Tag: virtual care

  • Follow-up to ED calls, May 12 and 13 – PPE, virtual care, and HR updates

    This email was sent to EDs/Administrative Leads, Board Chairs and Lead Clinicians of AFHTO member organizations.

    Thank you to all the executive directors who joined our third round of regional ED calls last week.

    This email is a follow-up to provide the information promised during the calls, as well as other updates and supports, including a link to last week’s webinar with Maria McDonald, which you’ll find in the HR section below.

    PPE

    Question: What are the recommendations related to use of PPE with asymptomatic patients?

    • The Chief Medical Officer of Health recommends that asymptomatic patients should first be screened over the phone prior to visiting the clinic. For non-COVID-19 related visits that are unavoidable, the patient should again be asked the COVID-19 screening questions upon arrival. If the patient screens negative to all questions and exhibits no signs or symptoms of COVID-19, the following is being recommended:   
      • At reception, if able to maintain spatial distance of at least 2 m or separation by physical barrier then no personal protective equipment (PPE) required by reception staff.  
      • Primary care providers should consider wearing procedural masks if within 2 m of a patient.  
      • Proceed with the patient as per Routine Practices, including hand hygiene and apply PPE as required based on the intervention. It’s suggested that a point-of-care risk assessment (PCRA) be performed by every health care worker before every patient interaction and additional PPE precautions be taken based on risk assessment.
    • Check out the OH West PPE site for “Point of Care Risk Assessment – PPE Selection Guide” for guidance on precautions to take based on risk assessment.
    • A one-page summary on the recommendations for asymptomatic patients and the “Point of Care Risk Assessment – PPE Selection Guide” is here.

    Question: How can I access PPE?

    • The ministry recommends the following pathway for accessing PPE:
      • Contact your regular supplier. They are your first point-of-contact and many suppliers have now increased stock.
      • If you’re unable to acquire PPE from your regular supplier, contact your OH regional table.
      • As a last resort, and if you have less than a 5-day supply, contact the Ministry Emergency Operations Centre (MEOC) at eocoperations.moh@ontario.ca
    • The OMA SGFP has secured an arrangement for bulk purchasing of PPE with Surgo Surgical Supply – please connect with your affiliated physician group to get access to this information.
    • The government’s Workplace PPE Supplier Directory also provides information on companies that sell PPE.
    • With our primary care partners, AFHTO continues to advocate for a provincial approach to PPE bulk purchasing and centralized distribution.
    • Guidance for PPE reprocessing is expected shortly. We will share this as soon as it is public.

    Virtual care

    • Kate Dewhirst of Kate Dewhirst Health Law has developed a number of virtual care policies that can be found on her website. The most recent policies and documents can be found on the bottom of her webpage.
    • There have been some concerns about patients recording their appointments. AFHTO is discussing this with the OMA and CMPA and will provide feedback on how to mitigate this risk.
    • We are hearing increasing concerns about analog lines and rural accessibility to virtual care, including the challenge that not all patients have access to the internet or digital tools like computers and phones. We will continue to bring this to the attention of the ministry.
    • Primary care teams have adapted to virtual care almost overnight and are leading patient-centric innovations in their community. Take a moment and learn more about what teams across the province are doing, and please share your initiatives with us at improve@afhto.ca.
    • Teams are also starting to think about what aspects of virtual care they want to become standard in the new normal.
      • We encourage EDs to consider getting input from staff and patients about what recent changes they’d like to maintain. For example, North York FHT has recently done a Virtual Care Provider Experience Survey.
      • AFHTO is working with our primary care partners to roll out a provincial primary care patient survey and provider survey to measure the virtual care experience during the pandemic – stay tuned for more information on that!

    Human Resources

    Canadian Family Physician (CFP), the journal of the College of Family Physicians of Canada, posted a blog by Dr. Kimberly Wintemute and Dr. Guylène Thériault on the “Post-COVID primary care reboot” that you may find of interest.

    To capture the primary care experience, we will be reaching out soon to schedule interviews with executive directors, which we hope to start in early June. We ask you do your best to schedule one with us or to delegate to someone on the team who would be willing to be interviewed. We will hopefully be working with students at the University of Toronto to conduct these interviews, which will provide us with the narrative of how essential the role of team-based primary care was during the pandemic.

    A reminder to keep checking out our COVID-19 section that we regularly update with news, tools, and resources, including the daily situation reports and regular memos from the ministry’s command table.

