Dr.S.Subramanian, Director,Smrthi Healthcare, Chennai
in conversation with
Mrs. Chitra, Health Communicator.
Here is a free transcript of the conversation.
Mrs C:
Hello Dr, your patients to are eager to
hear your views on the pandemic situation and this the context of our conversation.
Let me begin by asking as to how you are doing as a medical professional also as a
member of the society?
Dr S:
Just like anybody else in the society, we
are also taken aback by the kind of changes we need to adapt to, as result of the pandemic. It has thrown all our
plans and comfort zones out of the place and we are really adapting to
situations every day. It is very tiring. With medical profession being on the
forefront of the struggle of COVID, we must bear the brunt. Our elders, our senior
members of our society have faced such problems earlier too and if we look back
and take from their experiences, we will be able to come through this very
well.
Mrs C:
How has Smrthi Healthcare adapted as a healthcare system?
Dr S:
Unlike many other entities, we were not able
to completely shut down our work during COVID. Instead we continued to provide
our services in the best possible manner. So, given the fact that we have a
medical background and we had a responsibility towards the community, right
through the lockdown, we decided to
provide our best possible services, whatever it takes, in the best possible
manner. Through God’s grace and lot of support from community we were functional. Manu parents and lot
of children and pregnant women came to us through the pandemic. I would
not call it an achievement. But I feel that we have been able to live up to the
commitment given at the beginning.
Mrs C:
We are evolving in our response. Do you
think the changes are here to stay?
Dr S:
The changes are here to stay yes and we have learnt certain things and we have adapted to them. Because we are
forced to learn, we learnt it very quickly and having learnt that we can have
the comfort of certain services at the comfort of home, we would not want to go
back on certain aspects of care back to olden methods. For example, certain
review visits may not happen at all because we will be able to provide near
adequate care online. Through this, we will be
able to cut short lot of effort, time and money for the patient and the
healthcare. These changes are removing
lot of pressure on the healthcare system. These changes are here to stay. But this will also evolve over a period.
Mrs C:
In this context, how do we access
healthcare system, like do we restrict it to sickness visits or do we consult even if we see
challenges like red flags?
Dr S:
When you look at access to healthcare
system, during the time immediately
following the outbreak, it was relevant to say that it was better to stay back
at home and to avoid unnecessary visits. Restrict to immediate care needs only.
But with prolonged lockdown, what was emergency care has now been extended to
care which cannot be postponed any further. For example, we did postpone
vaccinations for the first 10 -15 days of lockdown. IAP and other associations recommended that postponing vaccines would mean return of vaccine preventable
diseases. Especially the initial ones like DTP, MMR etc if skipped would
create an outbreak of these diseases over and above COVID which would be a
catastrophe. Given that fact, now many pediatricians have started with it. So,
what was not considered emergency earlier, has now become essential. So, we
have transitioned from emergency to essential care services.
Mrs C:
For children undergoing therapies, what
does this break, or shift mean?
Dr S:
For children undergoing therapy due to issues with developmental progress not
being age appropriate, we need to look at it not just from medical but also
social context. When we look at the child, the parents, family, siblings, and
people around the child have to put that much effort on the child than the
previous state of the child prior to break of therapy. The longer they do not have
care they are going to slip back as far their progress is concerned. Their
goals are not going to be reached. It is going to be more and more difficult to
provide care for these kids. Breakage of continuity of care is a major issue in
rehab. In rehab you do not see immediate effect, you do not administer therapy and
see change the next day. In therapy many a times you need to put in sustained
effort, faith in therapy over a period of
time to see the results coming out. When you are not able to provide that care
for more than two three months, this is
definitely going to be a big problem for
these kids.
Mrs C:
Do you mean to say that we need to move
forward and get in tandem with therapy schedule?
Dr S:
Definitely. It is not just about therapy it
is about everything in life. We know that COVID is here to stay we have many
authorities stating that it is going to be a pandemic and slowly it is going to
be an endemic like Swine flu or other illness. We are going to live with it.
Whether we have vaccines or not, this is not going to go away from the
community. Given that fact ,we must look forward as to how we are going to
handle this. We cannot expect the pre-pandemic situation to return. We need to
start looking at other options.
Mrs C:
Do you mean to say that ultimately, we need
to come onsite as the situation is not going to go away?
