The Dose - “They’re Not Going to Say They’re Hungry”: Designing Health Care for Trauma Survivors
Episode Date: May 21, 2021Many of us can recall a time we felt nervous about seeing a doctor. Maybe it was because we were wary about how much the visit would cost, or what a diagnosis would mean for our health. Now, imagine h...ow much more stress you would feel if you had experienced trauma — from domestic violence or human trafficking, for example. Trauma survivors are the people family medicine physician Anita Ravi, M.D., cares for. On the latest episode of The Dose, Ravi and Keisha Walcott, one of her former patients, talk about how to design health systems for women and girls who have experienced gender-based violence. Ravi and Walcott explain how health, poverty, and trauma are interlinked and why providers must address all three.
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The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation dedicated to healthcare for everyone.
A lot of my training had been in our community health centers. That's where I did all of my
residency training. And, you know, you start to see ridiculous situations, right? Like our board
exam questions will be like, which one of these medications is best for pulmonary
embolism?
But nothing ever asks you, if a patient can only afford a diabetes medication or a pulmonary
medication, which one should they get?
Hi, everyone.
Welcome to The Dose.
I'm Shanwar Sirvai, and you just heard from Anita Ravi, a family medicine
physician. Anita's patients are women and girls who have survived trauma, like being trafficked
to the United States or living in an abusive home. Many of them are too afraid to seek medical care,
and even if they do, they can't afford to pay the bills. On today's show,
she's going to talk about how to design health systems that break through these barriers.
She's joining me with Keisha Walcott, one of her former patients and a trauma survivor herself.
Anita, Keisha, welcome to the show. Thank you so much. Thank you. So Keisha, could you just start by telling
us a little bit about how you first met Anita? About six years ago, I was in a very bad place. I was going through a really bad relationship. I was in the shelter. I was just really distraught. I am an immigrant. I was brought here as a child, and I didn't have any kind of immigration status at the time. So I didn't have health insurance. So I couldn't
work in the US legally. And I had two small children at the time. So I was just in a relationship that
I was being taken advantage of. And it was so hard to just get simple things like food. And I'd been going
through like an eviction and I met with a lawyer and was trying to get some assistance for rent.
And we just started going through my situation and she was like, what is your most immediate
need? And at the time I had had a pulmonary embolism. I had underlying issues like sickle cell disease, and I was not
getting follow-up care at all. I was existing, but I wasn't living. And she was like, well,
you know, there's a doctor that she started this program in NYC. Do you think that you'll be able
to reach her to go to the doctor appointments?
I was like, well, you know, sometimes I can't get there or sometimes I can't even get to
our appointments.
And she was like, well, you know what?
I'll send you MetroCards to get to your doctor's appointments.
And she gave me on a little yellow sticky note, she gave me Dr. Anita Ravi's telephone number, which was surprising to me
because doctors don't usually give you their personal telephone number. I didn't know it was
her personal telephone number at the time. I got home and I called the number and she answered.
The doctor herself answered the phone. So that was surprising to me. So that was how I met Anita.
And Keisha, thinking back to that first appointment and other appointments that
you had with her, how are these different from previous times that you'd gone to see a doctor?
Even if I'd gotten care immediately to address whatever the situation was,
it never ended up where I would follow up or I could get the proper medications because I didn't
have any insurance. I remember one instance when I was on a certain medication for an embolism and
it wasn't working for me at all. It was just not stabilizing. It wasn't
working. And Anita sent me to a specialist and they advocated and got me like this very,
very expensive medication for like $2. So it was just like, wow, I don't have to settle for less. I don't have to be at the bottle of the barrel,
like scrimmaging for the leftovers. I can actually get quality care. Like I can get
decent medication that's actually going to help me. And that medication led me to like,
become well and not have to take the medication anymore. So these are the things. It was just
a completely different experience. And Anita, you mentioned that Keisha was one of your first
patients at this clinic you started for trauma survivors. So tell me about the clinic and what
motivated you to start it in the first place?
Sure.
So I'm a family medicine physician. And the reason that I highlight that is because I just,
I think it's such an important part of our healthcare system.
