Jun 3, 2024
Four women health care leaders discuss the value of connected health data, clinical studies at the point of care, neurodiversity considerations in data collection, and the importance of community care. This second episode on women’s health continues the conversation on how health systems need to change to eliminate barriers and address the needs of women patients to provide whole-person care.
Featuring:
Listen as they discuss:
“I think that it's really about how can we make these super busy people utilize the tools that work for them best … Because every data element I don't fill out as a patient is a data element a medical assistant, a nurse, a doctor is going to have to do instead, which means less time treating me like a patient.” – Dr. Sarah Matt
“Where you live has a tremendous impact on your health and well-being, not just at a country or state level, but down to the neighborhood level. And so when we can get that information in the EHR, then we're able to proactively engage based on transportation barriers, food insecurities.” – Christy Dueck, Ph.D.
“How do we pull that data together to be able to proactively reach into those communities? When I think about women and historically vulnerable populations, I think those are some of the same type of thinking and methodology that we have to leverage in connecting the data together, using data from a variety of sources to proactively identify populations, and then reach out to them.” – Dr. Nasim Afsar
“There are a lot of [technology] platforms I feel that have come on board, which just makes it more accessible for people. And then just thinking about different groups of people who may perhaps were not considered before, like neurodiverse, and are we thinking about them when we are designing the [technology] systems or thinking about their data and how to connect their data … How do they communicate with their healthcare provider? Do we have a lot of information about that? Neurodiversity covers quite a lot and there will be a lot of changes [to technological solutions] in terms of how we capture the information in a standardized way.” – Esther Gathogo, M.Pharm., Ph.D.
00:00:00
You're listening to Perspectives on Health and Tech, a podcast by Oracle with conversations about connecting people, data and technology to help improve health for everyone.
In the second episode on Women's Health Equity, we'll be talking about how the role many women play as caregivers can present a challenge for patient engagement. We'll talk about technology and patient data and how we can effectively unify our knowledge together to treat the whole person.
00:00:37
Hi, I'm Dr. Nasim Afsar, chief health officer at Oracle Health. And joining me today on the podcast are three of my colleagues from around the world. I'll ask them to introduce themselves and give a brief overview of what they do.
00:00:53
Sarah Matt
Thanks, Nasim. I'm Dr. Sarah Matt. I'm a surgeon by training my
fellowships and burns, but I've been in product development all
over the world for my entire career. That's building our electronic
medical records, new mobile applications, patient engagement
solutions, you name it. First, I came in to drive our OCI, the
cloud side of our business for health care and life sciences. And
now, after our acquisition of Cerner, I focus on new product
development.
Nasim Afsar
Thank you. Esther?
00:01:20
Esther Gathogo
Hi, I'm Dr. Esther Gathogo, and I'm a pharmacist with 18 years’
experience working across different sectors: community, hospital,
academia and clinical research. And I currently work as a senior
performance improvement leader in international based in UK. And I
also focus on health equity and AI.
00:01:40
Nasim
Christy?
Christy Dueck
Hi, everyone, I’m Dr. Christy Dueck. I'm the vice president and
global head of our Learning Health Network and really have
responsibilities around creating health system partnerships with
life sciences industries to bring clinical research as an
integrated component of clinical care.
00:02:02
Nasim
Thank you, Christy. And my background is in internal medicine. I
practiced as a hospitalist for over a decade in tertiary,
quarternary academic medical centers.
I've been in health care administration on the health care delivery
side for over sixteen years in roles, in quality roles, in health
management, contracting and health care operations. My team is
focused on how do we ensure that across the globe we have healthy
people, healthy workforce and healthy businesses. Driving the best
of products and services to ensure that we're improving the health
of the world.
So thrilled to be here and thank you all for joining me today as we talk about women and health equity.
00:02:49
Nasim Afsar
Many women prioritize the care of other people, their loved ones or
family members above their own, and oftentimes may feel like they
don't have time to take care of themselves or be able to do the
extra research that's required or seek a second opinion. Some of
the ways that technology can help partner with providers to ease
that burden. Christy, what do you think about this?
