The Covid-19 Response in New York City: Crisis Management in the Epicenter of the Epicenter
Editat de Syra S. Madad, Laura G. Iavicoli, Eric K. Weien Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 apr 2024
Written by healthcare providers who were at the epicenter of the pandemic in New York City, this book provides a sound accounting of the response to the pandemic in one of the world's largest cities.
- Provides historical context of the COVID-19 response by NYC Health + Hospitals
- Covers how to respond to a mass influx of patients and sustained crisis over a year+
- Presents information on standing up genomic sequencing
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780443187551
ISBN-10: 044318755X
Pagini: 406
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE
ISBN-10: 044318755X
Pagini: 406
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE
Public țintă
Healthcare Providers, Emergency Managers, Healthcare Leadership, Public Health PractitionersAnyone interested in the COVID-19 Pandemic Response
Cuprins
Section I: In the beginning
1. Standing up the emergency response in the epicenter of the epicenter
Colleen Smith, Suzanne (Suzi) Bentley, Geoff Jara-Almonte, Veronica Delgado, Phillip Fairweather, Cathy Lind, Ram Parekh, Stuart Kessler and Laura Iavicoli
2. The history of NYC Health þ Hospitals
P.J. Rosenstock, Machelle Allen and Nate Link
Section II: The pivotal moment
3. Emergency Departments spring into action
Jeremy Sperling, Adrienne Birnbaum and Rajneesh Gulati
4. The crisis shifted to the intensive care units
Alfredo Astua, Leon Boudourakis, Marialeah Cervantes, Matthew Langston, Vikramjit Mukherjee, Vito Stasolla and Amit Uppal
Section III: A system surge plan put into place
5. Bringing key players together, standing up incident command, and communicating with everyone
Matt Siegler, Christine Flaherty, Ana Marengo, Menji Indar, Manuel Saez, Priya Dhagat, Christopher Montgomery and Eric Wei
6. The iterations of patient movement throughout the surge: Load-balancing demand through interfacility transfers
Katelyn B. Prieskorn, R. James Salway and David M. Silvestri
7. Supply chain and PPE, the wave 1 dilemma
Priya Dhagat, Syra Madad, Danielle DiBari, Mary Fornek and Keith Tallbe
8. Staffing for pandemic surges in the NYC safety-net health system
Milana Zaurova, Wilbur Yen, Annika Ginsberg, Donna Boyle Schwartz, Jeannith Michelin and Natalia Cineas
9. Fatality management during the worst crisis of our lifetime
Jory Guttsman, Madeline Tavarez, William Fasbender and Stuart Rosenhaus
10. Fine tuning the surge (and flex) plan
Janice A. Halloran, Karen L. Mattera, Robert Faillace and Sheldon Teperman
Section IV: The technical side of the response
11. Situational awareness, going from flying blind to eyes on it all: DnA (Data and Analytics)
Angelie E. Oberoi, Bharti Sharma, Andrew M. Vegoda and Alexander G. Izaguirre
12. IT-coordinating the technology infrastructure of the system
Michael Bouton, Gabriel Cohen and Kim Mendez
13. Donations were a full-time job
Kwame Sheehy, Linh Dang and Freda Wang
Section V: Nuances of a massive health system
14. The correctional health response to COVID-19
Patsy Yang, Nancy Arias, Carlos Castellanos, Maria Creta, Ross MacDonald, Zachary Rosner and Bipin Subedi
15. Alternate care sites including hoteling, a new path in a massive surge response
Leon Boudourakis, Amanda K. Johnson, Nicole JordaneMartin, Floyd R. Long, Jr. Khoi Luong, Matilde Roman and Colleen Vessell
16. Behavioral health and COVID-19
Vladimir Gasca, Rebecca Linn-Walton, Emily Carter and Charles Barron
17. External affairs: Managing communications with regulators and stakeholders
Hillary Jalon, Deborah Brown, Andrea Cohen, Linda Dehart, Brenda Schultz and John Ulberg
Section VI: A light at the end of the tunnel
18. Testing and tracing in the “world’s capital”
