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VIEWPOINT: Digital transformation is imperative to combat health care’s labor crisis
As the coronavirus pandemic first spread across the globe, health systems turned to technology and virtual care while focusing their efforts on COVID-19 and its consequences. Physicians deployed digital tools to keep the worried well out of hospitals, to keep beds open for COVID-19 patients, and to support and manage conditions like pregnancy from the safety […]
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As the coronavirus pandemic first spread across the globe, health systems turned to technology and virtual care while focusing their efforts on COVID-19 and its consequences. Physicians deployed digital tools to keep the worried well out of hospitals, to keep beds open for COVID-19 patients, and to support and manage conditions like pregnancy from the safety of patients’ homes.
Now the health-care industry faces a new challenge. The so-called “Great Resignation” is causing workers to leave their jobs in droves. The health-care sector is among the top three industries affected.
Hospitals were already operating on razor-thin margins after several years of limiting or foregoing lucrative elective procedures. Now they have been strained to the breaking point by increasing staff shortages. With skilled workers in high demand, many health systems are allocating resources to wooing employees with higher salaries and benefits, paying two to three times the typical salary for in-house nurses to fill staffing gaps with traveling nurses. In the meantime, they’re halting or permanently shutting down services like labor and delivery and emergency departments.
Why not use that budget to invest in digital tools, to fundamentally rethink how care is delivered? The same tools hospitals used to deliver remote care at the onset of the pandemic can serve as a stopgap during the present labor shortage.
Extend the reach of overburdened care providers with asynchronous care
Burnout is both a cause and effect of current staffing shortages. The U.S. was struggling with a shrinking clinical workforce before the pandemic. COVID-19 accelerated the problem, with some taking the opportunity to retire, others moving to more lucrative contract work, and still others switching fields altogether.
Digital tools are not a solution by themselves. Modalities that require a physician on the other end of a solution (e.g., virtual visits) do nothing to address the problems of physician shortages. Health systems need to implement mobile self-care — consumer technologies like smartphone and tablet apps that enable consumers to capture their own health data without direct provider assistance. When this biometric data is communicated into a patient’s electronic health record, providers can identify elevated risks remotely and act on them.
Reduce the need for in-office visits
The transition to virtual care at the start of the pandemic forced health-care leaders to re-evaluate and rewrite outdated industry standards. The maternal-health field is a great example of this. Although data showed long ago that a standard schedule of 12 to 14 prenatal visits is not tied to better outcomes, those recommendations remained largely unchanged since the 1930s.
Then, in response to the need to reduce in-person visits, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists assembled a panel of experts who determined that patients without medical conditions or pregnancy complications were safe to select a less-intense visit schedule, aided by digital health tools.
Remote patient monitoring can help providers capture more than 20 times the data typically collected at an in-office appointment, maximizing their time and facilitating better outcomes. Providing continuous digital touchpoints to patients also strengthens feelings of safety and support on the patient end, addresses fears from health-care staff that the labor shortage is compromising patient care, and provides a critical safety net for patients that were already struggling with access before hospitals suspended or eliminated services.
Decrease emergency-department utilization with remote patient monitoring
Remote patient monitoring (RPM) is likewise a solution for managing readmissions and emergency-service utilization. Early research showed the benefits of RPM for reducing hospital stays and admissions. The technology (and providers’ fluency with it) has improved exponentially in the ensuing years.
While its level of effectiveness varies by population and condition, data shows that RPM reduces acute-care use, and enables providers to intervene in high-risk events without sacrificing quality of care for low-risk patients.
In the U.S., COVID-related emergency department visits doubled between December 2021 and January 2022 to their highest level since the pandemic began. This strain on emergency services touched non-COVID ER patients as well. Bed shortages in rural facilities caused some ER patients to wait days to be transferred out of state.
If RPM can effectively mitigate the need for emergency services, it carries the promise of reducing the strain on emergency care within our increasingly crowded hospitals — a potentially life-saving development.
