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Hospital for Special Surgery: Returning to a New Normal? (A)
內容大綱
Early on the morning of April 27, 2020, Justin Oppenheimer stood outside the entrance to the lobby of the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) Pavilion Building with mixed emotions. On one hand, Oppenheimer, HSS' Enterprise Chief Operating Officer and Chief Strategy Officer, was excited that HSS was only two weeks away from resuming in-person outpatient office visits (i.e. physician visits not requiring admission to the hospital). Since the middle of March 2020, the global COVID-19 pandemic had forced HSS and other hospitals in New York to suspend nearly all outpatient office visits in an effort to slow the spread of respiratory illness. The Outpatient Care Task Force (OCTF) chaired by Oppenheimer had anticipated the difficulty of reopening while the future of the pandemic was still uncertain and made various accommodations, including dramatically limiting physicians' schedules. Simulations run by the OCTF, however, suggested that even with these accommodations, several patients would be forced to wait outside of the Pavilion building. Given HSS' reputation for patient experience and that many patients seen at HSS suffered from ailments that made it painful to stand, Oppenheimer knew that asking people to wait outside of the building would not (and should not) be tolerated for long, particularly during inclement weather. Oppenheimer opened his phone and sent an urgent meeting request to OCTF to see what further adjustments could be made to alleviate this problem.