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Evaluating COVID-19 Response Within a Tribal Health Care Organization.

Krista R SchaeferBrianna TriplettOlivia LorenzoMichelle AregoodDonna GalbreathDenise A DillardAnn Futterman Collier
Published in: The Permanente journal (2023)
Introduction Health care organizations of all types have adapted in response to COVID-19. Responding to the pandemic has varied across organizations and there are few standardized frameworks from which to evaluate an organizational response. This article reports COVID-19 responses by a tribal health care organization using a synthesized evaluation framework that integrated the organizational values and allowed for timely implementation of responses during this COVID-19 public health emergency. Methods The authors categorized each COVID-19 response into six domains, including leadership practices, patient engagement, operations management, teamwork and communication, public health, and external partnerships. Responses were analyzed by domain and across time. Results COVID-19 responses included medical alerts, modifying delivery of care, establishing testing and vaccination sites, additional benefits for employees, as well as new processes for communication between employees and senior leadership. COVID-19 responses were most frequently categorized into the operation management domain (80%). Many responses, especially those that considered patients, employees, and the community, also fit other domains. Discussion Operation management was the most frequent domain because the pandemic emerged rapidly and required swift, agile, action-oriented responses from the tribal health care organization. The majority of COVID-19 responses involved multiple, not single, domains. Conclusion Our evaluation approach captured areas of importance to the tribal health organization and may be pertinent for other indigenous organizations and rural communities. It is especially important to consider tribal perspectives in response to COVID-19 because of the prior history with Western medicine and infectious diseases, and health care limitations experienced due to rurality.
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