Encourage patient engagement and adherence to quality measures
The collateral damage in this labor crisis are patients — particularly the economically vulnerable, as the hospitals that typically serve these communities struggle to compete with wealthier systems that can better afford the steep rising labor costs. With these hospitals reallocating staff and resources, closing beds and services, and struggling with overloaded schedules, patients are in more danger than ever of slipping through the cracks.
It’s imperative that hospitals provide a digital safety net for their patients — 24/7 access to provider-approved education, connections to community resources, as well as reminders to engage with important quality measures such as taking medication or measuring blood-pressure levels. Digital tools are critical for supporting patients and providers.
COVID-19 revealed and exacerbated major holes in a system that was already struggling to service its patients while supporting providers. Unless today’s short-staffed hospitals adapt to current remote patient-monitoring practices, the challenges it has revealed will be with us for a long time. The “Great Resignation” should spark a great transformation, where digital innovation is no longer a stopgap but an integral part of any health-care delivery strategy moving forward.
Juan Pablo Segura is president and co-founder of Babyscripts, a virtual-care platform for managing obstetrics. He has been named a “Healthcare Transformer” by the Startup Health Academy in New York and a Wireless Lifechanger by CTIA for his work in detecting problems in pregnancy faster.

Rome Health gets county funding for maternity department renovations
ROME, N.Y. — Rome Health will receive $3 million from Oneida County to help fund a dedicated Caesarean section (C-section) suite, adjacent to the maternity department on the fourth floor of the hospital. Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente, Jr. announced the funding in his April 6 State of the County address. The hospital will
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ROME, N.Y. — Rome Health will receive $3 million from Oneida County to help fund a dedicated Caesarean section (C-section) suite, adjacent to the maternity department on the fourth floor of the hospital.
Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente, Jr. announced the funding in his April 6 State of the County address.
The hospital will use the funds to renovate 2,000 square feet of existing space and convert it to a surgical suite next to the maternity department. This will enhance patient safety and optimize the hospital’s existing operating suites on the first floor, hospital officials said.
“We are proud to be one of only two “Best Maternity Hospitals” in the state,” Rome Health CEO AnneMarie Czyz, said in a news release. “The funding for a dedicated C-section suite will enable Rome Health to take the next step in advancing our bold plan for the future.”
While the hospital’s C-section rate is lower than the state average, Rome Health’s overall obstetrics volume grew 28.5 percent between 2020 and 2021 as the community had reduced access to care in neighboring communities.
At the same time, the hospital’s overall surgical volume increased 26.4 percent with the addition of new service lines and new surgeons. Currently, one of the hospital’s four existing operating rooms is reserved for emergent C-sections.
Creating a dedicated women’s surgical suite for both scheduled and emergent C-sections will increase available capacity for general surgical growth, according to hospital officials. In 2021, 744 babies were born at Rome Health, including 282 by C-section.
“The county’s investment will help us accelerate our plans for expanding access to the best care out there, here in Rome,” Czyz said.
Other recent growth initiatives at Rome Health include breaking ground during the pandemic on a new physician center, becoming a nationally accredited bariatric center, and investing in 7D technology for spine surgery.
Rome Health provides services from primary and specialty care to long-term care, is an affiliate of St. Joseph’s Health, and is an affiliated clinical site of New York Medical College.

Binghamton entrepreneur named SBA Upstate Small Business Person of the Year
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — Anthony Folk, owner of Chenango Point Cycles in Binghamton, has won the 2022 Small Business Person of the Year Award from the

St. Elizabeth College of Nursing names Panko president
UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) has appointed Kimberly A. Panko as the next president of the St. Elizabeth College of Nursing (SECON) in Utica, effective June 6. Panko succeeds Varinya Sheppard, who is retiring on June 1 after a 40-year nursing career that included serving as president of the college and multiple
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UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) has appointed Kimberly A. Panko as the next president of the St. Elizabeth College of Nursing (SECON) in Utica, effective June 6.
