Urgent Practice Data Survey – August Medicaid Transformation Focus

August Survey Refresh!
Medicaid Transformation Questions Included

Your practice response is needed!

NCMGMA, NCMS, and Curi continue working together to gather essential practice information from administrators and clinicians across North Carolina relative to the current COVID crisis.

We know this is a stressful and uncertain time, but by taking less than 5 minutes to complete this survey, you are allowing us to better respond to and represent your needs from COVID to new protocols, telehealth issues, and now Medicaid Transformation. Please click the link above to take this short survey.

Thank you for your time and for your commitment to your communities. We’re in this together and are proud to support you and all North Carolinas in your practice through this tumultuous season.

Your Colleagues at NCMGMA, NCMS, and Curi


Please click on the links below to access our other Urgent Practice Data Survey Summary and Data Trends reporting:

COVID-19 Vaccine Summary Report – Week of March 15th
COVID-19 Vaccine Summary Report – Week of January 18th
2020 UPDS Summary Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – Sixteen Week Summary Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – Practice Well-being Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – Reopening NC Healthcare Practice Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – Telehealth Data Summary Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – NC Practice Financial Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – Summary Report
Urgent Practice Data Survey – Trends Report
COVID-19 Practice Protocols Report

Recording: August 26th Lunch & Learn Webinar

August Lunch & Learn Webinar Recording
Second-Order Threats: Preparing for the Downstream

Effects & Risks of COVID-19

On Thursday, August 26th, Donna H. Nicholson, MBA, BSN, RN, CPCO, Senior Vice President of Risk Management at Curi, addressed the second-order impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the importance of beginning to prepare to mitigate the downstream effects of the global crisis while taking the necessary steps to ensure the continued success of our practices.

Thank you to Donna Nicholson and to all of our webinar participants. Also, a big thank you to Curi for sponsoring this webinar.

Please click on the blue button link below to access the webinar recording. The passcode is F#JVEx7N. You can access a PDF copy of the webinar handouts here.

Questions

For questions, please contact the NCMGMA offices at info@ncmgm.org.

Message from 2020-21 NCMGMA President Amanda McKinney

General Information | Schedule of Events | Accommodations | Registration

Message from the President

I want to take a moment to personally thank our NCMGMA members. Most of us have felt the effects as our state’s healthcare industry has struggled through this pandemic, and I know some practices, companies, and managers are still facing enormous challenges as we continue to push forward. If there is a positive that has come from this most challenging season, it is that our North Carolina healthcare community is unquestionably strong.

As an association, NCMGMA has worked diligently to continue to keep up the support and resources needed through various channels, as we were unable to meet in person. Through the listserv, state-hosted webinars, surveys, advocacy-efforts, and locally hosted educational events and opportunities, we have done a phenomenal job remaining relevant to practices and our industry partners through this pandemic.

Today, many of us can see the light at the end of the COVID tunnel. With an extraordinary effort towards vaccinations in our local communities and across the state, we have begun to cautiously evaluate opportunities for engagement beyond our virtual learning avenues. Our community has offered so much to many of us this year via the wonder of technology, but I know we are eager to have sidebar chats and meet new people outside of the confines of a small box on our laptop screens.

I am proud to say NCMGMA will be meeting, in-person, this May for our Annual Conference, one of the first healthcare associations in NC to do so. I am grateful to our staff, committee, and industry partners for the support and commitment to ensuring the safety of our members. For many of us, attending an in-person meeting will be incredibly helpful to our work within the healthcare domain. Our continued focus on NCMGMA’s main pillars of networking, education and advocacy is critical.

For those of you who are able and willing, I encourage you to make the investment of time and resources to attend this meeting. The content is strong, the location is fabulous, and I am comforted by the commitment of so many to our safety. For those who simply cannot make it in May, we understand and are hoping to welcome you this October in Asheville for our Fall Conference.

I am looking forward to seeing many of you in just a few weeks in Myrtle Beach. I appreciate our NCMGMA community members who have already stepped forward to attend and look forward to celebrating the resilience and success of our industry together!

Amanda McKinney, MBA
NCMGMA 2020-2021 President

Urgent Practice Data Survey: March COVID-19 Vaccine Survey Results

Results of Practice Survey on COVID-19 Vaccine

NCMGMA, NCMS and Curi continue working together to gather essential practice information from administrators and clinicians across North Carolina relative to the current COVID-19 crisis. The week of March 15, 2021, our practice survey included questions on the COVID-19 vaccination process. The following is a summary of those results.

We will continue to send the survey to identify trends among North Carolina practices as the state continues to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and its various impacts.

Please follow the button link to view our March Vaccine Summary report.

About the Urgent Practice Data Survey
The information and data collected has been compiled and used anonymously to better understand the most acute and immediate needs and to establish any trends to inform our policymakers on behalf of the physicians, PAs, practice administrators and the patients of North Carolina. Thank you to all of our members and practices who have contributed to these report-out results.