    We’ll continue to keep you updated, and we’ll arrange another round of check-in calls to happen in about 2-3 weeks’ time.

    Please contact us any time. We’re here to support you.

    Sincerely,

    Your AFHTO Team

  • Follow-up from ED calls, April 21 – 22 and more

    This email was sent to EDs/Administrative Leads, Board Chairs and Lead Clinicians of AFHTO member organizations.

    Dear triad members,

    Thank you to all the executive directors who joined our second round of regional ED calls last week. It’s proving helpful to hear what is working well, how you are managing the challenges you’re facing, and how we can help.

    This email is a follow-up to provide the information promised during the calls, as well as other updates and supports.

    PPE

    •         AFHTO, OCFP, and NPAO issued a joint letter to the Minister of Health on April 15 regarding the urgency for PPE across the primary care sector.
    •         Teams are encouraged to reach out to their Ontario Health regional leads to ensure they are part of regular communication across regions, and to provide updates and need regarding PPE supply. Regional table leads can be seen here.
    •           The ministry will be releasing PPE guidelines in about a week’s time, which will include an outline on how distribution is prioritised and strategies to help ensure PPE conservation.

    Virtual care

    •         Two documents have been posted to assist with virtual care: Hosting Group Platforms Virtually and Summary of Virtual Visit Platform Solutions.
    •         The amount of care that is being delivered in-person is fairly consistent across teams. Polls during the ED calls showed that the majority of physicians and nurse practitioners – 79% and 80%, respectively – are delivering 10% or less of the care in-person.
    •          Almost all teams polled on the calls have RNs and RPNs delivering at least some in-person care (97%). The other three professions most likely to be delivering in-person care, across the teams polled, were pharmacists (18%), chiropodists (15%), and physician assistants (13%).

    Financial Information

    • The federal and provincial governments have announced a series of tax changes and financial measures to build on the federal government’s COVID-19 Economic Response Plan, including:
      • 10% wage subsidy – teams may qualify for a federal payroll deduction rebate for employee compensation paid between March 18, 2020, and June 19, 2020 (up to $1,375 per employee and to a maximum of $25,000 total per employer).
      • Employer Health Tax (EHT) – Retroactive to January 1, 2020, the EHT exemption for 2020 will be increased from $490,000 to $1 million. If you have been remitting EHT, you can contact the Ministry of Finance to check your organization’s EHT account.
    • Teams should work with their accountants or financial advisors to determine and understand eligibility for any financial subsidies.
    • For teams that qualify, they can request repurposing money towards COVID-related costs. The ministry is developing guidelines on eligible reallocations for unintended expenses through the normal reallocation process. Teams are encouraged to contact their senior program consultant about applying for reallocations.

    Human resources

    • AFHTO has confirmed WSIB’s new Classification Structure does not apply to FHTs and NPLCs. These changes only impact Schedule 2 organizations (e.g. those that have a public board appointed municipally or provincially), so it is not mandatory for teams to carry WSIB coverage at this time.
    • We heard many teams are beginning to redeploy staff to other sectors/organizations in need of support. We encourage all teams to check with their insurers on the best approach to redeployment to mitigate risk and liability concerns. We can also provide teams with a sample secondment agreement to help outline the terms and conditions of deployment.
    • The current emergency order prohibits long-term care employees from working in more than one long-term care home, retirement home, or health care setting. However, if primary care staff are redeployed to a long-term care home (or hospital setting or a testing/assessment centre), there is no provincial recommendation preventing them from continuing to work at their home organization. Similarly, there is nothing prohibiting staff from working across multiple primary care sites. That said, we encourage teams to follow these best practice tips for staff that are working in more than one sector or organization:
      • Ensure staff working in other settings are provided with appropriate PPE.
      • Encourage staff working in more than one setting to provide as much virtual care as possible and limit any in-person visits to those deemed necessary.
      • Where possible, loan staff on a full-time basis to other sectors as required to limit the need to work in two different settings.
    • AFHTO will update teams if/when further provincial guidance is offered on redeployment.

