
The 23 volunteers currently in the program reflect New York City itself, with some being college students interested in medicine and others retirees.
Credit: °”ÍűTV Langone Staff
A program to increase patient satisfaction and appointment efficiency leverages healthcare providersâ oldest tool, their humanity.
Youâre running late for a medical appointment. Maybe you hit traffic, you couldnât find your phone, or life simply happened. You rush through the hospitalâs revolving doors, greeted by gleaming floors, suspended artwork, and a sea of people, each carried by their own urgent narrative. The minutes until your appointment tick down as you scan the corridors. A visitor screener intercepts you, âGood morning. Which department are you headed to?â After quickly checking your information, he gestures toward the east wing. As you turn in that direction, a warm voice breaks through: âHi, Iâm Hala. Can I walk you to your appointment?â
This moment marks the beginning of °”ÍűTV Langone Healthâs Iâll Walk with You Program, an initiative thatâs reimagining how patients experience healthcare institutions. The concept is simple: Visitor Screening greets patients and then assigns a volunteer to walk them to their appointment. Its impact, however, cuts to the heart of quality care.
âSome 80 to 90 percent of patients require some form of directional guidance when entering a large health system,â says , health systems director of disability inclusion at °”ÍűTV Langone. And 40 to 50 percent end up getting lost. âThese statistics are directly correlated with missed or late appointments, mangled schedules, increased anxiety, and even compromised care.â
The consequences of getting lost in a hospital extend beyond tardiness. âImagine you go to see your cardiologist, and youâre so stressed because someone inadvertently bumped into you, and you got turned around several times trying to find the right pathway, elevator, and clinic,â Dr. Rizzo explains. âBy the time you reach your doctor, you are so stressed, and your cognitive reserve is so compromised, that you barely retain what you are being told about your diagnosis or, worse yet, treatment.â
The programâs volunteersâcurrently 23 in total, with more in trainingâreflect New York City itself. Some are college students eyeing careers in medicine, while others are retirees giving back to the institution that once cared for them or their loved ones. Hala Abdullah, 23, a volunteer from Queens, discovered her calling during the isolation of COVID-19.
âI realized I had never really ventured outside my neighborhood,â says Hala. âI wanted to experience the world and be useful. I was taught life doesnât just depend on what you do in school, but rather how you apply those lessons to serve your community. Volunteering is part of that for me.â
Hala explains her cohorts arenât just guides, but companions. âIt is really fun! Being a volunteer means they are your guest, and you are having an experience together. Some of them are coming in for surgery, so you get to provide a distraction and calm their nerves. The patients appreciate it, and we get to make an impact.â
Crystal Monique Moore, with a steady presence and aspirations in healthcare, sees the program as a gateway to the medical field. âThe volunteer program is a great way for someone to learn about the organization and become familiar with its culture, especially if they are switching industries,â says Crystal. Sheâs even developed her own signature strategy: giving preview directions and maintaining a slightly slower pace to ensure her patientsâ comfort.
Hala, driven by her lifelong commitment to medicine and patient advocacy, is applying to medical school and sees the program as a vital opportunity to deepen her understanding of patient care. âThis is the perfect way for someone to understand the patient experience before they enter a doctorâs office,â she says.
This level of hospitality, unprecedented in major medical centers, is part of °”ÍűTV Langoneâs effort to show patients and colleagues that they are valued. With 3,000-plus patients accompanied to their appointments thus far, the hospital is tracking metrics like on-time arrivals and patient satisfaction, with early feedback suggesting significant impact. Theyâre planning to expand to 105 volunteers, providing coverage from 8:00AM to 8:00PM, seven days a week.
Sometimes the most meaningful innovations are also the most human. As one patient from Texas, rushing in from a delayed flight, put it when offered a guide: âOh, thank God.â In that moment of relief lies the programâs true measure: not just in getting patients where they need to go, but in showing them theyâre not alone in getting there.
Media Inquiries
Arielle Sklar
Phone: 646-960-2696
Arielle.Sklar@°”ÍűTVLangone.org