Page 10 - Healthcare Heroes 2022
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HEALTHCARE HEROES OF WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS
said. “I don’t think anyone thought we’d be dealing with a pandemic like we did in 1918, but here we are, 100 years later, dealing with a global pandemic that was devastating the world.
“Very early on, it was clear that this was devastating — our hospitals were overrun with COVID patients; our community was devastated. The Black and Brown communities in the city of Springfield probably got hit the hardest in terms of livelihood and being able to work, so we knew that staying home from some jobs simply wasn’t an option for some people. So it was all-consuming; I lived COVID-19 education every day, and I continue to do that.”
“I did not believe it was going to go on for two and half years — we’re still dealing with the pandemic today. Early on, we thought it might be a month or two, but it continues to be a pervasive virus that we’re dealing with.”
The seriousness of the virus was one issue, Caulton-Harris went on, adding that the degree of difficulty in coping with the situation was compounded by information from state and federal agencies that was often lacking, inconsistent, and at times quite confusing.
“In the early part of the pandemic, we were told that masks were not necessary, and then we were told we needed to mask up,” she recalled. “We did not have vaccines, so education and working with the public became critical. It was my lived public-health experience that enabled me to take on the pandemic. I did not believe it was going to go on for two and half years — we’re still dealing with the pandemic today. Early on, we thought it might be a month or two, but it continues to be a pervasive virus that we’re dealing with.”
As she noted, the COVID experience, if you will, has generated improvement in how those involved in matters of public health communicate, collaborate, and work together to serve the community.
As an example, she cited the work of a collective that came to be known as the ‘VAX FORCE.’
“This was a combination of physicians, community members, researchers ... there were 15 individuals who were appointed by
Mayor Sarno to be part of this VAX FORCE,” she recalled. “We met
to put strategies in place to be able to work with the public, and that manifested itself in vaccination clinics that we had in the North End, the South End, Mason Square, Indian Orchard, and other neighborhoods. We were very intentional about the fact that we had to meet people where they were, and we used all of the expertise of the individuals on the VAX FORCE to come up with a strategy to market and make sure we were hitting all the various communities that we needed to hit.
“That, to me, was a very important strategy, and one that we put together in a way that was different than what we would have done had we not experienced the pandemic,” she went on, adding that this will be the blueprint for how to do things moving forward.
The Next Chapter
When asked what might come next for her as she nears retirement age, Caulton-Harris opted to borrow some words used recently by tennis star Serena Williams, who eschewed the term ‘retirement,’ and instead said that she will be ‘transitioning,’ or ‘evolving.’
Caulton-Harris said she will likely be doing some of the same, noting that she is working on a book, a personal history of sorts, that she started maybe a decade ago.
“It’s going to be about the journey that I’ve had, from the public- health perspective, but also the personal side,” she said. “I think it’s important to be able to talk about the experiences and let people know the human side of who we are.”
Some would say she’s already written a book, the one about how to be a true leader in public health and make a difference in the community. The one about how to be a Healthcare Hero. n
To my “Elegant and Eloquent” Commissioner of Health and Human Services
Helen Caulton-Harris, congratulations and
thanks - you have done us all proud!
~Good Health and God Bless
Photo by Leah Martin Photography
Respectfully, Mayor Domenic J. Sarno
A10 2022
2022 HEALTHCARE HEROES