Social workers play a key role in our nation’s health care system, and as the country
continues to grapple with the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, their intervention
has been critical to helping contain it. Ashley Childers-Dykes, who graduated from
University of Houston-Clear Lake in 2008 with her Bachelor of Science in Social Work, works for the Texas Department of State Health Services and believes she and her team have helped make an impact in Texas, where almost 24,000
people have been confirmed COVID-19 positive to date.
Childers-Dykes, who is the regional program manager of the Specialized Health and Social Services Program in the DSHS, said that daily, she receives a list of COVID-19 positive cases from
a team of epidemiologists who do community disease surveillance. The agency is divided
into regions, and hers covers 16 counties —seven of which do not have a local health
department. “We do the tracing and notification of COVID-19 cases for Walker, Waller,
Wharton, Austin, Colorado, Matagorda and Liberty Counties. For those counties, we
are the local health department,” she said.
“The labs and doctors must report this disease, and then a case is assigned to a nurse
who calls the person to find out who they’ve been in contact with,” Childers-Dykes
said. “The 48 hours before symptoms show up are the most important. Did the person
go to work? Who’s in their household? Did they go to the grocery store? The nurse
finds out this information and she teaches the person about quarantining. Then my
team gets the list of cases and the people they’ve come in contact with and we start
informing them that they’ve been exposed and they have to quarantine.”
That’s when Childers-Dykes’ job starts. Whether it’s a close contact or a one-time
encounter, she informs people on the list they must quarantine for 14 days. “It’s
difficult in households, where everyone is continually exposed to each other,” she
said. “You do your best in your household to isolate yourself, but you might have
to share a bathroom or a kitchen. The people living in a house with someone COVID-19-positive
are considered continuously exposed unless the person can truly separate.”
She makes everyone in the entire household aware, explains how quarantining works,
and start asking about symptoms. “We have a questionnaire that we use from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and I complete a form on every member of the household and every contact listed,”
she said. “Some people need letters for employers that say they have to quarantine,
and I arrange for those.”
Close contacts are also informed. “Those are people who have ridden in a car with
the infected person or coworkers and friends who may have been around. I start calling
them, asking for their symptoms and notify them they need to be quarantined as well,”
she said.
Generally, she said, people accept what she’s telling them. “On a busy day, I might
talk to 20-30 people,” she said. “We are getting into a rhythm, building out our team
and now we have more to take on the load. We don’t have fewer cases, we just have
more people to handle it.”
Since her work impacts rural communities, Childers-Dykes said that getting people
the help they need can be complicated. “Some counties might only have one testing
site,” she said. “Some people live in poverty and have no transportation. How can
you get someone to a testing site when it’s far and they have no way to get there?
Now we’re dealing with systemic issues that were there before COVID-19, and while
we can’t fix those problems, we are trying to navigate them in the world of COVID-19.”
Attempting to solve these problems certainly requires critical, out-of-the-box thinking
skills, she said. “During my time at UH-Clear Lake, critical thinking is the skill
I acquired, and it’s the one that has the most impact on my work,” she said. “Those
skills have been valuable in situations where I have to come up with a solution or
an opinion quickly, and it’s the ability to solve a problem in a way that is meaningful
and intelligent.”
Clients look to social workers to fix problems, think outside the box, and navigate
obstacles, she continued. “One of the most helpful things I learned at UHCL was learning
to interview. We were taught the basics about nonverbal cues, being mindful about
how you portray yourself and watching for certain things in the person you’re interviewing,”
she said.
That helped her see an interview from both sides. “A lot of schools teach you how
to interview, but not how you should be careful not to be judgmental, watch your facial
expressions, and control things you don’t realize you’re doing,” she said. “Our professors
and the program were instrumental in teaching us interviewing, and now, as a program
manager, I am comfortable speaking to people about things that are sensitive while
staying empathetic. I learned all that at UHCL. I hold that time dear to my development
as a person as well as to my career.”
Before the spread of COVID-19, Childers-Dykes managed a program that coordinates a
Medicaid benefit for medically fragile children aged birth to 21. “If a child has
a mental, physical or emotional disability and they receive Medicaid, we would do
home visits, assessments, and coordinate the benefit for them,” she said. “That program
is still operating during this time, but we are not doing the home visits now so we
do not expose medically fragile children.”
Meanwhile, she said that she feels her work has helped contain the spread of the virus
in the communities she serves. “Imagine what it would be like if we weren’t calling
people to tell them they’d been exposed,” she said. “People would be out doing what
they normally do and potentially infecting many other people. Our health care system
would be even more inundated than they currently are. I believe we are having some
impact.”
Learn more about the Social Work program at UHCL online.
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