March 12th Panel Discussion: On the Front Lines of a Vaccine Clinic

Friday, March 12, 2021
12:00 PM EST | Zoom Meeting

NCMGMA’s Advocacy Committee presents a 30-minute panel discussion with three of our fellow NCMGMA Administrators as they share their practice’s path through the COVID-19 vaccination application and distribution. Hear how they’re managing clinics, physicians, staff, and patients, and ask your own questions. Register today for this complimentary NCMGMA virtual event.

Webinar Speakers & Moderator

Matt Johnson, MA, MBA
Chief Administrative Officer
Wake Internal Medicine Consult.
Raleigh, NC

Melissa White
Practice Administrator
Newton Family Physicians, P.A.
Newton, NC

Jacob Rodman, CMPE
Chief Executive Officer
Raleigh Neurosurgical Clinic
Raleigh, NC

Registration

There’s no cost to register for this Zoom webinar event. To register, follow the “Register Online Today” link at the button below. Once you have registered, you will receive a confirmation email with complete event details.

Questions

For questions or more information please contact the NC Medical Society offices at ncmsfoundation@ncmedsoc.org.

Logistics Behind a Mass COVID-19 Vaccination Clinic

Originally published in the March 3, 2021, issue of the North Carolina Medical Society’s Morning Rounds. Reprinted with permission from the North Carolina Medical Society

Last Friday, several NCMS staff members joined a group from the eastern chapter of the NC Medical Group Management Association (NCMGMA) to tour Vidant Health’s COVID-19 mass vaccination clinic being held at the Greenville Convention Center. As vaccine supply becomes more plentiful and smaller practices may begin administering them, gleaning lessons on logistics from those who have already set up vaccination clinics could be useful.

As he led the tour through the convention center’s clearly defined registration, vaccination and observation areas, Anthony Bartholomew, vice president of operations for Vidant Medical Group, shared his insights on setting up the mass vaccination clinic. The site has the capacity to administer 3,000 vaccines daily. Since it opened on Jan. 25 through last Friday, Feb. 26 approximately 41,000 vaccines had been given.

“We’ve never set anything up of this magnitude. It was just a lot of rapid planning,” he said, adding that a key to success is “being willing to change if you notice something that isn’t working. With the few days we had to plan it we did the best that we could and I think we did a great job. We really have fine-tuned this over the past five weeks to get it where it is today.”

Scheduling Appointments

Together Vidant and the Pitt County Health Department websites are set up to take appointments for vaccination. To reach the broader community, workers have gone out to underserved areas and, in collaboration with faith-based organizations, have used tablets to help people make online appointments on the spot.

“All scheduling is done online. We try to maximize the use of technology,” Bartholomew said. “We apply various marketing techniques with that technology and go to various churches and various neighborhoods with tablets to schedule. We found that’s better than taking phone calls or having people turn in lists. We had to learn that lesson the hard way.”

Joyful, Helpful, Safe and Efficient

The public relations and marketing staff at Vidant created a strong framework for the experience they want people to have when they arrive at the Convention Center. No lines and every encounter should be ‘joyful, helpful, safe and efficient.’ Volunteers in bright orange t-shirts with ‘Dose of Hope’ emblazoned on the back greet people at the door with hand sanitizer, a free face mask, if necessary, and a welcoming smile. Volunteers, including National Guardsmen directing traffic and parking, are available to help throughout the process. The atmosphere is almost festive as individuals are guided to one of 26 registration tables set up in the first section.

The basic registration information is initially entered in Epic rather than the state’s COVID-19 Vaccine Management System (CVMS) to expedite the process.

“We decided to take the CVMS off the front to save time. We have another room off in the back where we have 15 to 20 people who are getting reports [from the registration area] that give them enough information to go into the CVMS database and register the patient and put in the shot information,” Bartholomew said, adding that they are working on a technical interface between Epic and the CVMS to streamline the process further.

An individual receiving their first vaccine dose may spend 4 to 6 minutes at the registration area. Second doses take less time. Interpreters – either in-person or online – are available for those who need them. The total vaccination experience from start to finish takes about 30 minutes on average, Bartholomew said.

The clinic does second doses on Monday through Wednesday, and first doses the rest of the week and weekend.

“That cycle seems to go ok,” Bartholomew said. “On second dose days, people really fly through here.”

Vaccination, Observation + Selfies and Cookies

After receiving the vaccine in the vaccination section, individuals move to the observation area where about 210 chairs are set up, physically distanced, in 30-minute and 15-minute observation sections. Appointments for the second dose of vaccine are made at this point. EMS personal always are standing by in case there is a reaction that needs a rapid response.

Lending to the overall festive atmosphere, local bands and musicians have come by to entertain those waiting. “Sometimes it’s hard to get our patients out of here,” Bartholomew said.

As patients do exit, volunteers cheer and guide them to a selfie station and to refreshments to complete the COVID-19 vaccine experience.

For the legions of volunteers and Vidant and county health department staff working this clinic, there is an on-site pharmacy, human resources department personnel, an electronic time clock on site and a break room fully stocked with snacks.

As Bartholomew said: “We want this to be a good experience for everybody.”