Panko succeeds Varinya Sheppard, who is retiring on June 1 after a 40-year nursing career that included serving as president of the college and multiple nursing roles including chief nursing officer at St. Elizabeth Medical Center.
“In its nearly 118-year history, SECON has graduated thousands of nurses who have gone on to take care of the people of this community,” MVHS President and CEO Darlene Stromstad, said in a release. “Building upon its long legacy, we look to SECON and Dr. Panko to help take us into the future as we educate the nurses of tomorrow and open our new, state-of-the-art Wynn Hospital next year.”
“The role of president of SECON is vital to ensuring this region has access to strong nursing,” she continued. “Dr. Panko will be an integral leader in our recovery from the pandemic and our ability to deal with workforce shortages. Educating the next generation of nurses is critical to our success, and we are so lucky to have such a well-established and respected college as part of our system. Dr. Panko is the best person to take over the reins and move us into the future of healthcare in our community.”
Currently serving as director of nursing, medical surgical, and acute-inpatient rehabilitative services at MVHS, Panko’s career at MVHS began in 2001. She previously served as dean of students and faculty development and as nursing instructor/course coordinator. She has more than 28 years of experience in various nursing positions.
“My entire career has been spent providing care to this community, so to be able to take on the role of president of SECON at this juncture is exhilarating,” Panko said. “There are so many new and exciting things happening at MVHS and in our community, I am grateful that I have the opportunity to contribute to the excitement through my work at the college. Our students are the future of healthcare in this community, and I am thrilled to prepare them for this wonderful profession.”
Panko earned her doctorate degree in nursing practice, systems leadership from Chamberlain College of Nursing in Downers Grove, Illinois; master’s in nursing and administration from Clarkson College in Omaha, Nebraska; bachelor’s degree in nursing from SUNY Polytechnic Institute; and her associate degree in nursing from Northern Maine Technical College in Presque Isle, Maine.
Founded in 1904, St. Elizabeth College of Nursing offers multiple curriculum plans including weekday programs, an evening/weekend program, and a dual-degree program with SUNY Polytechnic Institute that allows students to earn two degrees in four years.

Gillibrand pushes for lower prescription-drug costs
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) recently made a stop in Syracuse to discuss her proposal for Congressional action to address the high cost of prescription drugs. Gillibrand, a member of the Senate Aging Committee, visited Upstate Medical University’s Institute for Human Performance on April 29 to outline her policy package, dubbed the
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) recently made a stop in Syracuse to discuss her proposal for Congressional action to address the high cost of prescription drugs.
Gillibrand, a member of the Senate Aging Committee, visited Upstate Medical University’s Institute for Human Performance on April 29 to outline her policy package, dubbed the “Gillibrand Prescription for Lower Drug Prices.”
“While our nation is recovering from the pandemic, drug prices remain unacceptably high, which puts a heavy financial burden on older adults and families in Syracuse and across the country,” the senator said in a news release about the proposal. “I am releasing [this] plan to provide a framework for slashing drug prices. From fighting price gouging to importing affordable drugs from Canada to enabling Medicare to negotiate drug prices, this plan will help us bring down costs for countless Americans.”
Dr. Mantosh Dewan, president of SUNY Upstate Medical University; New York State Senator John Mannion; Onondaga County Legislator Peggy Chase; Onondaga County Legislature Minority Leader Christopher Ryan, and Syracuse Common Council President Helen Hudson joined Gillibrand for her announcement.
Under current law, the secretary of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is prohibited from negotiating lower drug prices on behalf of Medicare Part D beneficiaries, Gillibrand’s office said. In contrast, other government programs, like Medicaid and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) are allowed to negotiate.
The Democrat’s office cited a recent report by the Government Accountability Office that indicated Medicare paid twice as much for the same prescription drugs as the VA in 2017.
About Gillibrand’s proposal
The core pieces of the “Gillibrand Prescription for Lower Drug Prices” include a plan to” reimagine” financial assistance for Medicare.
