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Copernican Clinical Services: Coronavirus-COVID-19 Plan of Action

3/9/2020

1 Comment

 
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David A. Perna, PhD
Licensed Psychologist
Lecturer in Psychology
Department of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School

View my profile on LinkedIn

"We will be here to support you as these events unfold"
"The overriding goal of this letter is to promote hygiene and not to increase anxiety"
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CDC: "Face-masks should be worn by health professionals who have direct contact with patients" 
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"The CDC has asked that people attempt to “socially distance” themselves from others to help decrease transmission."
"We are supportive of all of our Asian and Asian-American 
​colleagues, patients, and their families who are dealing with this issue. 
."

Copernican Clinical Services:
Coronavirus-COVID-19
​Plan of Action


To Our Patients
​and Their Families,

 
In my role as the president of Copernican Clinical Services, I wanted to help clarify how my staff and I are responding as a behavioral health company to the Coronavirus concerns that have recently arisen throughout the world and more recently in our home state. 
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On the whole, we will continue to provide timely and targeted support for all of our patients and their families in any way possible to help decrease anxiety or other mental health concerns related to this public health event. We will be here to support you as these events unfold. Please be aware that only an extremely small segment of the US population will have a serious impact from the virus. Many of our patients are considered to be at very low risk for a serious impact.
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Feel free to contact me directly if you have any questions about how your specific treater or any of our staff can help you through these challenging times. Our procedures are based upon Massachusetts public health procedures and federal guidelines that are distributed via the Centers for Disease Control. The overriding goal of this letter is to promote hygiene and not to increase anxiety. You can refer to the links listed at the end of this post for additional information.
 
Practical health behaviors that we have implemented to minimize transmission:
  • We have purchased touchless Purell dispensers that are placed at the entrances to both of our facilities. Please use these dispensers when you arrive for a session and when you leave a session. We hope to be able to purchase more supplies over time.
  • We have installed touchless paper towel dispensers in all of our bathrooms.
  • We have placed spray bottles of disinfectant in each bathroom which you may use as you see fit to maintain a hygienic environment for you and/or your child.
  • We ask that you accompany younger children to the bathroom to be sure that they are using proper hygiene to minimize any transmission concerns.
  • Please consider washing your hands before and after you use the bathroom. Washing beforehand will decrease the likelihood of self-infection as you use the bathroom.
  • Please let your clinician know immediately if we are out of any items such as paper towels, Purell, or disinfectant.
  • Please let your clinician open and close the door to their office before and after your session.
  • Face-masks: The CDC has clarified that face masks should be worn at all times.
 
Informing us of Risk Factors:
  • If you think that you have been exposed to someone who has had the Coronavirus, we ask that you seek medical attention and ask that you to contact your clinician via phone/email, rather than in person, and develop a plan with your clinician to address your health and mental health issues.
  • If you think that you or your child has been exposed, then we do not want you to present in person at our facility. This request is in line with CDC guidelines to minimize transmission in health-related facilities.
  • If you or your child has been exposed, please note, we will continue to support you without question via phone/telehealth sessions, whether these sessions are covered by your insurance or not (details are provided below).  Our goal is to help minimize exposure within our communities.
 
At the onset of each session:
  • Session Check-ins: CDC guidelines have been set for health providers to take an active role in asking about patient risks for recent exposure. Your clinician will ask you at the onset of each session if there are any recent concerns surrounding your health and/or the health of your family that have increased your risk of exposure to or transmission of the virus. They will also check-in with you on your anxiety level related to this event with regard to your physical and/or mental health.
 