March 12th Panel Discussion: On the Front Lines of a Vaccine Clinic

Friday, March 12, 2021
12:00 PM EST | Zoom Meeting

NCMGMA’s Advocacy Committee presents a 30-minute panel discussion with three of our fellow NCMGMA Administrators as they share their practice’s path through the COVID-19 vaccination application and distribution. Hear how they’re managing clinics, physicians, staff, and patients, and ask your own questions. Register today for this complimentary NCMGMA virtual event.

Webinar Speakers & Moderator

Matt Johnson, MA, MBA
Chief Administrative Officer
Wake Internal Medicine Consult.
Raleigh, NC

Melissa White
Practice Administrator
Newton Family Physicians, P.A.
Newton, NC

Jacob Rodman, CMPE
Chief Executive Officer
Raleigh Neurosurgical Clinic
Raleigh, NC

Registration

There’s no cost to register for this Zoom webinar event. To register, follow the “Register Online Today” link at the button below. Once you have registered, you will receive a confirmation email with complete event details.

Questions

For questions or more information please contact the NC Medical Society offices at ncmsfoundation@ncmedsoc.org.

Urgent Practice Data Survey: Practice Survey on COVID-19 Vaccine Results

Results of Practice Survey on COVID-19 Vaccine

The January 18th Urgent Practice Data Survey – regularly sent by the North Carolina Medical Society (NCMS), the North Carolina Medical Group Management Association (NCMGMA) and Curi since last March – included questions about the COVID-19 vaccine. The results have been compiled into a graphic summary, which reveals some interesting insights into the response of medical practices and staff in the initial stages of the vaccine rollout.

We will continue to send the survey to identify trends among North Carolina practices as the state continues to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and its various impacts.

Please follow the button link to view our Vaccine Summary report.

About the Urgent Practice Data Survey
The information and data collected has been compiled and used anonymously to better understand the most acute and immediate needs and to establish any trends to inform our policymakers on behalf of the physicians, PAs, practice administrators and the patients of North Carolina. Thank you to all of our members and practices who have contributed to these report-out results.

February 16th NCMGMA-NCMSF Webinar: Recovering and Building Financial Resiliency in the Wake of COVID

Recovering and Building Financial Resiliency
in the Wake of COVID

February 16, 2021 | 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM EST

Program

Join us as we discuss practice finances in the wake of the current Covid-19 Pandemic. Hear from rural medical business owner Dr. Karen Smith along with the practice’s Population Health Administrator, Michaela Latham, as they review the financial lessons learned through the Pandemic and how building financial resiliency is key to practice stability. We will discuss the practical aspects of recovering from the costly impacts of Covid, and what is being done to build up their practice resiliency for a stronger, more stable future.

Our Speakers

Karen L. Smith, MD, FAAFP
Owner/Physician
Karen L. Smith MD, PA

Karen L. Smith, MD, FAAFP, is a graduate of Hahnemann University School of Medicine. She trained at the National Congress of Family Physician Residents, North Carolina Academy of Family Physicians, Duke University, Cape Fear Valley Medical Center, and Fellow American Academy of Family Physicians.

Dr. Smith has been practicing since 1992, with a private practice in Raeford, North Carolina, since 2003. Dr. Smith’s practice specializes in family medicine.

Michaela Latham, MPH
Population Health Administrator
Karen L. Smith, MD, PA.

Michaela Latham, MPH, currently serves as the Population Health Administrator for Karen L. Smith, MD, PA. In addition to managing and coordinating quality improvement initiatives/ projects for Dr. Smith’s practice, Michaela also manages the Chronic Care Management (CCM) program and serves the practice as a part of the leadership and management team. Michaela attended East Carolina University where she received her Bachelor of Science in Public Health Studies with a concentration in Pre Health professions. Following the completion of her undergraduate studies, Michaela earned her Master of Public Health from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Michaela has worked collaboratively with her team at Karen L. Smith, MD, PA, and the patient population they serve since 2017.

Registration

This webinar is free but you must be registered to attend. Space is limited so register early! After you register, you will receive an emailed confirmation and an email reminder with Zoom login instructions.

Questions

For questions or more information please contact the NC Medical Society offices at ncmsfoundation@ncmedsoc.org.

Urgent Practice Data Survey 2020 Summary Report

On March 29th, NCMGMA, NCMS and Curi started distributing the same set of questions to a collective e-distribution list on a weekly basis. The goal: to garner a snapshot of North Carolina’s healthcare practices as we moved through the coronavirus pandemic.

The graphs and charts offer a 2020 snapshot of the financial concerns, staffing issues, access to PPE, use of telehealth and other ongoing challenges you face.

Thank you to everyone who routinely completed — and who continues to complete — the survey as we carry on with collecting this valuable data at regular intervals. All three organizations have used the information to develop resources to help you and to advocate on your behalf with policymakers.

Please follow the button link to view our 2020 data summary report.

A Note About the Urgent Practice Data Survey
The information and data collected has been compiled and used anonymously to better understand the most acute and immediate needs and to establish any trends to inform our policymakers on behalf of the physicians, PAs, practice administrators and the patients of North Carolina. Thank you to all of our members and practices who have contributed to these report-out results.