AZ REACH program passes 3,000 patient transfers mark

Sept. 4, 2023
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Photo of a group of two men and one woman standing in front of a sign that says Hopi Health Care Center.

In its first eight months of operation, the Arizona Resource Equity and Access Coordination Hub completed more than 3,000 patient transfers, dramatically improving access to care for hospitalized Arizonans and easing the administrative burden on providers, particularly in rural areas.

The Arizona Poison and Drug Information Center at the R. Ken Coit College of Pharmacy partnered with the Arizona Department of Health Services and Blackbox Healthcare Solutions in December 2022 to launch AZ REACH, a statewide program aimed at enhancing equitable access to care for rural communities. The program has helped improve health care access for tens of thousands of Arizona patients.

AZ REACH was born out of the transformative experiences of the Arizona Surge Line, a centralized transfer center that played a pivotal role in load-leveling hospitals and facilitating patient transfers during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 85% of transfer requests received during the pandemic originated from Rural Indian Health Services, Tribally Operated PL-638 and Critical Access Hospitals. To address this glaring disparity in access to care for rural Arizonans, state and federal grants were used to create AZ REACH. 

"It cannot be overstated how crucial the Arizona Surge Line was in getting patients access to the lifesaving care they needed," said principal investigator Steven Dudley, PharmD, DABAT, director of the Arizona Poison and Drug Information Center. "These hospitals made it clear how desperately needed this was for all conditions, not just COVID. Thus, AZ REACH was born."

The impact of AZ REACH is evident. Hospitals are experiencing improved patient transfers, allowing clinicians to concentrate on delivering essential care at the bedside rather than dealing with administrative tasks, which are now efficiently managed by dedicated AZ REACH personnel.

AZ REACH provides a strong framework for swift activation during hospital admission surges caused by events like mass casualty incidents, seasonal increases or potential future pandemics. This was demonstrated when AZ REACH effectively responded to the surge in pediatric hospitalizations during the previous respiratory syncytial and influenza season, assisting providers and patients regardless of the hospital they came from.

AZ REACH tracks numerous metrics such as patient demographics, required medical specialties, care levels and total transfer times. This provides a deeper understanding of the status of Arizona's health care system for county and state health departments and enables the early detection of brewing surges in hospitalizations. It also simplifies some of the daunting complexities of health care coordination that lead to worse patient outcomes.

The program embodies the commitment of Arizona's clinical medicine and public health communities to the concept of equity. It strives to ensure swift and equitable access to care for vulnerable populations and hospitals, embodying the true essence of compassion in health care.

“In underserved communities, health care provider shortages exacerbate the existing disparities,” said Charley Larsen, MSN-L, MBA, RN, NE-BC, chief nursing officer of Blackbox Healthcare Solutions and executive lead for AZ REACH. “Our program strives to ease administrative burdens on emergency care providers, granting them greater time and focus at the bedside to care for those in need.”

This work was supported by the Arizona Department of Health Services under award no. CTR0061468.