Kym Neck, Alex Dobranic, Chris Keeley, Sarah Joseph Kurien, Kathleen Blaney, Andrew Wallach, Amanda Johnson, Steffen Foerster and Ted Long
19. Vaccines and outpatient therapeutics: The race against the variants and the road to normalcy
Andrew B. Wallach and Lee Fiebert
20. Wellness and Helping Healers Heal during the biggest crisis of our lifetime
Jeremy Segall, Omar Fattal and Suzanne (Suzi) Bentley
Section VII: Conclusion
21. The future of public healthcare delivery systems in the United States in the post-COVID era
Mitchell Katz
1. Standing up the emergency response in the epicenter of the epicenter
Colleen Smith, Suzanne (Suzi) Bentley, Geoff Jara-Almonte, Veronica Delgado, Phillip Fairweather, Cathy Lind, Ram Parekh, Stuart Kessler and Laura Iavicoli
2. The history of NYC Health þ Hospitals
P.J. Rosenstock, Machelle Allen and Nate Link
Section II: The pivotal moment
3. Emergency Departments spring into action
Jeremy Sperling, Adrienne Birnbaum and Rajneesh Gulati
4. The crisis shifted to the intensive care units
Alfredo Astua, Leon Boudourakis, Marialeah Cervantes, Matthew Langston, Vikramjit Mukherjee, Vito Stasolla and Amit Uppal
Section III: A system surge plan put into place
5. Bringing key players together, standing up incident command, and communicating with everyone
Matt Siegler, Christine Flaherty, Ana Marengo, Menji Indar, Manuel Saez, Priya Dhagat, Christopher Montgomery and Eric Wei
6. The iterations of patient movement throughout the surge: Load-balancing demand through interfacility transfers
Katelyn B. Prieskorn, R. James Salway and David M. Silvestri
7. Supply chain and PPE, the wave 1 dilemma
Priya Dhagat, Syra Madad, Danielle DiBari, Mary Fornek and Keith Tallbe
8. Staffing for pandemic surges in the NYC safety-net health system
Milana Zaurova, Wilbur Yen, Annika Ginsberg, Donna Boyle Schwartz, Jeannith Michelin and Natalia Cineas
9. Fatality management during the worst crisis of our lifetime
Jory Guttsman, Madeline Tavarez, William Fasbender and Stuart Rosenhaus
10. Fine tuning the surge (and flex) plan
Janice A. Halloran, Karen L. Mattera, Robert Faillace and Sheldon Teperman
Section IV: The technical side of the response
11. Situational awareness, going from flying blind to eyes on it all: DnA (Data and Analytics)
Angelie E. Oberoi, Bharti Sharma, Andrew M. Vegoda and Alexander G. Izaguirre
12. IT-coordinating the technology infrastructure of the system
Michael Bouton, Gabriel Cohen and Kim Mendez
13. Donations were a full-time job
Kwame Sheehy, Linh Dang and Freda Wang
Section V: Nuances of a massive health system
14. The correctional health response to COVID-19
Patsy Yang, Nancy Arias, Carlos Castellanos, Maria Creta, Ross MacDonald, Zachary Rosner and Bipin Subedi
15. Alternate care sites including hoteling, a new path in a massive surge response
Leon Boudourakis, Amanda K. Johnson, Nicole JordaneMartin, Floyd R. Long, Jr. Khoi Luong, Matilde Roman and Colleen Vessell
16. Behavioral health and COVID-19
Vladimir Gasca, Rebecca Linn-Walton, Emily Carter and Charles Barron
17. External affairs: Managing communications with regulators and stakeholders
Hillary Jalon, Deborah Brown, Andrea Cohen, Linda Dehart, Brenda Schultz and John Ulberg
Section VI: A light at the end of the tunnel
18. Testing and tracing in the “world’s capital”
Kym Neck, Alex Dobranic, Chris Keeley, Sarah Joseph Kurien, Kathleen Blaney, Andrew Wallach, Amanda Johnson, Steffen Foerster and Ted Long
19. Vaccines and outpatient therapeutics: The race against the variants and the road to normalcy
Andrew B. Wallach and Lee Fiebert
20. Wellness and Helping Healers Heal during the biggest crisis of our lifetime
Jeremy Segall, Omar Fattal and Suzanne (Suzi) Bentley
Section VII: Conclusion
21. The future of public healthcare delivery systems in the United States in the post-COVID era
Mitchell Katz