I can take care of adults, children, people across the gender spectrum.
And all of my work and training, the reason I became a family medicine physician
was I was particularly interested in working with women who are going in and out of the criminal
court systems. And a lot of my training had been in our community health centers. That's where I
did all of my residency training. And you start to see ridiculous situations, right? Like our board
exam questions will be like, which one of these
medications is best for pulmonary embolism? But nothing ever asks you if a patient can only afford
a diabetes medication or a pulmonary medication, you know, which one should they get? And those
were the kind of real life situations that were happening all the time in how we were practicing
medicine. And when you start to overlay
that with gender-based violence and trauma, which is what I was seeing with women who are going in
and out of court, I did a lot of my work volunteering on Rikers Island. And you see such
profound histories of ways in which people have experienced trauma and violence, and it keeps them from being able to access systems in the way that they need.
And so Purple Clinic came about because the issue of health and human trafficking actually was just
emerging in the healthcare field. And so there were more conferences talking about this intersection
of health and human trafficking. And there was so much when I came across the field that intersected
with the court systems, with violence, trauma, and people not being able to access care.
And so I started designing a project where I was going to interview survivors of trafficking
who were incarcerated on Rikers Island to ask them about their health care experiences
while they were being trafficked, where they were getting care, and what would make them
feel more comfortable actually connecting with long-term care.
Like we don't really have that information in the medical literature.
So while I was doing this, I was collaborating with community-based organizations.
And it's so awesome the things you can learn about health from people outside of the healthcare
system.
And so, you know, there are social workers and people who are like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
like research is great.
That'll come out in like five years and maybe impact something. But we are seeing clients now who
cannot get care. And it's not just, you know, like they're not documented. They may not have
insurance, but also they're afraid to go in. Like it's one thing if we're sitting here and we build
a bunch of free clinics and, you know, we're like, oh, we're getting through all of these
logistical reasons why people don't get care. But there is very, very little focus on building systems where people are comfortable
accessing what you have designed. And I think that's such a key part. And I really believe
if we can ace that, then anybody can get care no matter what. And so if you can optimize the
healthcare system for survivors of gender-based violence, everybody will benefit.
And you feel like the rest of the healthcare system isn't designed for people who may be afraid to come in?
Correct. Our team always says that the healthcare system is reactionary instead of being proactive in its design of how we can serve survivors.
And so I feel like our healthcare system exploits resilience in survivors.
So they're like, resilience, you know, like survivors can figure it out.
They figured it out forever.
So they'll figure this out too.
And that is like resilience should not be a reason why things can't be designed better and more optimally.
Anita, what did you learn about how to care for
and how not to care for people who have experienced trauma at the Purple Health Clinic?
I mean, I think you start to reflect right on, sometimes designers call it pain points in the
system. What are the things that aren't working
and how can we do a quick little fix, rapid innovation, rapid cycle, and come back and fix
it and see if it works? There's all these steps, right? You start to celebrate these victories.
If someone makes an appointment, it is a victory. Then if someone comes in all of the way,
one of the worst diagnoses that exists, I think,
in our medical system is something called left without being seen. It's like a formal diagnosis
code. And it is somebody who checked in, was waiting in the waiting room. At some point,
they left before the doctor saw them. So they'll be sitting on my schedule. I have to close the
chart. And now I put this diagnosis code left without being seen. And I just, I can't think of something worse than someone taking the
chance, taking time off, childcare, doing all these things, making the effort, and then they
weren't seen. So I was constantly trying to figure out, okay, once you do design something where
someone feels comfortable getting in, like, how do you keep them engaged? And then the next part
became, how do you do it so people just don't end up coming for one visit? Like, how do you keep them engaged? And then the next part became, how do you do it
so people just don't end up coming for one visit? Like, I always ask people what their dream job is
at my first visit. I've been doing that since I was a medical student, because I kind of want to
understand, like, what are people aspiring to? What do they care about? Because my job is to help
people get to where they want to go. And so the more I understand that, the more I can
act on it and build around it. And so, you know, I would stay up at night because maybe I would
see one person once and I would never see them again. And I'm like, okay, what did we do? What
do we need to do differently? Is it transportation? Is it that they don't have a phone anymore?
