1. Finding and replacing the "missing domino."
What we're hearing: While there’s clearly a restraint on
demand for hospital care for a number of reasons — such as loss of
employment, loss of insurance, reticence about missing work, or fear of
contracting COVID-19 in a healthcare setting — there’s also a longer-term
threat that’s become more evident to us over the last few weeks. Even if
patients are successfully rescheduled for the much-needed surgeries that
accumulated throughout the elective surgery shutdown, who will come after
that?
Much
like a row of dominos, nonemergent patients move through a progression, with
each action triggering the next step. They likely go to a PCP, who probably
refers them to a specialist, there’s lab work done, diagnostic imaging,
perhaps a preventative screening — all of which could be precursors to a
potential higher-margin surgical procedure. But the volume restrictions we’re
seeing on the surgical side, are also present on the nonsurgical side, which
poses a real risk as we look toward the end of 2020 and beyond to 2021, both
for patient health and for the continued financial viability of many
hospitals.
Communications takeaway: We addressed this topic at length in today’s Daily Briefing Live, and you can
also read more about it in our most recent blog post. But to summarize, there are three
things that health system marketers should focus on to replace the missing
dominos in their systems:
- If you are not already
pursuing a Rapid Recovery strategy, with marketing and operational
leaders working hand in hand, start right now. Evidence suggests that
while volumes may look relatively stable right now, there’s likely to be
a significant drop-off 60 to 90 days from now.
- Ramp up marketing and
physician relations to restore “the missing domino” — getting patients
back in physicians’ offices and diagnostic services.
- Begin communications planning
for the fall/winter return of COVID-19 and the seasonal flu.
2. A responsibility to lead.
What we’re hearing: Having concerns about COVID-19 and
wanting to return to “normal” life are not mutually exclusive. As states
begin to reopen, many people have expressed that just because it is open
doesn’t mean it is safe. Consumers, in turn, are seeking information about
the risk levels associated with everyday activities so that they can make
smart decisions for themselves.
Communications takeaway: Throughout the pandemic, it has been
imperative for hospitals to not only be thought leaders that dispel
misinformation, but also arbiters of truth and timely public health
information. This need, if it wasn’t already clear, became abundantly so over
the Memorial Day weekend as people ventured out for some much-needed fun and
relaxation. While the first COVID-19 wave is beginning to wind down for some
areas, health systems still have a responsibility to promote good hygiene,
social distancing, and wearing masks as “table stakes” for their communities.
This is especially true in areas where local or state leadership is falling
short.
3. Removing
barriers for pediatric patients to return to care settings.
What we’re hearing: It’s no secret that consumers have
been putting off routine care, but as mentioned in our last report, they have
been putting it off for their children as well. Experts are increasingly
concerned with the millions of children that could be at risk for other
diseases because of disruptions to vaccines. As many as 100 million children
globally could be at risk for not receiving their proper vaccinations amid
the COVID-19 pandemic — leading to more public health impacts such as
outbreaks of diseases which the world otherwise had under control. To make
things more complicated, those who are now without a job also have the added
barrier of having lost their insurance.
Communications takeaway: Now is the time for us all to take
care of our most vulnerable, especially children, whose care may have
significantly decreased or altogether ceased during the COVID-19 pandemic.
While parents may have been understandably nervous about taking their child
to a clinic or doctor’s office, we must now focus on communicating about the
importance of routine care to ensure all children get the proper treatments
they need. And time is of the essence as plans for children to return to
school in the fall start to emerge.
4. Funding haves and have-nots.
What we’re hearing: As we hear more about distribution
methods of federal aid funds to industries across the country, it’s quite
clear that it was not done equally. Recent stories about hospitals and health
systems across the U.S. have shown this also to be the case in healthcare.
How hospitals received financial support from the federal government, and the
amount distributed to them, will set the tone for what their short- to
mid-term outlooks will be as they begin to emerge from the first wave of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Communications takeaway: To build trust with their communities,
hospitals and health systems should be open and transparent about the
financial support they received from the CARES Act and any subsequent rounds
of support. For the “have received,” this is your opportunity to double down
on community support by leading the public health conversation in your
community while driving your post-COVID-19 goals forward. For the “have not
received,” of which there are many right now, it’s critical that you
communicate about your current reality. Use your involvement in the community
throughout COVID-19 as a rallying cry to gather local influencers and
community leaders who can support you during this time of need.
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