The COVID-19 pandemic overwhelmed health care systems across the United States. More
than 100 million cases and one million deaths later, clinicians and researchers are
still unraveling the lessons learned from this global public health crisis.
In a recent publication in AIDS and Behavior, scientists from the University of South
Carolina identified seven lessons regarding health care system resilience learned
from the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, these takeaways detail ways that AIDS service
organizations in South Carolina were able to persevere through the pandemic. Taken
together, these facilitators may offer a roadmap for organizational resilience when
faced with the next public health crisis.
“Throughout the pandemic, South Carolina has been categorized as highly vulnerable
to COVID-19 infections, complications and deaths due to our unemployment levels, limited
income, housing and transportation instability, crowded living and working conditions,
and aging population,” says Shan Qiao, associate professor of health promotion, education, and behavior and a core faculty member with the South Carolina SmartState Center for Healthcare Quality. “These conditions worsened existing health disparities and put a strain on the local
health care systems that vulnerable groups depend on to manage chronic conditions,
such as HIV/AIDS.”
With the eighth highest rate of HIV/AIDS incidence in the country, South Carolina
has a population of nearly 18,000 residents who are living with HIV. Supply chain
disruptions (e.g., safety equipment, pharmaceuticals used prevent and treat HIV),
staffing shortages, capacity limitations and other challenges resulted in disruptions
to services offered by 82 percent of the state’s HIV clinics at the beginning of the
COVID-19 outbreak.
Researchers at the Center for Healthcare Quality have been examining impacts of the
pandemic on people living with HIV, including service delays/interruptions, mental
health, co-infection with COVID-19, vaccine efficacy, stigma, viral suppression, and
more. Qiao’s study sought to identify recurring themes among AIDS service organizations
who were better able to overcome many of these challenges. Their analysis resulted
in seven facilitators of organizational resilience.
“These facilitators are unique to the context of the COVID-19 pandemic yet are relevant
going forward, as this study highlights their importance in providing a continuity
of care to people living with HIV and other vulnerable groups under circumstances
requiring nontraditional methods of treatment,” Qiao says. “Our findings highlight
the importance of effective health care system policies, management, and leadership
that have clear and preemptive protocols to facilitate organizational resilience.
This work necessitates organizational, local, state, and federal policies, drafted
in times of crisis, to consider their immediate and long-term impacts on health care
settings serving vulnerable populations and, more broadly, organizational resilience.”
This research was funded by NIH/NIAID (R01AI174892).