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Prescription for Hope

The MetroHealth System

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“Prescription for Hope” captures the stories inside Cleveland’s public hospital system. Told by the people and patients on the front lines of care, “Prescription for Hope” offers a behind-the-scenes look at how The MetroHealth System is moving beyond medical treatment to improve the foundations of community health and well-being. Since 1837, MetroHealth has served the community, neighborhoods and people of Greater Cleveland. Its nearly 8,000 caregivers are devoted to a mission of health, hea ...
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show series
 
Dr. Christine Alexander-Rager, MetroHealth’s new President and CEO, may be new to the corner office, but she's not new to MetroHealth, not even close. In her 28th year as a family physician at Metro, "Chrissy" as she's known to patients and colleagues, is bringing a patient-first focus to Cleveland's safety-net hospital. She recently sat down and s…
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A never-before-heard, behind-the-scenes look inside a hospital morgue. Two years ago, in 2021, we spent some time with the amazing team inside MetroHealth’s Department of Mortality and Autopsy Services – the hospital morgue. We wanted to answer questions, dispel myths and capture the amazing professionalism and compassion these workers show every d…
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Every weekday, from a big white box truck parked in the vacant lot at 3370 West 25th Street, MetroHealth’s Project DAWN Expanded Mobile Unit dispenses sterile syringes, Narcan kits, condoms and other supplies to those living with opioid-use disorder.Perhaps most important, the team also dispenses hope – a light in the darkness, a hand to grab and h…
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The toll of the COVID-19 pandemic on our relationships is something that doesn’t get talked about enough. And we are witnessing a mental-health crisis as a result. MetroHealth’s Dr. Robert L. Smith – aka “Dr. Bob” – joins us again to offer his trademark voice of comfort and kindness as he shares his thoughts on COVID’s damage to our relationships a…
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The caregivers in MetroHealth’s Mother and Children Dependency Program have always had a wish: a place, a home – with a “mother hen” – where new moms struggling with substance-use disorder could stay to continue their recovery and healing while also caring for their newborns. … Well, sometimes wishes do come true. … This is an UPDATE of an episode …
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The COVID-19 vaccine is safe, it’s been rigorously tested, and it works – really, really well. Still, some people may be hesitant to receive it. To build trust within the community, MetroHealth invited faith leaders from around Greater Cleveland to come in, roll up their sleeves and set a lifesaving example for their flocks. Check out a video versi…
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The vaccine has arrived, the vaccinations have begun and the prescription for hope is finally being filled. Join us for an up-close look at the historic Wednesday when MetroHealth took the first steps in the beginning of the end of the COVID-19 pandemic.The MetroHealth System
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If all goes according to plan, we are just days away from the arrival of a safe, effective COVID-19 vaccine. Dr. Amy Ray, MetroHealth’s Medical Director of Infection Prevention, leads the system’s Vaccine Preparedness Committee, which has been planning for the arrival of a vaccine for months. She shares some of those plans, some important info on t…
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We are exhausted. Caregivers – and everyone else – have been dealing with the coronavirus pandemic for nine long months. We’re not only tired, we’re facing a frightening third wave of COVID-19 infections and a long winter ahead. MetroHealth’s Dr. Robert L. Smith, aka “Dr. Bob,” the caregiver for the caregivers, joins us to provide guidance on how t…
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For the first time in our lifetimes, a crisis has affected every person, every family, every street, town, school, church and business in America. It’s important to label the impact of COVID-19 for what it is: trauma. All of us, individually and collectively, have been traumatized by the coronavirus pandemic. Katie Kurtz, Community Resilience Educa…
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The coronavirus crisis put non-urgent health care on hold. Screenings, elective surgeries, tests, well visits and vaccinations were all delayed to keep people from spreading the virus. But the missed, avoided and postponed appointments have created a different potential public health crisis. Dr. Bernie Boulanger, MetroHealth’s Chief Clinical Office…
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How do you lead an HR department, responsible for 8,000 employees and thousands of front-line workers, through the worst public-health crisis in memory? How do you push a 183-year-old public health system to face, fight and reverse society’s systemic racism and injustice? Just ask Alan Nevel, MetroHealth’s Senior Vice President, Chief Diversity and…
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Eight of the nation’s top 10 COVID-19 outbreaks have been in jails or prisons. And back in early March, the beleaguered and chronically overcrowded Cuyahoga County Jail seemed to be the perfect petri dish for infection. But thanks to quick action, teamwork and compassion, the jail avoided a coronavirus catastrophe and became a national model for in…
