HomeMy WebLinkAbout12-2020 DECEMBER 9 PHAB Minutes
Deschutes County Health Services
Public Health Advisory Board
MINUTES
MINUTES
December 9, 2020
12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.
via Zoom videoconferencing
Facilitator Keith Winsor, Chair
Staff Coordinator Tom Kuhn, Community Health Manager
Scribe Lindsay Seibel
Next Meeting January 27, Zoom
Topic and Lead
Introductions and Approval of October Meeting Minutes
Tom Kuhn will send the October meeting minutes to the group for approval over email.
Updates and Unfinished Business
Jim Powell resigned from the board for reasons undisclosed, but has only positive comments
about his time on the PHAB.
Durlin Hickock will become a PHAB member after we ask the BoCC to add him officially.
The 2021 PHAB calendar will be ready toward the end of December and will follow the same
pattern of scheduling as the 2020 calendar. Keith Winsor requested that Tom include a PHAB
retreat in the 2021 calendar.
Tanya Nason was able to schedule more Traditional Health Worker trainings for January,
February, March, and April of 2021. Please let Tanya know of anyone who may be interested in
these trainings, especially for Doulas. In particular, Tanya would like to recruit Spanish
language speakers and empathetic people.
Durlin asked if PHAB members are able to join other committees and advisory boards, such as
the COVID-19 Advisory Committee. This is permissible as long as board members identify their
involvement as individuals and not as representatives from the PHAB.
COVID 19 Update
Carissa Heinige, the Deputy Director for Case Investigation and Contact Tracing, provided a
COVID-19 update to the board.
Data
As of 12:00 pm on December 9, Deschutes County had 20 new COVID-19 cases with more to
come. The total case count was 2,939. In the past 7 days, there were 472 new cases. There
were 168 new cases during the metric period. On December 9, St. Charles had 43 COVID-19
hospitalized patients with 24 from Deschutes County, 11 from Jefferson County, 3 from Crook
County, and 5 out of the tri-county area. There were 7 COVID-19 patients in the Intensive Care
“To promote and protect the health and safety of our community.” Updated 1/26/21
Unit with 4 from Deschutes County, 2 from Jefferson, and 1 from out of the tri-county area.
There were 5 patients on a ventilator with 3 from Deschutes County, 1 from Jefferson County,
and 1 from out of the tri-county area.
Trends
Trends are showing that highest case count coming from people ages 20 to 40. Transmission is
mostly occurring in households, workplaces, and social events, especially if they take place
inside.
Surge Response and Back Log Protocol
Deschutes County Health Services (DCHS) is currently in phase 3 of the surge response. This
includes ramping up staffing and onboarding new hires as quickly as possible. DCHS is
following the Oregon Health Authority’s guidance for a surge protocol where case investigators
scale back on the questions asked during case interviews, asking households to notify their
own close contacts, and providing quarantine information to cases for them to distribute to
their close contacts. The case investigators provide follow-up for close contacts considered at
high risk (medical risk factors, demographics, etc.). DCHS has also engaged businesses to help
with contact tracing if they have an employee who tested positive.
Backlog Protocol
DCHS created a plan for mobilizing an extension of the Health Services staff to help with
backlog cases. The normal case investigator team did not have the capacity to complete the
work from the surge of cases. Last week there were 129 new cases on one day. The backlog
team completed 221 calls between Friday, Dec. 4, and Tuesday, Dec. 8.
Q&A and Open Forum
- Carissa does not believe St. Charles has implemented their surge protocol yet due to
concerns around capacity, but this could change quickly due to the influx of cases we
are seeing.
- Keith asked about Deschutes County’s testing capacity. Carissa does not know specifics
about the testing capacity, but expects more testing to be completed since OHA
changed their investigative guidelines for COVID testing. Previously, OHA recommended
testing for exposed individuals with symptoms or at high-risk. Now, OHA recommends
testing within 3-14 days of exposure regardless of symptoms or risk level. Some clinics
require a provider’s referral for testing. Individuals who are uninsured and/or
undocumented face barriers to testing. Keith will reach out to Steve Strang, the Testing
Branch Director for Deschutes County, for more details.
- Tom is inviting a presenter for the next PHAB meeting to provide an overview of the
results from a study on testing for COVID in wastewater.
- The rate of false negative COVID test results is high. The rapid test has a higher
likelihood of a false negative result than a PCR test. The criteria for a confirmed COVID
case is either a positive test result or meeting the presumptive case definition of having
exposure and at least two out of the four main symptoms.
- Before the new DCHS Incident Command Structure, the Communicable Disease program
staff were working on both COVID cases and all other infectious diseases. This became
too taxing, so now the Communicable Disease program is split into non-COVID and
COVID sections.
- About 68 percent of COVID cases were considered sporadic in March; in November, the
sporadic cases are at 45 percent and going up. Much of the spread is occurring without
“To promote and protect the health and safety of our community.” Updated 1/26/21
known sources of exposure, but many exposures occur during in-person gatherings like
parties.
Other COVID-19 Resources
St. Charles COVID-19 Data
OHA Testing Strategy
OHA False Negatives
OHA Viral False Positives
PHAB 2021 Priorities Review
The PHAB 2020 priorities were set aside to focus on COVID-19. Instead of rolling the 2020
priorities over to 2021, the workgroup decided to draft new priorities with a special focus on
COVID-19 concerns. Tom sent the PHAB 2021 priorities to the group members for approval via
email on Monday, December 7, but decided they should be discussed live during the PHAB
meeting.