The legislation would create the Medicare Cost Assistance Program, a new, streamlined program to provide help with Medicare Part A and Part B premiums and cost-sharing for low-income individuals. The measure would reimagine financial help for Medicare Part A, Part B, and Part D.
The legislation would also expand and streamline administration of the Extra Help program to provide premium and cost-sharing assistance to eligible low-income people with Medicare Part D.
The proposal also calls for reviewing brand-name price gouging. The legislation would level the market for Americans purchasing prescription drugs by “pegging the price” in the U.S. to the median price in Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Japan.
Additionally, Gillibrand’s plan would give Medicare the authority to negotiate drug prices. The bill would direct the secretary of Health and Human Services to negotiate lower prices for prescription drugs under Medicare Part D.
The proposal would also allow patients, pharmacists, and wholesalers to import “safe, affordable” medicine from Canada and other major countries.
Gillibrand’s plan would also make Medicare beneficiaries in U.S. territories, such as Puerto Rico, eligible for the Medicare Part D Low Income Subsidy program. This program — known as “Extra Help,” — provides federal subsidies to help low-income seniors with their monthly premiums and other out-of-pocket prescription drug costs, Gillibrand’s office said.

UHS breaks ground for Wilson Project in Johnson City
JOHNSON CITY, N.Y. — Work is underway to develop the Wilson Project, a new, six-story, “state-of-the-art” clinical tower at UHS Wilson Medical Center, adding more than 183,000 square feet of space to the existing hospital. It represents the first expansion of the Johnson City campus in more than 30 years, UHS said. The UHS Foundation
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JOHNSON CITY, N.Y. — Work is underway to develop the Wilson Project, a new, six-story, “state-of-the-art” clinical tower at UHS Wilson Medical Center, adding more than 183,000 square feet of space to the existing hospital.
It represents the first expansion of the Johnson City campus in more than 30 years, UHS said.
The UHS Foundation is launching a $10 million capital campaign to support the project, which it is called the UHS Journey Campaign. To date, the effort has raised close to $6 million.
Creating a “great patient experience” is what this Wilson Project is really all about, John Carrigg, president and CEO of UHS, said in his remarks at an April 19 groundbreaking ceremony.
“The goal of the exciting new clinical tower that will take shape at this location is to provide a state-of-the-art healing environment for the patients we serve in the Southern Tier well into the future,” Carrigg said. “This groundbreaking ceremony represents a major step forward in the enhancement of UHS Hospital’s facilities … and the end result will be more than just a magnificent building … but most importantly a great place to provide and receive care.”
The building will include four inpatient medical/surgical units with 30 private rooms each.
Facing Main Street, the tower will be the “front door” to UHS services going forward, the health-care organization contends. It will feature a new emergency department, MRI suite, surgical-support area, and rooftop helipad, in addition to the patient rooms.
Carrigg went on to describe the Wilson Project as a “vital part of [the] UHS overall strategic and facility master plan.”
Rochester–based LeChase Construction Service, LLC is the contractor on the project. Construction will happen in three phases with completion set for summer 2025. Chianis + Anderson Architects, PLLC of Binghamton is the lead architect on the project.
“The Wilson Project will … truly enable us to recruit and retain outstanding health-care professionals and providers who will be naturally attracted to a modern, state-of-the-art working campus,” Carrigg said.
The project also adds to an area of Johnson City that has a health-care focus with Binghamton University’s health-sciences campus located in the same neighborhood, he added. The area is home to Binghamton’s School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences and the Decker College of Nursing.
The groundbreaking event included remarks from Broome County Executive Jason Garnar; Stacey Duncan, executive director of the Agency and president and CEO of the Greater Binghamton Chamber of Commerce; and state and local lawmakers as well.