  • Work/Financial Concerns: We also understand that many patients are concerned about their ability to address financial stress related to their job, business, or to recent swings in the global financial markets. Please feel free to speak with your clinician about these issues, while they are unable to provide you with financial counseling, they can help you manage these stressors and put together a plan to help decrease your anxieties about your finances. We believe that these work/financial issues will tax the energy of our adult patients even more so than the health implications of this crisis and as such are prepared to have a conversation with you on this topic.
Isolation Stress:
  • Social Distancing:
    • The CDC has asked that people attempt to “socially distance” themselves from others to help decrease transmission. These measures are temporary and will fade as the health scare passes. Examples of social distancing would include:
      • Staying 6-feet away from others if possible
      • Avoiding larger gatherings if possible
      • Avoiding common social formalities such as handshakes/kisses/hugs during the crisis.
    • ​Racial/Ethnic Profiling: Please be aware that the CDC has been clear that this virus impacts everyone. Asian-Americans are at no higher risk than anyone else in the US. However, Americans who have travelled to high-risk regions are a major concern. The first high risk patients in Newton consisted of students from Newton who had studied in Italy for a week. Almost all of the other cases in Massachusetts were connected to high level executives who attended a global staff meeting at the Biogen Corporation.  We are supportive of all of our Asian and Asian-American colleagues, patients, and their families who are dealing with this issue. 
  • Self-Quarantines:
    • If you are informed by your physician to “self-quarantine,” you and your family will have minimal contact with others during this 14-day period. We understand that this intense level of home-based interaction may stress your family. We encourage you to speak with your clinician about ways to make this experience an opportunity to bond with your family in a healthy way. Your clinician can check in by phone or via a telehealth interaction on an as-needed basis during a self-quarantine. Please inform them of your needs directly. Under such circumstances, we would ask that you provide your clinician with a letter from your health provider to clarify that you are ready to return to face-to-face interactions in our facility.
 
  • Emergency/Urgent Contact: You can call our emergency phone line, (617)-244-2447, to reach your clinician if you do not feel that you receive a timely response via phone/email. Please be aware that our clinicians may be managing a variety of urgent/emergency calls during this period of time. We will definitely work together as a team to help support you.
 
Grief Support:
  • If you lose a family member, friend, or loved-one as a result of a Coronavirus-related health issue, we will provide you with emotional support and any other support possible to help you through your grief. We can also advise you on how to talk with your children about these events in a developmentally appropriate manner.  
 
What if your clinician becomes ill?
  • If your clinician becomes ill, we will expect them to simply follow their doctor’s medical advice. If that advice includes time off from work due to feeling ill, caring for a family member who is ill, being subjected to a self-quarantine, or any other disruption in their ability to meet with their patients, then they will provide you with a plan to address your specific treatment plan moving forward.
  • All of our information systems are cloud-based so your clinician can fully function with relevant clinical information relating to your case from any location where they find themselves, including their homes.
  • We have been clear in our most recent staff meeting that all Copernican Clinicians should make decisions that are in the best interests of their health and the overall health of their patients.
  • Cross Coverage: If needed, we can provide cross coverage with other staff members from our practice if your clinician is unavailable.
  • Telehealth Solutions: If your clinician is unable to be present for sessions in person, or if you are unable to be present for sessions due to health concerns, and are able to engage in an online telehealth session, then you can arrange a time to meet with your clinician virtually. Your clinician will email you a link that will allow you to meet with them virtually via a HIPAA protected telehealth interface. The interface is extremely simple to use.
  • Helping Others: If you have a friend or extended family member who becomes anxious about this public health event, please feel free to offer our supports if you deem it appropriate. Once again, if they are fearful of coming into our office, we can schedule a telehealth meeting with them remotely.  
 
I thank you for taking the time to review our concerns and response to this global health event. As is always the case, the support that we provide to each other and the manner by which we work together during these trying moments will help us define who we are in these times of uncertainty. My staff and I all look forward to passing the most critical test during these times, the test of our compassion for others during times of need. Be well and remain as healthy as possible.
 
 
Sincerely,
 
         Dr. Perna

          David A. Perna, PhD
          President, Copernican Clinical Services
          Lecturer in Psychology, Department of Psychiatry
          Harvard Medical School
 
Helpful Links:
 
How to prepare for Coronavirus in your:
  • Home:
    • https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/home/index.html
  • K-12 school settings:
    • https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/schools-childcare/index.html
  • College settings:
    • https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/colleges-universities.html
  • Faith-based organization/community events:
    • https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/organizations/index.html
 
 
American Psychological Association Podcast on Coronavirus and anxiety:
  • https://www.apa.org/research/action/speaking-of-psychology/coronavirus-anxiety
 
