FEATURE PROFILE
Round Rock Chamber forum Area leaders talk state of health care in the city
BY BROOKE SJOBERG
In a panel discussion moderated by John Garrett, Community Impact founder and CEO, the Round Rock Chamber on Sept. 27 invited local leaders to discuss the state of health care in Round Rock. Speakers included Jeremy Barclay, CEO of St. David’s Round Rock Medical Center; Kate Henderson, president of regional hospitals and community part- nerships for Ascension Texas; and Drew Bennett, vice president of operations for Baylor Scott & White Medical Center Round Rock, each contributing to the discussion of local health care a little over two years after the U.S. onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Responses have been edited for length and clarity.
Area leaders meet to discuss the state of health care during a Round Rock Chamber luncheon Sept. 27. (Brooke Sjoberg/Community Impact)
FLEXIBLE USE Ocials from Ascension Texas, Baylor Scott & White Health and St. David’s HealthCare described future considerations in mind for new facilities and the planning of multipurpose spaces for dierent levels of patient care.
WHAT IS SOMETHING YOU’RE PROUD YOU’VE ACCOMPLISHED? IF YOU WANT TO THROW IN A PER SONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT, TOOTHAT’S WHAT WE DO AT CIWHAT’S YOUR BEST PROFESSIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT? Barclay: The very rst thing that comes to mind is the word ‘survive.’ I mean that in the business sense of sur- viving, what we’re probably going to get into here in a little bit, that the total blowup of everything that we knew as normal, and the whole delivery of patient care, the whole of my job, to totally change all those aspects. Henderson: Everyone’s health care needs have continued to grow, and our communities continue to grow. One of our goals is to get the care that you need closest to where you live, work, play and pray. That involves, in many cases, expanding the breadth and depth of services so that you don’t have to drive to another community to get complex care. In the last 24 months, we’ve also added things like specialized cardiovascular services at Seton Williamson; we’ve added a broader array of women’s health ser- vices, including regarding the pelvic oor, specialty care, which again, now means you don’t have to drive. Bennett: We’re just continually in awe of our folks that have come through [who] have also helped us evolve to getting to a place of sus- tainability and remain resilient and still provide our communities have what they need in the face of all these things. Another piece of that, that I think we’re really proud of, or I’m really proud of, from the organization standpoint is the investment in our workforce over the past year plus.
We have almost tripled the number of graduate nurses that we accept in our region here. We have set up partnerships with [Austin Community College] for apprenticeships, for patient tech programs and [certied nursing assistant] programs. We are really trying to make sure that we are meeting the customer where they are in the best possible way. The pandemic really made us realize the value of our app. You can make an appointment straight from the app with any of our providers. [You] don’t even have to have been an established patient, which is a new feature that we introduced during the pandemic. ARE WE IN THE ENDEMIC? OR ARE WE STILL IN THE PANDEMIC? I DON’T MEAN THIS TO BE POLITICAL. BUT AS YOU GUYS START PREPARING YOUR HOSPITALS, HOW DO Y’ALL APPROACH THAT? Barclay: With the information that has been presented, I would say yes, we’re on to the endemic stage. How are we adjusting? You know, Mr. Bennett mentioned several of the tele- medicine video visits; I thought that was a really clever way to say it. Those certainly went up signicantly. And I think the end user of our products that we produce, they really got used to that and really liked that. I think that means more technology and probably catching up to where we probably needed to be years ago. I think there have been a lot more of those plat- forms going across with things that were never out there previously. Henderson: We believe it’s endemic. COVID-19 is a new disease category, and it will have its itera- tions, which we’ve seen. Most of the time when we nd COVID-19, as Kate
St. David's HealthCare
Ascension Texas
Baylor Scott & White
Universal bed concept: Planning for facilities to have beds for various levels of care in exible, multipurpose spaces
Hospital bed bank: Facilities expansions will have multiuse hospital beds to accommodate dierent levels of care
Surge plans: In the event of an outbreak, plans identify areas to convert for patient care
SOURCES: ASCENSION TEXAS, BAYLOR SCOTT & WHITECOMMUNITY IMPACT
in the relatively near future. But the way we’ll think about how that’s constructed, what those hospital beds can do, will be less prescribed and just more [that] there’s a bank of hospital beds, and so that as the community’s needs change, and as new diseases emerge, we can use those spaces for a host of things and related platforms. We recently opened the sixth oor of Ascension Seton Williamson in the last six to nine months. We thought it was going to be needed for one patient group. As we saw more patients coming in our emergency department or physician’s oces, we were up in just four dierent patient groups. Bennett: As we’re planning expan- sion of our hospital campus to keep up with the growth of this area, we’re doing the same exact thing space we’re talking about. We actually call it a universal bed concept, where we are planning, at least from a physical infrastructure perspective, to see all those dierent levels of care and that we really do have that exibility to thrive, what needs to be in an inpa- tient setting there, have the right care as far as stang and all those things.
Henderson’s presenting today, to have her knee replaced, and we test her before surgery. So we have her results. Oh, and by the way, she’s also COVID-positive. So it’s incidental to what my real presentation was. That’s how most of it’s presenting today. That said, I would encourage all of you to follow [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines and go get your vaccinations. Bennett: [I] very much agree with what’s been shared thus far and also have to plug in there that it’s in a kind of normalcy state as far as how we’re guring out how to operate with COVID moving forward. However, it is very important that we, you know, maintain that COVID is very much still there as far as the number of cases that are happening. We know the things to do to help prevent [it]. ARE WE GOING TO SEE THE WAY THAT HOSPITALS, HOW THE BEDS ARE UTILIZED, IS THAT GOING TO CHANGE AS WELL? Henderson: We’re continuing to expand and anticipate being able to nearly double the size of our campus
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ROUND ROCK EDITION • NOVEMBER 2022
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