1. COVID-19 Considerations.
a. Support CDC Guidelines – “Hands (wash), Face (mask – covering nose and
mouth), and Space (social distancing)” Do not recommend wearing face shields
b. Support COVID-19 Vaccination when available
c. Health Screenings and Care during COVID – With early COVID disruptions to
healthcare, many appointments were canceled. The healthcare community has
put COVID protections in place had have resumed appointments. We need to
encourage people to seek and follow up with preventive health care including at
least the following:
Child wellness doctor visits & childhood vaccinations.
Maternal and child health
Oral health
Preventive tests
Ongoing follow up care for chronic conditions
Seek help for alcohol and drug dependencies
Mental health
Not delaying emergency concerns or conditions
Eye exams
2. Immunizations and Vaccinations (general, non-COVID)
Other topics for consideration if time allows or needs immediate attention:
3. Sexually Transmitted Disease/ Infection (Including Harm Reduction Strategies)
4. Teen Pregnancy/ Reproductive Health Access
Group members discussed pediatric healthcare as particularly important with the upcoming
universal childcare for two to five year olds. Other areas highlighted included telehealth, which
is especially important for mental health visits, and chronic healthcare.
Sharity Ludwig mentioned that data from items two through four need monitoring in order to
know if they need immediate attention. Additionally, immunization messaging is important to
emphasize. It would be beneficial if providers reviewed patients’ immunization records when
“To promote and protect the health and safety of our community.” Updated 1/26/21
they inquire about the COVID-19 vaccination to help ensure up-to-date immunizations for
diseases other than COVID-19.
Tom questioned if the PHAB should focus primarily on non-COVID immunizations since many
other entities will prioritize the COVID-19 vaccine. The group will follow up on this topic at the
next meeting.
The group discussed asking for the Commissioners’ support and guidance in mid-January
regarding the PHAB’s immunization messaging strategy. To prepare for a meeting with the
Commissioners, a PHAB workgroup will come up with a presentation before the next PHAB
meeting that highlights messaging strategies as well as provides recommendations for next
steps. Durlin will send Tom some resources on the history and best practices for Public Health
messaging to be distributed to the group.
The group moved to accept the 2021 PHAB Priorities.
Public Health Strategic Planning
Channa Lindsay shared a presentation on Strategic Planning with the PHAB during the last
meeting. Since then, the DCHS staff developed draft Strategic Planning priorities for funding
year 2022. These priorities are active for three years but include annual revisions. During this
meeting, the PHAB provided input to refine these priorities.
DCHS leadership chose the department level outcomes as 1) improve outcomes, 2) assure
quality, and 3) increase sustainability. Based on staff input and data, the Public Health
Strategic Priorities for fiscal years 22 through 24 are Public Trust and Public Health Service
Area Resilience. The COVID-19 response and recovery is a primary priority for FY22 and is
integrated in Public Trust and Public Health Service Area Resilience. The two priorities for fiscal
years 23 through 24 are Built Environment and Land Use Planning as well as Injury Prevention.
FY22 Strategic Priorities
Public Trust includes advocacy and communication, such as evidence-based decision-making,
health literacy and promotion, and branding and social marketing. Public Trust also includes
partnership and engagement, such as community voice and empowerment, collaborative
coalitions, and equity and representation.
Public Service Area Resilience includes culture, workforce, and sustainable funding. Culture
focuses on support, purpose, and shared accountability for staff. Workforce includes
recruitment and diversity, competency and staff development, and engagement and internal
communication. Sustainable funding includes diversity of funding, maximizing revenues, and
legislation and modernization.
PHAB Input on FY22 Strategic Priorities
The group suggested some ways to operationalize Public Trust.
- Education that explains Public Health activities, its impact on communities, present and
past accomplishments, and historical events could help improve Public Trust. This could
also include sharing local stories for a qualitative impact.
- Community Health Workers are the representatives from the community who can
meaningfully improve Public Trust since they understand, advocate, and can relate with
“To promote and protect the health and safety of our community.” Updated 1/26/21
their communities. Tom and Channa requested that any board members email them any
known organizations or groups who can leverage CHWs.
Public Service Area Resilience
- Public Health is the reason our society is as healthy as it is today, and this needs to be
emphasized with the PH staff so they can communicate this back to the community and
through their work.
- Successful healthcare depends upon more than just a provider; it is imperative that all
health communicators work as a team to address needs.
- Public Service Area Resilience needs buy-in from the Commissioners, so they need
education on its subject matters.
- The programs funded primarily through grants are not sustainable. These programs
need more regular and reliable funding, especially for remote counties.
The group emphasized that community partnerships are integral for Public Trust, Resilience,
and sustainability.
Adjourn
1:31
Action Items:
PHAB schedule for 2021
Board Members Present: Keith Winsor, Dave Huntley, Sharity Ludwig, Tami Pike, Tanya
Nason, Alison Perry, Durlin Hickock, and Peter Boehm
Staff Members Present: Tom Kuhn, Lindsay Seibel
Guest Presenters: Channa Lindsay (staff), Carissa Heinige (staff)
PHAB – Public Health Advisory Board THW – Traditional Health Worker
CHW – Community Health Worker PSS – Peer Support Specialist
PWS – Peer Wellness Specialist YSS – Youth Support Specialist
FSS – Family Support Specialist PHN – Personal Health Navigator
OHP – Oregon Health Plan FFS – Free For Service
CHE – Community Health Excellence BOCC – Board of County Commissioners
PH – Public Health DCHS – Deschutes County Health Services
RHA – Regional Health Authority RHIP – Regional Health Improvement Plan
BAR HII – Bay Area Regional Health Inequities Initiative
SWOT – Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities & Threats
CD – Communicable Disease EH – Environmental Health
DCPH – Deschutes County Public Health CDC – Center for Disease Control
“To promote and protect the health and safety of our community.” Updated 1/26/21