In this interview we’ll be speaking with Dr. Shreya Kangovi about Community Health Workers. Community Health Workers are individuals who have been hired from their community, and given training and support to provide customized, culturally sensitive, non-clinical care. Their focus is on the social determinants of health – at the individual level, and delivered in a highly personalized and relationally oriented way. To my mind, this workforce and approach to care is one of the most untapped opportunities we have to reframe healthcare and create transformative change. It addresses the overwhelming impact that the Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) have on healthcare outcomes, utilization, costs and the experience of care. The issues of SDOH, chronic disease and disparities of care have been some of the fundamental problems in our healthcare system – problems the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed and exacerbated. One of the solutions to our present moment and to a better future is the focus of today’s discussion.
Dr. Kangovi and her colleagues have pioneered a rigorous, evidence-based approach to building, deploying and measuring the impact of a Community Health Worker (CHW) program. Dr. Kangovi is the founder & executive director of the Penn Center for Community Health Workers – a national center of excellence dedicated to advancing health in low-income populations through CHW programs. She and her colleagues have spent nearly a decade creating and refining a world-class CHW model called IMPaCT™ (Individualized Management towards Patient-Centered Targets). Now, they are offering this program to other institutions to encourage widespread deployment.