Dr S:
Our response must be according to local
community spread. It cannot be same for every state, community, or city. We must
provide care based on the situation in the society. Depending on this we have to provide onsite or a distant or online
therapy where the parent becomes the provider
and the therapist/specialist trains the parent to deliver it. The therapist
here provides therapy through the parental mode. In fact, I would go a step
further and we should probably think of providing a hybrid mode, ready to shift
from one mode to another depending on the situation in community. We need to
continue to provide care. It may not be the optimal mode of providing care, but
it is better than not providing care at all.
Mrs C:
How safe is the onsite therapy?
Dr S:
Being a medical system which was running
through the pandemic, our adaption has been according to the recommendations
and to to the needs of the challenges,
Whatever needs to be done in the form of screening patients who come to the system or in the form of
providing only one to one therapy, stopping group therapy, ensuring safety of provider to ensure continuity of
therapy is being done. We are ensuring that the place is sanitized. We make
sure the rooms are sanitized before therapy, just before therapy starts, all
materials are sanitized, then therapy is administered. Once the therapy ends, the
entire place is again sanitized, and the items are sanitized too. Though the
recent evidence does say that fomite borne infections is low, we still ensure
that kids are safe. We are also ensuring that the parents are there with the
child and most of the handling of the child is done by the parents so that
physical touch by others is avoided as far as possible. Enough amount of social
distancing is ensured between the child and the therapist.
Mrs C:
The escalated costs, time, and stress on
the system as a result of this. How have you coped up with that?
Dr S:
It is all part of the
game and if we are to ensure sustained therapy, we need to sustain in every
other aspect as well. It is not the time to look at cost now. The other point
is about time. Yes, it is taking away lot of our time. You can imagine,
literally mopping down the entire space and cleansing every material after every therapy is taking a lot of time.
But I feel that this is going to be essential . With time, as we get better
evidence on maintenance, we may probably scale down this amount of
precautionary measures. As of now we are taking all precautions as we still
cannot take such evidence as final word.
Mrs C:
Doctor, in this context, I would like to know as to how you have managed with cost? Have you transferred it to patients?
Dr S:
Cost has escalated. But it has not been transferred to the patients. We are bearing it. As of now, we are able to manage. In fact we have packaged our costs for therapies at 10% lower than the pre-pandemic costs.
Mrs C:
Dr S:
Cost has escalated. But it has not been transferred to the patients. We are bearing it. As of now, we are able to manage. In fact we have packaged our costs for therapies at 10% lower than the pre-pandemic costs.
Mrs C:
How would you assess/ elaborate your online
interventions ?
Dr S:
As I mentioned earlier, to measure any
outcome of an intervention, you should allow sufficient time for the
intervention to act. There is a time lag between providing therapy and outcome being manifest.
In rehab we know it is going to take a long time before we can
have a definitive outcome. This is where we stand as far as evidence is
concerned. We only started in April and with the kind of numbers we have, I do
not think that I can clam that I have evidence for or against the online
therapy. There have been previous papers
about online settings and those are in different community settings, time etc.
We cannot extrapolate those data in our system. We will be able to gauge this
only with time. But what I can say is that by not providing therapy, these children
are going to slip. But I can say that by
providing online or hybrid therapy and by studies in other organizations where
parent directed therapy have been effective, I am confident that this will be a
good mode to provide therapy during these Corona times.
Mrs C:
Thank you, as we carry forward this
confidence that you have, I would want you to give this a finishing touch
with a two liner for every parent.
Dr S:
We
are challenged by the present situation and we need to look forward and start
adapting. We cannot continue to say that the previous setting would come back, and we would only work around such setting.
We should start looking for options, other modalities of providing care, education,
and stimulation for children. In this setting we can spend the time to
communicate appropriately with children and we should realize that we are the
role models in showing strength, resilience, and patience. I am sure that children
will grow up watching this and as they
grow up, they will realize that they have learnt a very important lesson in
life when they face adverse situations.
Thank you!
Dr. Subramanian, Thanks much for this details session. These are the questions i had as a parent and it was very well addressed. There were also certain questions, which we had in mind but was not sure how to ask. Like: Is the Smrthihealthcare taking adequate care of the facility so that we can visit the Drs i case of any emergency. Thanks for highlighting those aspects as well.
ReplyDeleteAs parents and part of this community which is seeing a "new normal", can we expect more of such sessions from you?
Is there a way we can post questions, pointers. please advice.
Glad we could answer your queries. Yes, we will try our best to do more of such sessions. Please post your queries/pointers here as a reply and our team will respond.
ReplyDeleteDr.S.Subramanian
Thanks for sharing the useful information and making it online. Everyone must evolve and adapt to the new challenges.
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