Like, what are the things that I could do to make someone feel comfortable,
like not just engaging, but staying engaged? You know, there's left without being seen, but there's also like
engaged without being seen, right? Like someone comes in and they engage, but they don't,
aren't seen for who they are or getting the care that they need. And that also is like,
it's a silent diagnosis. You don't want to happen either. You want someone to feel comfortable
coming back by seeing them and listening. And this point of transportation, Keisha, you brought this up. You talked about
how initially your lawyer would give you Metro cards in New York. That's how you can get on the
subway. Can you just talk a little bit about how it's so important for the healthcare system,
the doctor, to address something like your transport,
how you're getting to the clinic.
So even like the lawyers that I'd encountered,
like for her to realize that this was a problem,
to send me Metro cards.
And I realized at that point, it can happen, right?
You have these funds, these petty funds, it's $2.50 to get on a train at the time. And if it's
worth $5 to help someone get to the doctor, why can't we do that? We throw away money on things that have no use all the time. So if you can take $5,
allocate $5 to give to someone to get to the doctor, that is such a great accomplishment.
Keisha, once you started working at the Purple Clinic, what are some of the things you noticed
about the needs of the
people who came there and what did you do to help them? Sometimes in the winter, I would notice that
patients were coming in without jackets, didn't have socks on. It would be 32 degrees outside
and they didn't have socks. Sometimes they were hungry and they had to take labs and didn't have
anything to eat prior. So we designed where we got a donation closet and I would ask staff,
do you have anything that you're not using or you want to donate to our closet? And then
it just caught on. We got socks donation. We got toiletry donations.
We got all these things from staff members and from clinics and hospitals. They were doing drives
for coats for Purple Clinic. We started having a separate room where we could keep the children
if the moms had to have like an
examination or something. And hearing all these things that you're saying, Keisha, I just can't
help wondering, the medical system traditionally doesn't think that this is their responsibility,
right? Like doctors are supposed to provide a clinical diagnosis. They're supposed to treat your medical condition, but they're not necessarily looking to see whether you have good shoes or not.
And so, Anita, what is it that you realize sort of turning this traditional idea on its head?
What do doctors really need to be thinking about. When we think about what good we're doing,
if you work in a system long enough, you start to realize that what you thought was having impact
was only making yourself feel better and maybe not the patient that you're working with. And
so, so often, right? Like in primary care, we're taught to manage diabetes and hypertension,
but what good is it if I'm going to tell you, oh yes, diet and exercise. If you don't feel safe
walking around in your neighborhood, if you don't have shoes for it. And then later you come back
telling me that you have chronic back pain. And I'm like, oh yes, it's because you have bad shoes
and maybe you should see a podiatrist, but you can't even get access to physical therapy or
a specialist, that kind of thing. So you kind of create more
problems and more interactions with the system, the less you understand the root cause of what
someone is telling you about and where you fall into that cycle of their health. You have to be
so conscious of it. A lot of what you're describing points towards the importance of considering a patient's financial situation.
How do poverty, health, and trauma all taken together impact a patient?
So there's this concept, right, called the health poverty trap. And we see it in practice all the
time. I'm sure any physician who has worked in a community health center, a federally qualified health center, the VA, and in correctional settings, we see it where, again, for a variety of reasons, people
may have poor health, but they may also not have access to health care, which means they may not
have insurance, they may not have documentation status, but that makes it hard for them to get
employment or to get a job or to keep a job, which might benefit
their access to care. So now they can't get a job or they lost their job because of health.
And so now they have even less access to healthcare and it becomes this vicious cycle.
And I think when we think about the health poverty trap, I think about it in terms of
survivors too, because we always talk about violence as a
cycle of violence and disrupting the cycle of violence.
And it becomes, you know, it doesn't just impact an individual, it's intergenerational.
It will impact their children.
I think about when I see someone and I'm like, oh, the guideline says they should get a pap
smear.
The pap smear costs $30.
