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Leadership and Resiliency: Beyond COVID-19

03sep12:00 pm1:00 pmLeadership and Resiliency: Beyond COVID-19A Virtual Speaker Series

Event Details

This series will feature six 40-45 minute presentations (either live or recorded based on speaker preference), followed by a live Q&A session. A recording of each presentation will be available for two weeks after the live session. CEUs available for LNHA.

Registration is per facility so many staff members can participate in the sessions for one fee. Prior registration is required. Registration for the entire series has closed, but individual sessions registration ($25 each) is still available.

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Session details:
6/25  Bite Size Coping During Times of Uncertainty

Bryan Sexton | Safety Culture, Teamwork, and Workforce Resilience Expert

Stressed during uncertain times? If you, your staff or your colleagues are feeling particularly spent, it is probably because the level of emotional exhaustion in health care workers was already at an all-time-high before COVID-19, with one out of three people already meeting the criteria for burnout. In this enlightening and entertaining module, we will provide some perspective, hope, and simple strategies to try during tense times.

 

7/9 Update on Coronavirus: What’s Next and How to Plan        

Marty Makary, MD | Johns Hopkins Surgeon and Professor of Health Policy

Dr. Makary, a leading public health expert at Johns Hopkins and Editor-in-Chief of MedPage Today, reviews the latest on the coronavirus and what organizations can do to prepare for the growing epidemic. Using plain English, he interprets the current data from overseas and U.S. studies projecting the impact in the U.S. Dr. Makary also reviews best practices of employee policies and how to adapt your business to deal with the epidemic in real-time.

 

 7/23  The Post-COVID Healthcare Landscape: Implications for Strategy

Jeff Goldsmith | President of Health Futures Inc.

What will the US health system look like post-COVID-19? Hospitals and health systems will be facing the financial aftereffects of a COVID related economic slowdown or recession. They will also have to deal with the political uncertainties created by the 2020 national election. Finally, they will face the continued threat of disruption of their existing businesses by new technologies and new competitors.  What are the most significant threats, and also opportunities, in this post-COVID landscape? How do health system boards and leadership set strategic priorities for this uncertain near term future?

 

8/6   How Hospitals and Health Systems can Lead a :”Quiet Revolution” for Healing During a Pandemic     

Dayna Bowen Matthew | Dean of George Washington University Law School

Dayna Bowen Matthew, JD, Ph.D., is the new Dean for George Washington University Law School in Washington, DC  and the former William L. Matheson and Robert M. Morgenthau Distinguished Professor of Law and the F. Palmer Weber Research Professor of Civil Liberties and Human Rights at the University of Virginia School of Law. She holds an appointment in the School of Medicine’s Department of Public Health Sciences, and as a Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellow, worked on Capitol Hill, helping to address public health disparities for disadvantaged communities. Because of her great experience in this area, in her presentation Professor Matthew identifies the historic and contemporary role that health providers can play in increasing health equity.  In addition, she defines the need for health care equity during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the threats to health equity that have been heightened as a result of this challenging period.

 

8/20   The 21st Century Challenges of Health Equity    

Dr. Kevin Ahmaad Jenkins  | Core Investigator at the Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion (CHERP) at the Corporal Crescenz VA Medical Center in Philadelphia

From broken community partnerships to diminished funding, how do we overcome the 21st Century Challenges of Health Equity?  This presentation motivates clinicians, researchers, and healthcare leaders to explore the role, recognition, and remediation of inequity in medicine.  This presentation teaches healthcare providers and biomedical researchers how to clinically confront the deadly “isms” that prevent quality care and public wellness.  In addition, Dr. Jenkins will be addressing the important issues of systemic racism and unconscious/implicit bias and the impact that they will have on delivering quality care to all.

 

9/3    The New Healthcare Ecosystem   

Tom Koulopoulos | Chairman of Global Futures Think Tank The Delphi Group

What the COVID-19 crisis has made abundantly clear is that the current healthcare ecosystem is ill-prepared to deal with the type of healthcare needs that will be typical of the 21st Century. With an aging global demographic that will put more than half of the world’s population in the 60+ age group by 2060 the world’s real healthcare crisis has barely begun. The challenge isn’t advances in medicine, the threat of future pandemics, or our ability to develop new pharmaceuticals and therapies, but rather a healthcare ecosystem that pits payer against provider, forces gaming of the system, poorly orchestrated supply chains, and the enormous burden on providers to handle so many of the administrative aspects of healthcare. The best hope for healthcare is to rethink how to refocus every part of the healthcare ecosystem on what it is best at.

Time

(Thursday) 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm CST(GMT+00:00)