This is a preprint.
Caring for COVID's most vulnerable victims: a safety-net hospital responds
- PMID: 33140040
- PMCID: PMC7605557
- DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-97328/v1
Caring for COVID's most vulnerable victims: a safety-net hospital responds
Update in
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Caring for COVID's Most Vulnerable Victims: a Safety-Net Hospital Responds.J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Apr;36(4):1006-1010. doi: 10.1007/s11606-020-06499-2. Epub 2021 Jan 19. J Gen Intern Med. 2021. PMID: 33469746 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
Abstract
Background: As COVID-19 surged in people experiencing homelessness, leaders at Boston Medical Center (BMC), New England's largest safety-net hospital, developed a program to care for them. Aim: Provide an opportunity for COVID-infected people experiencing homelessness to isolate and receive care until no longer contagious Setting: A decommissioned hospital building. Participants: COVID-infected people experiencing homelessness Program Description: Care was provided by physician volunteers and furloughed staff. Care focused on allowing isolation, managing COVID-19 symptoms, harm-reduction interventions, and addressing problems related to substance use and mental illness. Program evaluation: Among 226 patients who received care, 65% were referred from BMC. Five percent were transferred to the hospital for a complication that appeared COVID-related. There were no deaths, but 7 patients had non-fatal overdoses. Seventy-nine % had at least one diagnosis of mental illness, and 42% reported actively using at least one substance at the time of admission. Thirty % had at least one mental health diagnosis plus active substance use. Discussion: This hospital-based COVID Recuperation Unit was rapidly deployed, provided safe isolation for 226 patients over 8 weeks, treated frequent SUD and mental illness, and helped prevent the hospital's acute-care bed capacity from being overwhelmed during the peak of the COVID-19 epidemic.
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