People news: Saleem joins St. Joseph’s Health as hospitalist
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Aleena Saleem, MD, has recently joined the team of hospitalists at St. Joseph’s Health Hospital. The hospitalist team offers diverse specialties to

Nurses at Upstate Medical are getting pay raises
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Registered nurses (RNs) and licensed practical nurses (LPNs) at Upstate Medical University are receiving pay raises. In all, Upstate Medical will offer 1,481 RNs and 125 LPNs with the geographical area pay differential (GEO). GEO raises will allow it to be “more competitive” with nursing salaries, the health system says. The move
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Registered nurses (RNs) and licensed practical nurses (LPNs) at Upstate Medical University are receiving pay raises.
In all, Upstate Medical will offer 1,481 RNs and 125 LPNs with the geographical area pay differential (GEO). GEO raises will allow it to be “more competitive” with nursing salaries, the health system says.
The move represents “the first time” that the medical school is providing pay raises for LPNs, it said in an April 27 announcement.
Upstate Medical will pay the raises to eligible nursing staff in addition to their base pay. The raises are calculated based on years of service, experience, and education, the health-care organization said.
The move represents Upstate’s third RN GEO adjustment in the last four years. Previously, RNs received a GEO raise in 2019 and 2021.
“Upstate nurses are at the core of care we provide our patients,” Dr. Mantosh Dewan, president of Upstate Medical University, said. “Not only do Upstate nurses deliver medical care, they also lift up families during difficult hospitalizations and provide leadership throughout this top-tier academic medical institution — one that has proven itself to be essential to our Central New York community.”
The GEO raise will provide a pay boost between $9,000 and $14,187 annually for PEF-represented RNs and $7,000 annually for CSEA-represented LPNs. This 2022 GEO raise is in addition to GEOs received previously. The increase will allow Upstate Medical to “recruit and retain” nurses for patient care at its two hospitals.
PEF is short for New York State Public Employees Federation and CSEA is short for Civil Service Employees Association.
“As I’ve said for years, PEF’s goal is to increase the compensation and benefits package of state nurses to retain and attract skilled professionals to public service,” Wayne Spence president of PEF, said in a statement. “This is one more step that the president of SUNY Upstate Medical University is taking to move in that direction.”

More than 470 receive degrees at Upstate commencement
SYRACUSE — Upstate Medical University started the month by recognizing its Class of 2022 during a commencement ceremony held at Upstate Medical University Arena at Onondaga County War Memorial in downtown Syracuse. The medical school awarded 474 degrees during the May 1 ceremony. In its online news release, Upstate Medical University provided a breakdown of
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SYRACUSE — Upstate Medical University started the month by recognizing its Class of 2022 during a commencement ceremony held at Upstate Medical University Arena at Onondaga County War Memorial in downtown Syracuse.
The medical school awarded 474 degrees during the May 1 ceremony.
In its online news release, Upstate Medical University provided a breakdown of the degrees.
The College of Graduate Studies awarded 19 doctoral degrees, including seven in biochemistry.
The College of Health Professions awarded 170 degrees (56 bachelor of science, eight bachelor of professional studies, 68 master of science and 38 doctorate of physical therapy). The college’s programs include clinical perfusion, medical imaging, medical technology, medical biotechnology, respiratory care, physical therapy, physician assistant, and radiation therapy.
The College of Medicine awarded 171 degrees (146 doctor of medicine, 22 master of public health degrees, and three certificates in public health.)
The College of Nursing awarded 110 degrees and certificates (29 bachelor of science, 76 master of science degrees, and five post-master certificates).
The medical school also presented honorary degrees to three people who have made “substantial contributions in areas of importance to Upstate,” including social justice, equity, clinician wellness, and evidence-based practice.
The three honorees are Dr. Vanessa Northington Gamble, Bernadette Melnyk, and Dr. Tait Shanafelt.
Gamble is university professor of medical humanities at George Washington University. She is the first woman and first African American to hold this endowed faculty position, Upstate said.
Melnyk is VP for health promotion and university chief wellness officer, the Helene Fuld Health Trust professor of evidence-based practice (EBP), and dean of the College of Nursing at The Ohio State University.
Dr. Shanafelt is chief wellness officer at Stanford Medicine and associate dean and Jeanie and Stewart Richie professor of medicine at Stanford University.