00;03;17
Christy Dueck
Well, I'm going to hit it from that clinical trial perspective
again, as we look at ped's trials. We know the number one driver of
not enrolling enough kids onto those trials is because the
appointments happen when parents are working. And really when moms
are working. And so it's, again, something as simple as we're
changing that behavior so that we can bring that clinical trial out
of a clinical research organization or at a specialty clinic that's
4 hours away from where that kid lives, and actually make it
available at the point of care within their community on a Saturday
morning so that a mom can take her kid to be part of that
trial.
00:04:00
And instead of trying to create processes where we're enabling health systems and caregivers to work at optimum times, we've got to also create processes that actually allow our community members to engage in the care that they need on the time systems that work for them.
And so I think, Nasim, you know, exactly what you were saying is that if we're going to have moms engage in their own health and in the health of their kids, we've got to make it available for them at a time that works for them. And it can be something as simple as changing those appointment times, or the availability for them, that completely changes the outcome of a clinical trial.
00:04:42
Nasim
Sarah, wondering about your thoughts on this.
Sarah Matt
So for me it's really about options. So I'm here at my desk and on
my desk I have this letter. They actually send me a letter from the
doctor's office and it was about an upcoming appointment.
First of all, I'm in a generation that a letter is just not going to work. It's not going to cut it. But I was never given the opportunity to tell them how I communicate best. So if they would give me an option to use some other patient engagement tool, a portal email, a text message, literally anything else for me would be a better option.
00:05:20
But I think that's the trick, is that technology can allow for more options. So maybe Christy is a text person. Maybe Esther actually will listen to her phone messages. If someone calls me, they're never going to get a hold of me. But, you know, I think that it's really about how can we make these super busy people utilize the tools that work for them best.
And every health care organization uses patient engagement tools, whether they're using a third party for a kiosk in their office or a patient portal or other outreach mechanisms for population health. There's so many ways they can do this, and some populations are going to love that letter. Other populations, like me: please text me, please send me an email, because anything I can do by multitasking, anything I can do where I don't have to stay on hold and talk to an actual person is going to be better for me.
00:06:11
I think the second piece is really about the information in your medical record. Nothing is more frustrating than showing up to a doctor's office or for me with this letter, they sent me a whole packet of papers to fill out to bring with me to my appointment on paper. I know they're going to scan that. I know none of it will be discreet, structured information, which pains me because I know I'm going to have to fill it out again.
But if we can find ways to take a patient's record, to use it well, to send it to the next provider, to use HIEs, to use other mechanisms of interoperability well, then those patients don't have to get to the appointment or they don't have to worry about the information being they don't have to check it again and again.
00:06:54
Every time you write this information down, there's a chance I'm going to mess it up again. And I'm a highly educated patient. For patients that are really iffy about their health care, it can be even harder. I know for me, as I say, I have a ton of kids. When I am filling out paperwork for my four kids, I can barely remember all their birthdays.
You can tell it's going to be a mess. So any time that all that information can be instead sent to me to review and verify, I'm going to do a ton better than what I'm starting from scratch. And I'm probably not the only patient out there that's experiencing the same thing.
So for me, when I think about how technology can really help patients and that patient provider burden, it's about being able to transport and use interoperability in a really robust fashion to make sure my records go from place to place and then give patients options.
00;07:50
Because every data element I don't fill out as a patient is a data element a medical assistant, a nurse, a doctor is going to have to do instead, which means less time treating me like a patient.
00:08:02
Nasim
Sarah, I can promise you that you are not alone. And I look at the crazy amount of health care paper that lands in my mailbox. You know, your comment about options and preferences is ultimately an angle of precision medicine, right? It's getting health care the way that you want it, and you need it to be able to care for yourself. And I think we have we have a lot of work to do, too, to actually be able to get there.
00:08:34
When patients feel like the medical establishment is no longer listening to them, they sometimes turn to alternative therapies.
How can patients and clinicians work better together to make sure they're bringing all of the data and modes of health and wellness together to really treat the whole person?
00:08:53
Sarah Matt
So when I think about brining, health, medical, wellness all
together, I think that in the past, and even today, we often keep
them in silos. So medicine is this and there's a big fence post
around it and we don't think about what does that mean to the
patient. What is wellness, what is mental health?
