Agape site or Primary Care

Agape Clinic & Community Care Procedures


General Principles | Staffing | Partners | Records | Setting up and closing | As patients enter clinic | Established patient procedures | New patient procedures | Women's health/GYN | Immunizations | Waiting area | Seeing doctor or NP | After doctor or NP encounter (includes prescriptions) | Referrals | After clinic closes | Home visits | Outreach | Primary Care (different page) | Health Screening (different page) | Finally

General Principles (the below applies to students, volunteers, and paid staff)

Staffing

Front Coordinator: The front coordinator works with the social worker to coordinate set up, sign in patients, pull charts, know who is waiting and why (requires frequent checks of the waiting room), patient flow, ensure support for the back manager, and whatever else is needed to keep the clinic running smoothly. Stays aware of noise level and keeps waiting room from becoming too chaotic. Depending on circumstances may take vital signs and obtain histories (stays aware of need for confidentiality).

All staff should stay aware of who is waiting to be sure that nobody is lost in the shuffle.

Back Manager: Responsible for orderly flow of patients, information, medications, and staff in the exam area and pharmacy. Insures that charts are complete (VS, wt, allergies, etc.). Assigns and delegates as needed for efficient operations. May pull people from other areas. Keeps exam rooms filled. Coordinates with front coordinator.

Primary Nurse(s): Take histories, perform initial assessments, and complete charts. Accompany patients when seen by nurse practitioner (NP) or physician. Assist NP or physician, ensure that patients obtain correct medications, assess need for assistance obtaining medications with Rx, teach medications and related material. Perform teaching and related after patient is seen by physician.

Pharmacy: The "pharmacist" pulls, counts, and labels the medications. The NP, physician, or health educator (promotora) confirms all meds correctly filled, teaches patient about medications, and gives the medications to the patient. Also, see "After the patient sees the doctor or nurse practitioner below."

Missionaries (Currently Lupe Springer): provide spiritual care to patients/families identified by other staff as needing spiritual care. Talk with patients/ families in the waiting room. Make home visits.

Social Workers (Leslie Kemp or promotora): Screen each patient. Assist patients obtain other types of services, make and follows-up on referrals, make home visits.

Lay Health Promoters or Promotoras: Teach patients and families, assist patients obtain other types of services, make home visits, accompany patients to appointments, assist with screening, provide translations, and other responsibilities according to patient/family needs.

Volunteers: Check-in. Read to children and otherwise assist parents and patients in the waiting area, help patients obtain prescriptions, transport patients to other sites of care, make HVs with nurses. Top

Partners

Among the partners actively providing care are the Agape Clinic, Louise Herrington School of Nursing Baylor University (BUSN), Concilio Dallas, Common Grace Ministries, East Dallas Cooperative Parish, Dallas County Health Department, Emanuel Lutheran Church, and, of course, Grace United Methodist Church. Top

Records and supplies

Records are kept locked in the cabinets by the check-in desk. It is very important that the cabinets are always locked when we are all out of the room.

Some charts are kept by family head-of-household name (previous format - some older charts still like this) and some (newer charts) by individual names. Shot records are kept in separate files. If a chart is not found under the patient's name, look under the family name. It sometimes happens that charts are filed under the patient's first name rather than last; and of course charts are sometimes misfiled. So you may have to look in several places to find a patient's chart.

Most paper and related supplies are kept in the bottom drawers of the files. Please tell CK (write it down) if any form is in short supply.

Medical supplies and medications are a challenge to keep in stock. Write down any supplies or medications that are in short supply. Give to CK.

Setting up (and closing)

(Everyone helps - The Manager is responsible for ensuring that setup and closing are correct. Oto-opthalmoscopes (Dx sets), glucometers, and other equipment is in the pharmacy and handles kept plugged in in the workroom.

Closing (the goal is for the people working the next day to walk in to a clinic that looks better than when they left the previous week)

As patients enter the clinic

Established patient procedures (also see GYN)

Patients who have an established chart need to have current problem SOAPed, including a brief recap of history of previous visits and care given and identification of outcome(s) of previous care. Note any +/- patterns in response to treatment, e.g., downward trend in BP, lack of pattern in blood glucose, improved compliance, etc. Complete history and necessary testing, e.g., UAs for women with lower abdominal pain and related, UTI Sx, etc.; DFS - note if fasting - for patients with diabetes; peak flow on patients with asthma or other respiratory difficulties). Use the assessment guide form to improve history-taking.

Check with families who have children whether they have begun the CHIP application process. If not, they should be given a CHIP application and, time permitting, given assistance filling it out. Encourage people to return to the clinic for social work assistance with any letters or questions in response to the CHIP application. Top

New patient procedures (also see GYN)

Charts are to opened for all persons requesting health or other services from us.

Women's Health/Gynecological Care

For the gynecological visit to run smoothly the room should be set up and supplies gathered before the nurse midwife (CNM) and first patient arrive. I suggest that you print this page and keep it handy throughout your work with the CNM

Preparing the room

The last room on the right (#3) is used and a privacy screen is put in front of the door for additional privacy.

Gathering supplies

Supplies need to be set up before each new patient excluding the paper towel with jelly that can be reused unless contaminated.

Patient preparation

Note GYN at top of progress note.

Patient Vitals: Call the patient from the waiting room and obtain her weight and height. In the room take the patient’s blood pressure, pulse, respirations, and temperature.

Patient History: A history should be obtained including questions from top of SOAP note (draw line through negatives; circle positives), reason or any problems leading to visit (details if not just for Pap smear, but do not put on sheet, discuss w/midwife first), gravida (how many times pregnant past 20 weeks), parity (living children), any abortions, date of last menstrual period (LMP), method of birth control, (if any), and whether she is sexually active. Note dates LMP on lab sheet.

