色香视频鈥檚 College of Osteopathic Medicine Dean Jane Carreiro interviewed by WGAN
Jane Carreiro, D.O., vice president of Health Affairs and dean of the College of Osteopathic Medicine, was the guest for the April 25 edition of the WGAN podcast 鈥淚nside Maine.鈥 Interviewed by host Marty Grohman, Carreiro discussed several aspects of health care within the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, including changes in clinical training, the importance of health care teams, and the psychological stress felt by providers.
Carreiro began the interview by informing 鈥淚nside Maine鈥 listeners about the broad array of health professions programs offered at the University of New England, mentioning not only the medical school but the nursing, physician assistant, occupational therapy, and physical therapy programs, as well as the colleges of pharmacy and dental medicine. She discussed the disruption that the pandemic has caused to students in all of the health care professions, noting that more advanced students have seen a curtailment of clinical experiences that is only just now beginning to abate on a regional basis.
She also emphasized that one of the most critical aspects of training at 色香视频 is its focus on working collaboratively across the health care fields. 鈥淭he whole flavor of the institution is teamwork 鈥 having the students working together and getting comfortable with what each other brings to the team,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the reality of health care. Even in rural settings you have a team. You always have a team because health care is just that complicated.鈥
Carreiro noted that the coronavirus outbreak has made people more aware of the importance of team-based health care. 鈥淚 think this COVID pandemic has really brought [the concept of health care teams] to the consciousness of the public,鈥 she stated. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing now is really a spotlight on this idea of teams and that so many of the things that we do in health care are shared 鈥 and the fact that if you can find a team of practitioners that can work together and be respectful and move something forward, it鈥檚 like any other team 鈥 like a baseball team or a football team; they鈥檙e going to be much more effective. Everyone has a role, but they also know how those roles interact. And that鈥檚 something that probably, from the outside of health care, people aren鈥檛 always aware of.鈥
Additionally, Carreiro discussed the psychological impact of the pandemic on those in the health care field, noting that the threat of exposure is nearly constant for health care workers and causes immense worry not only about their own safety but the wellbeing of their families. 鈥淎s a physician, as a nurse, a PA, you鈥檙e always in this situation, but what鈥檚 happening now is that it鈥檚 just so pervasive. It鈥檚 not one patient once in a while. It鈥檚 over and over again, so the exposure has increased significantly, and now you鈥檙e going home and you鈥檙e taking it to your family. And that鈥檚 where it gets really scary, I think, for a lot of people. It鈥檚 yourself, but it鈥檚 also your family,鈥 she said.
She also acknowledged the toll that these realizations take on health professions students. 鈥淭he psychological stress of this is something that is going to be with us for a long time,鈥 Carreiro stated. 鈥淚 see it in the students and trainees in ways that I hadn鈥檛 before.鈥 She explained that while medical students do not usually even begin to consider the effects of exposure to sick people until they are in the advanced stages of their training, the COVID pandemic has created a situation in which students who have not even yet begun clinical work are concerned that their choice of profession could have negative health impacts on themselves and their loved ones. 鈥淣ormally, students and trainees don鈥檛 even start thinking about this until they get into residency and they鈥檙e really exposed to it. But now we have first-year students who 鈥 now are already thinking about this,鈥 she shared.
When asked what her message would be to those who are planning on going into the health professions, Carreiro said bluntly, 鈥淲e need you. The health care system needs you,鈥 adding that being a health care provider is a vocation -- not a job.鈥