Professional competence/knowledge -
Professional responsibilities (managing COI,
etc.) - Professional communication honesty,
confidentiality, etc. - Appropriate
relationships
66What is Professionalism?
- Attributes - Primacy of the needs of the
patient - Reflective practice - Altruism -
Accountability - Respectfulness - Sensitivity
(culture, age, gender, disabilities, etc.)
67UH Centers Mission and Vision
- Mission Provide readily accessible, practical
and useful resources to all medical professionals
at University Hospitals that improve and enhance
providers' ability to deliver professional,
compassionate and ethical care of the highest
quality in the most collegial environment for
employees to function as a health care team - Vision University Hospitals will be an
institution that is known and respected for
excellence in humanistic and patient-centered
care.
68Return on Investment in Professionalism
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69Where are we so far?
- Two major Keynote speakers
- Michael Brennan, MD Director for Program for
Professionalism and Ethics, Mayo Clinic - Thomas Atchison, EdD Creating and Sustaining a
Culture of Professionalism - Medicine MM Conference The Curious Case of
the Confounding Communication - Presentation to Vascular Surgery on disruptive
behaviors - Developing Web presence UHDoctor.org
- Oct 27 and 28, 2015 Lawrence Smith MD (Dean,
Hofstra)
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70Elements of the Center
- Consultation to individuals and departments
- Website for resources and learning modules
- Partnership w CWRU in education and research
- Menu of programs for Grand Rounds, GME, CME,
etc. - Risk Management Strategies (e.g., prescribing
controlled substances, management of medical
mistakes, addressing disruptive behaviors) - Communication Skills
- Management of Challenging Patients
1
71Self
UH
CIMT
Wellness Committee
Wellness and Self Care
Physician
A Culture of Professionalism
72I Will