Patients who are within child-bearing age/years and cannot recall period or has not had period in over a month need UA and HCG

Preparation: When you are finished obtaining the history, explain the exam and ask if she has any questions. Give her a written explanation of the exam (Spanish/English) and explain to patient to take off ALL of her clothes, put gown on with opening in front, and that the Midwife will be in shortly. Arrange for translator if needed.

Assisting with the exam

The midwife will complete her history, breast exam, and then will begin the pelvic exam. During the exam /Pap smear you will be responsible for setting up lamp in appropriate position (she will help you), handing her the supplies she needs as follows:

After the exam you will both leave the room and allow the patient time to get dressed.

After educating the patient on her needs/treatment and explaining that she will only hear something from the clinic if there is anything abnormal she will be dismissed and you will need to clean up (throw away any trash) and prepare for next visit (see Preparing the room and Gathering supplies).

You will also need to place patient’s 2 lab specimens in plastic Ziploc bag with original copy of laboratory sheet after the CNM has signed it. Put this in a brown paper bag that all patients’ labs will go in for the day. Put note on front of chart to fill in lab pending. Author: Ciri Snyder (Fall, 2004) Top

Immunizations (not currently done except Td when indicated)

On days when the Dallas County Health Department has few or no refugees to screen, they will take care of most or all immunizations at the refugee agency next door to the church. Until we know how many screens they have (we find out about 0900 when the County arrives @ the refugee agency) we will (1) maintain a list of people needing immunizations and (2) start immunizing them. It is imperative that the list for immunizations be updated at the refugee agency every 15 minutes to ensure that clinic patients do not lose their place to others who come into the refugee agency. Clinic patients coming for immunizations should be escorted to the refugee agency by a clinic staff person or volunteer. If there are large numbers of refugees to be screened at the refugee agency we will take care of clinic immunizations to the best of our ability. Paperwork and services for immunizations should be completed as follows:

Also see Vaccination Procedures.

The waiting area (front manager responsible; all staff participate)

Stay aware of who is in the waiting area. Be sure nobody is deteriorating or sitting forgotten and waiting for something to happen. Walk through and make contact with people.

People who are very ill may need to be moved to an exam room. Children with fever should be medicated (talk with instructor).

Intake staff (usually one student) helps check patients in, obtains VS, CC, and other health data as appropriate; and, when the first press of patients is done, begins health screening.

Children who have to wait a long time may become fussy or difficult to manage. Volunteers or others should read to the children. We have crackers for those who become hungry.

Volunteers and nurses (time permitting) should interact with parents and children. Talk to parents about reading to their children as a way of maintaining closeness to the children and improving the children's reading ability.

We have books in the waiting and the back storage rooms. There should always be children's books in the waiting room. Children can take 1-2 books home. Books for older children are also available. Top

Seeing the doctor or NP (manager & primary nurses)

After the patient sees the doctor or NP (& filling prescriptions)

Introduction, Supplies and Tools

Filling & Assisting

Finally

It is easier to make mistakes when the desk and pharmacy is cluttered. Keep personal belongings off the table and out of the way of the shelves. Throw away all drink cans, food, etc. when you are finished.

Referrals

The patient is your responsibility, so you must be sure that the referral is made and the patient understands where and when she or he is supposed to go and is able to get to the appointment.

After the clinic closes

Students and volunteers review patients seen in the clinic and on home visits (HVs) and outreach. This occurs every day to be sure that patients receive quality/timely services. Top

Home visits

Safety is always a concern on home visits and outreach. Pay attention to your surroundings and never put yourself at risk. See the Baylor Safety Memo for specific guidelines.

Home visits (HVs) are the primary means by which we keep patients in a loop of care as problems are resolved and we move toward health promotion. All patients with problems related to preventable admissions, i.e., asthma, hypertension, diabetes, congestive heart failure, and other teaching-intensive chronic illnesses. All these patients will receive F/U and implementation of a structured teaching plan.

HVs are based on your evaluation of the patient/family need for F/U assessment and teaching. What happens on the HV is determined by patient/family need, problems, your intuition, and other factors.

Each HV should include a focused assessment of the primary patient, BP and possibly other checks of other adults, review of immunization records of children, and any other assessments indicated by circumstances or history.

All HV patients should have a chart in the file. HV documentation/charts includes: (a) permission to treat form, medication list, demographic form; (b) SOAP on Progress Note form (Important: note the Outcome of this and all other services); (c) Include all teaching and teaching plans. The mark of good documentation is if another person can pick up your work and quickly understand the patients problem, what you have done to address the problem, and what needs to be done next to address the problem. Top

Outreach

Outreach is the means by which we identify new patients, families, and community problems. Students are assigned to specific areas of East Dallas and should work to meet new people in those areas by (1) asking existing patients to introduce them to new families, (2) knocking on doors and offering to check blood pressures, immunization cards, and other services, and (3) meeting people in the course of seeing patients/families. Photo: Outreach at community garden with Cambodians

Health fairs and other screening activities are discussed in other documents. The essential feature of a worthwhile screening is ensuring that positive findings/problems are (1) significant health problems and (2) addressed - in our case, usually through follow-up and referral combined.

We are discussing possibilities for increased capacity in outreach and other community health services. All thoughtful ideas are welcomed and considered. Top

Finally

Remember, if you do not handle the problem, it will not be handled. Always remember, we are about solutions to problems and about dignified and respectful interactions with individuals and the community. Top

(Last update 10/2006)