To me, that seems like a best practice and a guideline, but that $30, my patient may have a higher chance of declaring bankruptcy than she does of getting cervical cancer. She's received a bill for $30. She can't pay it. She might be in
an abusive relationship or she might be trafficked. So she ends up back in that cycle. And now her
kids are affected because they can't get what they need, whether it's for school or for housing or
other things. She has to find a way to pay off the bill. She may never come back or she has to
compromise her health in other ways in order to get the money to pay for this pap smear.
We can't just be fixing one half of that system. I need to understand all parts compromise her health in other ways in order to get the money to pay for this pap smear.
We can't just be fixing one half of that system. I need to understand all parts in order to make sure I'm not inadvertently harming someone by what I believe to be a best practice in one domain.
Mm-hmm. And with everything that you were doing at the Purple Clinic, you still had patients
needing to pay sometimes for services, like you said,
$30 for a pap smear. Yeah. So what I started doing is I became very good friends with our,
with the pharmacist. I feel like too many people probably had access to my Discover Card number
because it was crazy, right? Like we, even on a sliding scale, people could not pay $1.99 copay.
So they would come and say to me, you know, yeah, I didn't fill this hypertension med.
Yeah, I didn't fill this, you know, yeast infection medication because there was a copay.
I couldn't afford it.
Or they'd tell me about a favor that the pharmacist pulled that they took money out of their tip jar and they used that to cover the dollar.
And so that is so, again, unacceptable. I think when we think
about grand scale of sliding fees, and of course, people can afford $1.99. We don't think about,
we don't understand ultra poverty, I think. And I think ultra poverty hits a lot with people who
have experiences of violence and trauma. There's evidence-based medicine, but then there's
practice-based evidence. And that's how I think about saving receipts and thinking that one day
you can show like, hey, there's a need for these things. And if we can fund them, it will be a
normalized part of care. And then we can focus on the stuff that we need to as doctors and physicians and healthcare systems. And what about just the element of listening to a patient coming in,
like really just trying to understand what's going on.
And Keisha, you sort of alluded to this, like, you know,
when you met Anita, you, you were in a dire situation.
You really needed care,
but you also really needed somebody who would listen to what was going on for you, for your body in your specific case.
I appreciated that she was aware.
She listened to me as well as looked at signals, you know.
If someone comes in and they're hungry, they're not going to say they're hungry, you know.
So you taking the initiative to say, because a lot has to do with pride, especially when it's someone who is resilient, right? And if you can offer a Quaker oat bar,
you know, it's like, that's something simple. You're helping someone not be hungry. You know,
if you're hungry, you can't focus. You can't express the things that you need to express.
You can't talk about what you need to talk about. So now it's going to turn into a mental health session because you're going around in circles.
People will come in and they can't tell you why they're coming in because they can't think
straight. And this is things that I've bumped into numerous times where I'm sitting there for
three hours and I don't know why the patient is here because they can't express to me what's actually happening or what's going on.
So we as practitioners, we have to.
We have to go above and beyond and initiate this, like, do you want something to drink?
Do you want something? Do you need something to eat?
You're going to have to do labs.
You want to get something to eat. You're going to have to do labs. You want to get something to hydrate. You know, if you give that initiative, they'll be more appealed to accept.
And so the Purple Clinic, which you started, Anita, that was a pilot and you're now working
on something new, which is the Purple Health Foundation. I think one of the coolest things about Purple Health
Foundation is I'm not the founder. I am the co-founder. And I think co-anything is just,
is so exciting. So I took a lot of lessons learned from running, you know, and designing Purple
Clinic for four years. But I also, I always call it like I got to meet this
team of superhero women. So I felt like, I don't know, almost like Professor X and X-Men. Like I
went around and found like, you know, five women who all had these like special gifts. And we came
together to design something that we believe in. And so it's, you know, it's two other family
physicians, a social worker who just like she, Jessica, she just went out of her way whenever she would send patients to Purple Clinic.
And so you can tell those people, you can learn from your patients who it is they trust and who it is that sees what they need from like a whole view.