VIEWPOINT: Five Steps for N.Y. employers to save on health-care costs
When it comes to offering health benefits to employees, every employer has two primary goals: improve coverage and lower costs. Achieving those goals may help encourage a healthier workforce, while reducing absenteeism and presenteeism, both of which can sap productivity and make an employer less competitive. Importantly, medical care ranks as the second-largest expense (behind
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When it comes to offering health benefits to employees, every employer has two primary goals: improve coverage and lower costs.
Achieving those goals may help encourage a healthier workforce, while reducing absenteeism and presenteeism, both of which can sap productivity and make an employer less competitive. Importantly, medical care ranks as the second-largest expense (behind salaries) for employers, so it is vital employers maximize the value of their health benefits.
Rather than watching health-plan premiums go up year after year, what if employers could cut costs by up to 15 percent or more compared to their existing benefits package? While that might sound too good to be true, the growing popularity of level-funded plans is making that possible for some employers when they move from fully insured plans. Tellingly, a recent report found that 42 percent of small firms use a level-funded plan, up from just 7 percent two years ago.
To help employers, especially small and mid-size businesses, navigate the transition from fully insured to level-funded (or even self-funded) health plans, here are five steps to consider:
Evaluate your plan options. Historically, employers often selected either a fully insured plan or, as companies grew larger, moved to a self-funded arrangement. That yielded potential savings but came with additional financial risks if medical costs exceeded expectations. A third option some employers have recently adopted more often is a level-funded plan, which offers the potential savings available through a self-funded approach but with less financial risk. In short, employers with level-funded plans pay a fixed monthly fee to cover claims, administrative fees, and stop-loss insurance, which help protect against unexpectedly large claims. If medical claims are lower than expected, the employer can potentially keep some of the surplus refund at year-end.
Request an underwriting analysis. To determine if such upfront savings would be possible for your business, the next step is to request an underwriting analysis to review your company’s previous medical claims and other factors to help determine what reduction may be available. This can be coordinated by an insurance broker or by connecting directly with a health-insurance company that offers level-funded plans. Generally, employers with relatively younger and healthier workforces may save the most.
Invest in wearables and wellness. Once an employer opts for a level-funded plan, it is important to help employees and their families play a more active role in their well-being and adopt ways to save on out-of-pocket costs. For instance, adding a wearable device well-being program can equip employees with a smartwatch or activity tracker, enabling individuals to monitor daily activity levels and earn financial incentives to help cover routine health-care costs. Encouraging employees to get or stay active may help build a culture of wellness while reducing the prevalence of costly chronic conditions, such as diabetes or heart disease.
Leverage other types of technology. In addition to wearables, employers with level-funded plans should include coverage and resources related to virtual care. That’s because virtual care, also known as telehealth, may offer employees a more convenient and affordable way to access medical care, including primary, urgent, and behavioral care, as well as chronic-condition management. With ongoing spread of the virus that causes COVID-19, encouraging the use of virtual care is especially important as an alternative to in-person care. In addition, unlike with most fully insured plans, employers with level-funded can receive detailed monthly data reports to help them better understand how employees are using their health benefits. This can enable tailored clinical interventions and communication campaigns, including to help reduce avoidable emergency-department visits and the use of out-of-network care providers or facilities.
Integrate additional benefits. Importantly, employers moving to a level-funded plan should continue to take a whole-person approach to health benefits, including maintaining or adding coverage for vision, dental, hearing, and behavioral-health services. That’s because research shows a link between overall health and oral, eye, and hearing health, including a connection to various chronic medical conditions. Also, businesses that combine medical coverage with specialty benefits through a single health-care company may in some cases be able to save up to 4 percent on medical premiums, as well as leverage data to help improve health outcomes, flag gaps in care, drive productivity, and reduce costs.
By considering a move to a level-funded plan and adopting these additional strategies, employers may make offering medical coverage to their workforces more affordable and personalized.
Michael McGuire is the CEO of UnitedHealthcare of New York.
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