Bloomberg-How Quarantines Have Impacted Mental Health in China:
  • https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-02-27/coronavirus-quarantine-raises-mental-health-concerns-for-china
 
Psychiatric Times Article-Coronavirus and its Impact on Global Mental Health:
  • https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/psychiatrists-beware-impact-coronavirus-pandemics-mental-health
 


1 Comment

Asian Mental Health Concentration Launch-Thanh Phan

2/19/2020

 

Thanh Phan, MA, our Psychology Intern from William James College,  helps launch the Asian Mental Health Concentration


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David A. Perna, PhD
Licensed Psychologist
Lecturer in Psychology
Department of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School

View my profile on LinkedIn

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Thanh is so committed to her family and her family's traditions
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The Launch of the Asian Mental Health Concentration at William James featured Lion Dancers from the Boston Chinese Freemasons Athletic Club.
Dr. Vuky is an incredible mentor to Thanh and so many other students at William James
​
-Dr. Perna

​Asian 
​
Mental Health

Concentration Launch


Diversity
​Matters​

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Dr. Perna congratulating Thanh Phan on the launch of the Asian Mental Health Concentration at William James College

Thanh Phan, MA, our Psychology Intern, had asked me if Copernican Clinical Services (CCS) would help sponsor the launch of William James College's Asian Mental Health Concentration (AMHC). I told her that we would all be thrilled to do so. 

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CCS Staff Member, Jenifer Nesin, helps Quanzhou (Jack) Zhao, a Chinese calligraphy artist, display his beautifully crafted artwork at the launch celebration

CCS staff members-Caitlyn Chappell, LICSW, Jenifer Nesin, and Thanh's co-intern Alexis Chirban, MA, and I were present for the launch that celebrated the Lunar New Year at William James in conjunction with a large crowd of William James students, faculty, and extremely energetic supporters (Including Thanh's family).


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Faculty, students, and family members were enthusiastically engaged in the launch and the Lunar New Year celebration

Acculturation: 
Thanh is a thoughtful, hard working, sensitive trainee who has brought so much to our training program this past year. She is not only fluent in Vietnamese but is proficient in Mandarin.  She impressed us from the start. 

Thanh exudes a sense of purpose and meaning in all of her clinical activities as she is rooted in her experience of being a person who has moved through the acculturation process and is able to speak her truth in relating to so many other immigrants who are currently experiencing their own personal transition. Her dedication to her family's cultural heritage, her parents and younger brother, as well as the diverse needs of the various family's that she interacts with at CCS is evident in all of her systems work.

Thanh is a first-generation Vietnamese immigrant who was born in Vietnam. Her understanding of the diverse mental health needs of Boston's Asian immigrants and their unique experiences in Boston  allowed us to quickly identify her as a top candidate for our training program. Her multi-faceted background has provided staff members and trainees with a perspective of American culture and American mental health practices that is extremely rare to come by. As a result, she is sensitive to the needs of the many clients who are simply not well-treated by our various state and federal support programs. 

When Thanh interviewed with us she shared a story about how she accompanied a  previous client and her family to a local emergency room during a psychiatric crisis. She knew that she would be needed to help translate for the overwhelmed family. She simply rolled up her sleeves, jumped in, and did what was needed. True Grit! That's why we offered her a training slot and we have not been disappointed.


Mentoring: Thanh has been mentored by Dr. Catherine Vuky, PhD,  the Director of the Asian Mental Health Concentration at William James who is also a staff psychologist at The South Cove Community Health Center in Boston. Dr. Vuky and Thanh make a great duo. It is easy to see why Thanh has such a sense of hope for the future of the AMHC. That future burns so brightly in the eyes of Dr. Vuky every day and is only matched by her warm smile and sense of commitment to her work. I am glad to see that they both have so much energy. The road ahead is long-so the company you keep makes all the difference. ​

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Catherine Vuky, PhD

Please click on the following Links for more information:​​

South Cove Community Health Center: Boston, MA

William Jame College's Asian Mental Health Concentration Information Page: (Click here)

William James College's Blog Post regarding the launch of the Asian Mental Health Concentration: (Click here)



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