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The coronavirus has changed how hospital chaplains do their jobs, but the job itself remains the same: provide emotional and spiritual support to patients and staff, when they need it most. MetroHealth’s Jim Kulma, supervisor of pastoral care, gives us an emotional behind-the-scenes look at what it’s like to be a hospital chaplain in the time of CO…
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How do you stay at home if you don’t have one? How do you shelter in place when your only place is a shelter? We follow MetroHealth family medicine Drs. Kelly Manger, Rahul Shenoy and Michael Seidman as they crisscross the city to screen homeless members of our community for COVID-19.The MetroHealth System
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Dr. Dan Kinker is a second-year resident in emergency medicine. In mid-March, he developed a cough and discovered he had COVID-19. He shares his experience and how things in the MetroHealth Emergency Department have changed since the arrival of the coronavirus.The MetroHealth System
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The small army that keeps every part of a hospital clean – the doorknobs, the elevator buttons, the bathrooms, the patient rooms – they are so much more than sweepers, moppers and wipers. They are healers. MetroHealth Environmental Services Aide Janice Longcoy and Director of Environmental Services and Logistics Thomas Jones share with us how our h…
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By reimagining technology that was designed to fight a potential Ebola epidemic, MetroHealth is now able to sterilize up to 50,000 N95 and KN95 medical face masks a day. Dr. Amy Ray, Medical Director of Infection Prevention, gives us a behind-the-scenes look at how it’s done.The MetroHealth System
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The coronavirus pandemic has revealed, rather starkly, a critical fact: Good health depends on a whole lot more than good medical care. COVID-19 has magnified the social determinants of health and the decades-long disparities in well-being in our society. MetroHealth’s Institute for HOPE is out to change that. Institute President Sue Fuehrer sits d…
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Quality Technical Specialist Alana Clampitt, who helps oversee the immunology lab at MetroHealth Medical Center, lets us follow a coronavirus test, from swab to results, while giving us a behind-the-scenes look at how the system is testing for COVID-19 in-house, with results in about two hours.The MetroHealth System
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The COVID-19 crisis has caused not only physical illness, it’s produced a long list of dark emotions: anxiety, anger, fear, frustration, loneliness and more. And it’s been worse for health care workers on the front lines. Dr. Bob Smith, director of MetroHealth’s Medical Staff Assistance Program, shares some ways we – caregivers and everyone else – …
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To protect patients and caregivers, MetroHealth has suspended almost all inpatient visitation. Many patients are able to stay connected with family and friends through phone calls, texting and video chat. But what about patients who don’t have devices or who are unable to hold and operate a phone or tablet? That’s where the Compassionate Care Round…
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In less than two weeks, nurses answering MetroHealth’s COVID-19 hotline have talked to over 4,200 callers. More than 2,100 of them have then been connected to doctors for an over-the-phone visit. MetroHealth primary care physician Dr. David Margolius helped launch the hotline and has worked the phones from the beginning. He describes how it works a…
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Does MetroHealth have enough supplies for the COVID-19 crisis? Justin Gallo, Vice President of Supply Chain Management, discusses how well the system has prepared. He explains how he keeps doctors and nurses supplied with masks, gowns, gloves and goggles. Want to donate supplies? Email LogisticsSectionHCC@metrohealth.org…
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How is MetroHealth preparing for a potential flood of COVID-19 patients? Vice President and Chief Quality Officer Brook Watts explains how MetroHealth is using this time of relative calm before a potential storm to train and educate caregivers about what might be ahead. She talks about how we are trying to prevent a shortage in supplies, and how th…
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Medically Assisted Treatment, or MAT, combines medication and counseling/therapy to treat patients with opioid use disorder. MetroHealth's Dr. Paul Manning gives us details and explains why MAT is such an effective weapon in the battle against opioids.The MetroHealth System
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In the moments after a drug overdose, while still in bed in MetroHealth's Emergency Department, patients now get a visit from a recovering addict. Their title is "peer coach," but "angel" is more accurate. Shawn Pasch and Craig Dunson of Ascent ED share their stories.The MetroHealth System
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The opioid epidemic's staggering body count seems to always grab the headlines, overshadowing the people on the front lines who are working to turn the darkness into dawn. MetroHealth's Dr. Joan Papp shares the scope of the problem and what she's doing to fight it.The MetroHealth System
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