What are these other areas of health and wellness that are not necessarily part of our electronic medical record or as a part of our normal scope of practice. So first, I think providers need to really think past their training, and that's hard. As a provider who is trained in the United States, I was trained to take care of patients in a pretty specific way.
00:09:35
Fortunately, I'm from the generation that's worked on paper and electronically, so I've seen the full gamut of craziness when it comes to how to take care of patients digitally and not. But how does that intersect with chiropractic care or traditional medicine for different cultures or herbal supplement 27? Whatever it is. I think that as medical professionals, sometimes we know what our scope of practice is, and we know what we know really well.
But when it comes to a new modality of care, whether it's a nontraditional type of therapy or a new medication, that is maybe not an FDA regulated medication, maybe it's something that's herbal, we don't know what to do with that. And a lot of providers, I think, often will put up that wall and say that's not a good idea.
00:10:26
That sounds kind of crazy. Maybe you shouldn't do that. But I think that if we look to ten years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, that's how we thought about a lot of things. Chiropractic medicine is a good example. Some providers are really excited about it, some aren't. But time and time again, all literature will show that for some patients it decreases pain.
So as a provider, should I prescribe chiropractic care? Ah, maybe not, but there's no denying that for some patients it's decreasing pain, and that's real. So what I'd suggest is first, sometimes as providers, we need to educate ourselves in some other modalities of care. Sometimes we need to recognize when some therapies are helping our patients, whether we agree or not, with the medical validity of it.
00:11:15
And we can help our patients understand what risks might actually be able. Will this medication actually do something in a negative? It’s helping this patient with pain, with depression, with this new thing. Is it going to cause harm in other ways? How can we help our patients do a risk analysis for themselves?
And when it comes to mental health, again, a lot of providers, me included, we have our scope of practice that we feel really comfortable with, and then we tend to refer out for everything else. Which is not a bad way to practice medicine, but I think it prevents us from thinking about what are those important and engaging human questions that we should be asking during our encounter.
Again, what are those personable things that we can do to show that we care and to help make sure that our patient gets to the right place next? Whether it's understanding a little bit about their life, about their struggles, about how things are going in their lives, I think that's important.
00:12:15
We often are concerned about how healthy they are or are they taking their medications the way they're supposed to. But I think we forget sometimes and rarely ask, how are you as a person? Because whether they hit those marks on the depression screen scale that my nurses give them, I think a lot can be said about when they speak to me in the office, if I'm concerned about them as a human being, and then I can help get them to the right resource or help give them some information that will help them on their journey better.
00:12:48
Nasim
There’s such tremendous value, Sarah, in truly listening,
understanding and empowering people to be able to take care of
themselves. And then for us to having truly understood them, to
help them in a different way. I really appreciate that perspective.
Christy, I'm wondering about your thoughts on about how can we help
patients and clinicians do better in bringing all of the data
together?
00:13:14
Christy
I think it's a couple of things. I think that as I was listening to
Sarah, I thought of, you know, there's the social determinants of
health aspect and then there's certainly the prevention aspect,
where we're not just focused on treatment of a known issue, but
prevention of issues presenting in the first place. From that
social determinants of health perspective, you know, we know that
beyond clinical data, there's so much more that impacts your health
and well-being.
00:13:43
Where you live has a tremendous impact on your health and well-being, not just at a country or state level, but down to the neighborhood level. And so when we can get that information in the EHR, then we're able to proactively engage based on transportation barriers, food insecurities.
00:14:06
Nasim
You know, Christy, one of the things that we talked about was how
our various data on patients are in lots of different places. So
that even if you have data with one EHR company and you see another
health care delivery system that has the exact same EHR, those two
parts actually don’t speak with each other.
And so when it comes to some very basic elements of care like colorectal cancer screening, we don't really have a good sense of what percentage of the population have been screened because we have data in all these different systems that don't really come together.
00:14:50
And really the strength of, and the privilege and the responsibility of, being part of a large data company that knows data and connectivity to look at how do we solve these problems, how do we really need a system where we can have a national, and then in every country across the globe, a way to be able to pull this data together, understand it?