And same for Tarina, for Keisha, Rebecca, Harika, like, you know, the six of us, we want something different from the healthcare system. We want a
new normal. I think all of us very firmly believe that survivors have the answers to a lot of the
issues that we face, whether it's racism, violence, poverty, all of those things.
So that's why when we designed Purple Health Foundation, we named it. In a key part
of our mission, it's to improve the health of our communities by investing in the physical,
mental, and financial health of women and girls who've experienced gender-based violence. Because
you can't pretend that our normal systems already do that. And we need to pointedly invest in those
things so that everyone thrives. Can you talk a little bit about how you're financing the Purple Foundation?
When we designed it, we, again, wanted a system that we could design that we could take scalable
best practices in healthcare delivery. And so a big part of that, and many of us having been in
the system in a long time, is honestly the restrictions that come with documentation and what we can and can't prescribe because of insurance.
And so we looked into it and we decided that we were going to be a healthcare organization that was not going to be using insurance as a way for reimbursement for this clinic model. So we piloted a system where we got funding,
$1 million in funding over three years to work on getting our clinic off the ground to demonstrate
the model of care that we want to do that will be largely funded by other avenues so that we
have the flexibility of having longer appointments. So it's largely from grants. And then we also do
trainings. We want to disseminate a new culture of care. So it's been amazing. We have been invited
to give talks on trauma-informed care, on implicit bias, on so many things that are resonating so
much with the healthcare system right now and beyond. And that has become an important way for us to be able to fund the work of the
medical practice as well. Anita, one quick thing on my mind is that people probably ask you how
you can scale this up. And, you know, most primary care physicians spend maybe 15, 20 minutes with their patients and you spend a lot more time with your patients.
So how can the model of care that you think should be provided be scaled up?
There's so many best practices in communication that we can deploy no matter what a visit length is, right? Or no matter who
is running the system that we work in. And so simple things like the language that we use,
you know, sometimes people would be like, oh, your veins are so difficult to find when we do
a blood draw. And sometimes when people have histories of substance use or other things,
like that is unintentionally shaming people or making people feel less
comfortable with their existence and with their body. And so again, that doesn't take time to
change how we talk about things. Or people would say, you know, if we have two blood pressure cuffs
available, because sometimes, you know, if the blood pressure cuff is too small, the comment
will be like, this is too small for your arm, let me get a bigger one. And again, there's so much interlap with trauma and disordered eating and body image issues and other things. And
for a simple thing like a vital sign, you're inadvertently causing trauma when you don't need
to. So these are things where we can have these in place. So regardless of what patient we see,
we can just be like, oh, wait, this didn't work. Let me just try this other cuff
and great. And Keisha, you've helped to design Purple Health Foundation and the medical practice.
Can you talk a little bit about some of the things that you felt we really have to do this so that
we can make sure that we reach people? I'll probably share a personal experience. So talking about the intergenerational
poverty trap and how it affects us, when I met Anita in 2015, my daughter was just
graduating high school and she was on her way to college. and I had absolutely no idea how we were going to do this,
but I knew that I wanted better for her. We knew that we wanted better.
And through the Purple Model of Care and all the initiatives that the Purple Clinic had,
it helped me to get back into school. We were both going to school at the same time. And these things are from the Purple Pilot, right? So I was receiving mental health care services to help like clean out my closet. It was. And we've come to the close of the Purple Clinic and we're starting the Purple Health Foundation.
And right now she will be graduating as a social worker in two weeks. So it's that cycle.
Congratulations.
And the proof is in the pudding. Like it just works. You know, when you have support in all these other areas, everything comes to fruition. Right. And it's happening live and direct. So we have to build a system that can support people to become their best. And I think that that is what Purple Health Foundation is all about.
And that's what we're striving to do.
Thank you both so much for joining me today.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for having us.
The Dose is hosted by me, Shanwar Sirvai.
I produced this show for the Commonwealth Fund,
along with Andrea Muraskin, Naomi Leibovitz, and Joshua Tallman.
Special thanks to Barry Scholl for editorial support,
Jen Wilson and Rose Wong for our art and design,
and Paul Frame for web support.
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