    Quality and research projects

    •          A brief web-based survey is underway to understand the experiences of IHPs in FHTs and to describe their state of practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. We encourage you share the link to the survey with your teams: https://queensu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_cZQNQrpCqKAc8K1
    •          The QI in PC Council has started two projects to support all teams. Please consider speaking with QIDSS and QIDSS-like individuals to encourage they join these groups, and contact Sandeep Gill with any questions:
    •    Standardized Queries for Chronic Diseases & High-risk Patients: Creating standardized queries to identify chronic disease patients, high-risk patients, and OHT priority populations. This will help with lists for vulnerable check-in calls during COVID-19 and priority population identification for OHTs post-COVID-19
    •    Let’s Measure the Impact of Primary Care during COVID-19: Creating meaningful indicators for primary care that can measure care provided during COVID-19 (ex: support provided to patients by IHPs, number of screenings completed, number of case reports sent to Public Health). This will create indicators to measure the impact of virtual care transition pre-, during, and post-COVID-19

    A few other things

    •           On April 25, the government announced an additional $4/hour of ‘pandemic pay’ for the next four months for frontline workers. The current list of eligible workplaces and workers does not seem to include primary care, but we are seeking clarity, especially for those who have been redeployed to COVID-19 assessment centres, LTC/retirement homes, or hospitals, and for those providing in-person clinical care.
    •          On April 25, the ministry also released version 4 of “COVID-19 Guidance: Primary Care Providers in a Community Setting.” There are significant inconsistencies in the document, including the misalignment between the case definition and the screening guidance and when full PPE should be used in the clinics. We have let the Emergency Operations Centre know that there are inconsistencies and requested a thorough review be done before dissemination.
    •         On April 27, the premier announced a high-level framework for the reopening of the province. The news release, which includes a link to the framework, is here.
    •         The provincial government has announced it’s partnering with the federal government to provide urgent rent relief for small businesses.
    •         The CEO of Ontario Health, Matt Anderson, issued an update on Wednesday, April 22, from Ontario Health’s COVID-19 Health System Response Team. You can read the memo here.
    •          AFHTO will be reaching out to EDs in the coming weeks to arrange an interview on teams’ pandemic approach, how virtual care changed practice, and a vision for primary care post-COVID in the ‘new normal.’

    Be sure to watch last Friday’s episode of The Agenda, where AFHTO’s president and board chair, Dr. Tom Richard, joined Dr. Sarah Newbery and Dr. Javed Alloo to discuss how family physicians and primary care are coping with caring for patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    And a reminder to keep checking out our COVID-19 section that we regularly update with news, tools, and resources, including the daily situation reports and regular memos from the ministry’s command table.

    Please consider sharing success stories that we can post and spread to help teams learn from one another, and to continue to show how team-based primary care is stepping up in the wake of this pandemic.

    We’ll continue to keep you updated, and we’ll arrange another round of check-in calls to happen in about 2-3 weeks’ time.

    Please contact us any time. We’re here to support you through this.

    Sincerely,

    Your AFHTO Team

  • Follow-Up from March 27th webinar, Qs and As from the Ministry and Clarity on PPE Questions from MEOC

    This email was sent to EDs/Administrative Leads, Board Chairs and Lead Clinicians of AFHTO member organizations.  

    Dear triad members,

    Thank you to all the executive directors who were able to join our regional calls earlier this week. We were pleased to hear how well many of you are doing, and to hear how we can continue to support you.

    This email is a follow-up to provide the information promised during the calls.

    • It sounds like teams are providing over 90% of care virtually with approximately 80% to 85% of their staff working remotely, so teams are exploring different tools for providing this care. We’ve now posted more information about virtual care that may help. This includes apps and programs that can be used, as well as how to set up call display when calling patients.
    • We’ve also put together information we’ve received from the ministry’s Emergency Operations Centre to help with PPE questions regarding asymptomatic patients and providers, the use of homemade masks, and the PPE survey. You can see it here.
    • We hosted a webinar on March 27 with Maria McDonald (McDonald HR Law) and Kate Dewhirst (Kate Dewhirst Health Law) called “Human resources, privacy, and risk management during the COVID-19 pandemic: What do you need to know?” There were several questions we committed to follow-up on. The answers to those questions and the webinar recording are here.
    • From the March 27 webinar and the ED regional calls this week, there were also questions for the ministry. The answers can be found here. If you have additional questions, please let us know or connect with your ministry consultant.

    Just a reminder that we have a COVID-19 section that hosts tools and resources you may need, including policies and procedures from your colleagues that you may find helpful in adapting for your site. We’ll continue to keep you updated, and we’ll reach out soon to arrange another round of check-in calls to happen in about 2-3 weeks’ time.

    Stay well, and please contact us any time. We’re here to support you through this.

    Sincerely,
    Your AFHTO Team