The Comprehensive Transfer Center Ensures That Patients with COVID-19 Move Through the Hospital System Without Delay to Receive the Critical Care They Need

By the first week of April, about 180 patients with COVID-19 were admitted to our hospital system daily, a pace that required °µĶųTV Langoneās Comprehensive Transfer Center to be resourceful and adaptable in its workflows.
Photo: °µĶųTV Langone Staff
As news of a threatening 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in New York City intensified throughout March, 2020, so did peopleās interest in Lisa Kestingās job. āPeople didnāt really understand what I do, especially my mom,ā says Kesting. āBut when rumors started circulating that the city wasnāt going to have enough hospital beds, my whole family was like, āWait, thatās what Lisa does.āā
As senior director of °µĶųTV Langone Healthās Comprehensive Transfer Center since 2019, Kesting oversees management of the hospital systemās patient flow through its emergency departments, procedural areas, and inpatient units. The accent is on the word ācomprehensive.ā Her responsibilities include transfers between °µĶųTV Langone locations, external transfers from other institutions, and the ever-shifting movement of patients throughout hospital beds. Not unlike a traffic cop, railway station master, or air traffic controller, her teamās mission is to ensure that there are no bottlenecks, whether itās a delay into the operating room or out of the emergency department.
The transfer team works closely with nurse managers, medical directors, and their respective teams to facilitate bed management. āOur team has demonstrated outstanding adaptability,ā says Kesting. āTheir ability to swiftly update placement and admission workflows has ensured that patients receive the critical care they need, as quickly and safely as possible in this rapidly evolving environment.ā
By the first week of April, COVID-19 inpatient admissions to the hospital system averaged 181 patients per day. Amid this surge of cases, the challenge of maintaining what Kesting calls the steady ādrumbeatā of her job would be enough to make anyone in her shoes break into a sweat. But she wasāand remainsāconfident that °µĶųTV Langone is in control despite the extraordinary circumstances. āWeāre in the middle of a pandemic, but I actually feel that our leadership is very calm,ā she says. āWe had meetings back in the beginning of January, when there were under 1,000 confirmed cases in China. Weāve prepared for this as much as we could.ā
°µĶųTV Langone has been able to manage its patient volume and flow effectively with a combination of good timing and great planning. Because the all-private patient rooms of Kimmel Pavilion could be adapted to isolate and contain known or suspected cases of COVID-19, the first waves of patients admitted in Manhattan were placed swiftly and safely. Moreover, inpatient units in Tisch Hospital that were vacated when the Kimmel Pavilion opened two years ago were restored and modified to accommodate patients with COVID-19. āWe were fortunate that the Manhattan campus had that infrastructure in place,ā notes Kesting. When °µĶųTV Langone postponed elective surgeries and procedures in mid-March, it converted empty surgical units into medical ones, reassigning and redeploying clinical staff as needed.
Kesting attributes the success of °µĶųTV Langoneās efforts to top-down management at its best. āThe calm tone set by leadership has really helped keep this institution going at this level,ā says Kesting. āThrough this whole process Iāve been in awe of the collaboration and communication among teams. Itās not a scary doomsday thatās happening. You know, I feel like weāve got this.ā