And then there's another side of this where more data can be leveraged. Which is pulling data from lots of different sources and connecting it enables us to understand particular communities where there are, for example, food deserts: where we know patients are likely eating large amounts of highly processed foods, where the rates of alcohol consumption and smoking are much higher and those are going to be populations that are more predisposed for colorectal cancer.
00:15:49
How do we pull that data together to be able to proactively reach into those communities? And again, when I think about women and historically vulnerable populations, I think those are some of the same type of thinking and methodology that we have to leverage in connecting the data together, using data from a variety of sources to proactively identify populations, and then reach out to them.
00:16:14
Esther
Just picking up on what I guess you've all said, but also what
Sarah mentioned on the mental health, it made me think about
digital therapeutics, an area which is growing. And even in Europe
you have some countries like Germany who are now having like
digital therapeutics on prescription as an alternative to giving
medicine.
So I'm just imagining now in terms of how to connect some of this data from these newer applications where they've really started to show really good benefits when it comes to managing depression. And mental health is an area that I feel over the pandemic really changed the model of care and delivery and with a lot more people feeling comfortable to have their therapy virtually.
And so there's a lot platforms I feel, that have come on board in which just makes it more accessible for people. And then just thinking about different groups of people who may perhaps were not considered before, like in terms of thinking about neurodiversity and are we thinking about them and when we are designing the systems or thinking about the data and how to connect the data.
00:17:36
So if you think about someone with autism or a woman with autism and how do they describe or how do they experience, for example, I'm going to talk about menstrual cycle because I started with that, but how do they experience the menstrual cycle? How do they communicate that with a health care provider? And do we know a lot of information about that?
So in thinking, just because neurodiversity covers quite a lot and I think there will be changes, I think, over more incoming years, in terms of how we capture the information in a standardized way. Because then you can be able to connect the information across to be able to do research in certain groups. So I think it's quite an exciting point to be in, I guess this is this is like the pioneering stage of everything.
00:18:35
And just thinking about like we saw statistics in the UK, we have now reached 99% of households with Internet and there's more people even over the age of like 80 who've got mobile phones and they're learning to use smartphones. So I think and if you look at the smartphone and the way there's a lot of health apps on there—I think when you're talking about this whole trying to improve the physician and patient kind of relationship, this thinking about when I go home and I've been diagnosed with a condition and how to been instructed and how to manage it, how do I, what's my self-care looking like?
So when I go home and I download an app that's capturing information, it might improve on the follow-up care in terms of how you capture the information and share it with the physician in your next visit. And I think a lot of that is going to become more and more easier in terms of sharing information between systems so that you can be able to improve on just seeing that holistic view of your patient across. So I think it's quite exciting.
00:19:56
Nasim
Yeah, I think that's that's a great point. What are some other
innovative ways you've seen health organizations share information
with their communities?
Esther
Yeah, So we saw just over the pandemic an increase in social media
use, particularly in low to middle income countries just looking
for answers really to understanding like COVID and also the vaccine
itself.
So we've seen an increase and they saw it as a potential tool to access hard to reach communities in terms of educating people in low resource settings on health care. And one of the things, for example, we had and within ECF last year there was Dr. Khyati Bakhai who delivered a talk on this where she was saying that she translated some information around the COVID vaccine to another Indian dialect, and that increased the uptake of the COVID vaccine within that community.
So you're starting to see how social media platforms, particularly if there's a really high usage of it, particularly in low resource settings, as another avenue to reach out to those communities, just to help them on understanding more about their health and also sharing credible health information through those platforms. And also just thinking about how you can use it as well and in terms of thinking how to reach out to them if it was, for example, for research or for understanding more around even like barriers to health care for them or understanding their needs.
00:21:56
Nasim
Well, thank you all for joining us for the thought-provoking
conversation about women and health equity. I want to thank our
panelists Christy Dueck, Sarah Matt and Esther Gathogo. Great
conversation around the role of technology and how can we address
some of these shortcomings and limitations that we have for women
to receive better care.
But lots of areas identified where we really need to work together in partnership to address as we move forward. Looking forward to ongoing dialog around this, and more importantly, action around how we can impact better health for women across the globe. Thank you.
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