My last blog was on how today’s medical system fails by not addressing the real
needs of our patients and their communities. Here, I highlight three projects
that take such an “upstream” approach to healthcare:
Doctors can give prescriptions for medications, but why not
a prescription for healthy foods and safer housing? Health Leads employs young people
(usually college graduates interested in careers in health) to be advocates who
assist doctors in clinics and ERs in connecting patients with community
resources. They help with everything from food assistance to job training to
legal counseling. They help to “fill” the other prescriptions that people need
to achieve better health.
Recognizing that black males have significant health
disparities and that outreach and education must start in the community, Project Brotherhood was conceived
from a simple idea: give patients free haircuts, and use barber shops as a
place to screen and counsel on illnesses such as high blood pressure and STI
prevention. Its model of multidisciplinary, culturally competent care
incorporates other aspects of social support, including on fatherhood and job
support.
The New York Times just published a story
about an “EMS
Corps” in East Oakland that specifically recruits at-risk youth and train
them to be emergency medical technicians. They provide mentorship for young men
who come from backgrounds of poverty and violence, and train them to become
professionals who will serve their communities. As the story cites, these men
are taught that they aren’t the problem—they are the solution.
These are only some of the some of the many innovations
occurring around the country. We need far more interventions that go
beyond “band aid” care. In the words of public health doctor Rishi
Manchanda (whose recent TED talk I highly recommend), we must change our entire approach to healthcare,
away from simply treating the effects of illnesses to targeting interventions
to where people live, work, and play—where health really begins.