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768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic

INTRODUCTION: A licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) has been recognized as an essential role within the Burn Center inpatient multidisciplinary team. However, for ambulatory patients facing acute crisis, resources can be scarce; relying on clinic nursing staff or an inpatient LCSW to problem solv...

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Autores principales: Spotts, Margaret, Dines, Margaret M, Foster, Crystal, Wiktor, Arek J, Weber, Elizabeth B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8945990/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.321
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author Spotts, Margaret
Dines, Margaret M
Foster, Crystal
Wiktor, Arek J
Weber, Elizabeth B
author_facet Spotts, Margaret
Dines, Margaret M
Foster, Crystal
Wiktor, Arek J
Weber, Elizabeth B
author_sort Spotts, Margaret
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: A licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) has been recognized as an essential role within the Burn Center inpatient multidisciplinary team. However, for ambulatory patients facing acute crisis, resources can be scarce; relying on clinic nursing staff or an inpatient LCSW to problem solve psychosocial concerns can leave large gaps of patient care unaddressed. An Ambulatory LCSW (ALCSW) assists transition of care working to prevent unnecessary Emergency Room visits and readmissions. We sought to examine our experience utilizing an ALCSW in the Burn Center. METHODS: A full-time burn ALCSW position was approved in fall of 2020 at our ABA verified Burn Center. The role includes extensive assessments of mental health, substance use, domestic violence, and safety concerns, connecting clinic patients to resources for transportation, benefits, insurance coverage, employment, food, and housing. The ALCSW also conducts short term patient centered, family & group therapy sessions. A retrospective review was performed on duties of the ALCSW comparing 9 months (December-August) pre and post hire. Data collected included visit types, hours of patient care, and interventions performed. RESULTS: During the first 9 months, the ALCSW completed 1,008 patient encounters (approximately 25 hours of direct patient care per week) and 510 psychosocial assessments. In the first three months alone 258 substance use screens, 166 mental health assessments, 44 ASD/PTSD therapy sessions, 205 Homeless Shelter referrals and 128 community resource encounters were performed that would have otherwise been left unaddressed or added to the workload of our Burn Clinic RN or provider. The ALCSW was able to see up to 89.39% more patients per month (n=89) compared to the inpatient LCSW who only responding to clinic patients with emergent needs (n=13). The increase of ALCSW encounters showed a 35.37% increase of completed visits without IP admission (n=pre 665 vs post 1029), 39.73% decrease of IP admissions after clinic visit (n=pre 73 vs post 44), and 17.82% increase of patients without inpatient admissions entirely (n=pre 572 vs post 696). In addition, the added effort of an ambulatory LCSW, has increased SOAR support group participation by 60.13% in calendar year 2021 compared to calendar year 2020 (n= pre 63 vs post 158). CONCLUSIONS: Hiring a dedicated Burn ALCSW can substantially increase the resources available to outpatients, fill voids of patient care, limit unnecessary hospital resources, and prevent admissions.
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spelling pubmed-89459902022-03-28 768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic Spotts, Margaret Dines, Margaret M Foster, Crystal Wiktor, Arek J Weber, Elizabeth B J Burn Care Res Psychological and Psychosocial 2 INTRODUCTION: A licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) has been recognized as an essential role within the Burn Center inpatient multidisciplinary team. However, for ambulatory patients facing acute crisis, resources can be scarce; relying on clinic nursing staff or an inpatient LCSW to problem solve psychosocial concerns can leave large gaps of patient care unaddressed. An Ambulatory LCSW (ALCSW) assists transition of care working to prevent unnecessary Emergency Room visits and readmissions. We sought to examine our experience utilizing an ALCSW in the Burn Center. METHODS: A full-time burn ALCSW position was approved in fall of 2020 at our ABA verified Burn Center. The role includes extensive assessments of mental health, substance use, domestic violence, and safety concerns, connecting clinic patients to resources for transportation, benefits, insurance coverage, employment, food, and housing. The ALCSW also conducts short term patient centered, family & group therapy sessions. A retrospective review was performed on duties of the ALCSW comparing 9 months (December-August) pre and post hire. Data collected included visit types, hours of patient care, and interventions performed. RESULTS: During the first 9 months, the ALCSW completed 1,008 patient encounters (approximately 25 hours of direct patient care per week) and 510 psychosocial assessments. In the first three months alone 258 substance use screens, 166 mental health assessments, 44 ASD/PTSD therapy sessions, 205 Homeless Shelter referrals and 128 community resource encounters were performed that would have otherwise been left unaddressed or added to the workload of our Burn Clinic RN or provider. The ALCSW was able to see up to 89.39% more patients per month (n=89) compared to the inpatient LCSW who only responding to clinic patients with emergent needs (n=13). The increase of ALCSW encounters showed a 35.37% increase of completed visits without IP admission (n=pre 665 vs post 1029), 39.73% decrease of IP admissions after clinic visit (n=pre 73 vs post 44), and 17.82% increase of patients without inpatient admissions entirely (n=pre 572 vs post 696). In addition, the added effort of an ambulatory LCSW, has increased SOAR support group participation by 60.13% in calendar year 2021 compared to calendar year 2020 (n= pre 63 vs post 158). CONCLUSIONS: Hiring a dedicated Burn ALCSW can substantially increase the resources available to outpatients, fill voids of patient care, limit unnecessary hospital resources, and prevent admissions. Oxford University Press 2022-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8945990/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.321 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Psychological and Psychosocial 2
Spotts, Margaret
Dines, Margaret M
Foster, Crystal
Wiktor, Arek J
Weber, Elizabeth B
768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic
title 768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic
title_full 768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic
title_fullStr 768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic
title_full_unstemmed 768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic
title_short 768 The Significant Impact of Having a Dedicated Ambulatory Clinical Social Worker in the Burn Clinic
title_sort 768 the significant impact of having a dedicated ambulatory clinical social worker in the burn clinic
topic Psychological and Psychosocial 2
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8945990/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.321
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