With COVID Surge, Healthcare Workers Can Volunteer to Help

The alert system is designed for state or national disasters.

Back in March, when many Americans rushed to get vaccinated, I received an email through my local church stating that the State of California had established a program for healthcare workers to be able to volunteer in a situation of an emergency.

I was interested, and went to the website and completed an application. The application contained several questions about work experience and knowledge within healthcare. Once the application was submitted into the system, it was reviewed and approved or denied. The approval puts the individual into the system to receive alerts and requests for assistance.

One recent Sunday, the California.gov system sent out a request for healthcare volunteers to help at the Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital in Grass Valley due to a COVID surge. The hospital is located in Northern California, near mountain foothills of around 2,400 feet of elevation, about an hour northeast of Sacramento. It has 105 beds and 18 ER beds. The volunteer request was for RNs, EMTs, and support staff.

The alert system is designed for when there is a state or national disaster (e.g., an earthquake, severe weather event, or public health emergency). And we all know that COVID-19 certainly qualifies as a public health emergency (PHE). The system can be accessed by authorized medical officials at the State Emergency Operations Center. On the website, you will see the following message: “(if you are) a healthcare provider with an active license, a public health professional, or a member of a medical disaster response team in California (and) would like to volunteer for disaster service, you’ve come to the right place!”

If you are a California healthcare worker interested in volunteering, you can do so in two ways. Go to the site for disaster healthcare volunteers for the state of California at    https://www.healthcarevolunteers.ca.gov/, or contact the hospital HR department of Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital directly. You may want to check within your own state as well for a healthcare volunteer program for public health emergencies.

Thank you in advance for your attention and assistance!

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Gloryanne Bryant, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCDS

Gloryanne is an HIM coding professional and leader with more than 40 years of experience. She has an RHIA, CDIP, CCS, and a CCDS. For the past six years she has been a regular speaker and contributing author for ICD10monitor and Talk Ten Tuesdays. She has conducted numerous educational programs on ICD-10-CM/PCS and CPT coding and continues to do so. Ms. Bryant continues to advocate for compliant clinical documentation and data quality. She is passionate about helping healthcare have accurate and reliable coded data.

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Cardiology Question for the Week of June 8, 2026

When is CPT® add-on code +0993T reported for augmentative software analysis performed with a CT scan of the heart? Case Example: A patient with multiple cardiovascular risk factors, including obesity, hypertension, a history of smoking, and elevated inflammatory markers, underwent coronary CT angiography (CCTA) for evaluation of coronary artery disease. The patient was placed supine in the CT scanner, and a gated coronary CT angiography study was performed using standard institutional protocol with intravenous contrast. Image quality was confirmed adequate for diagnostic review. Immediately following image acquisition, the CCTA dataset was transferred to an AI-powered perivascular fat analysis platform. The software automatically identified the coronary arteries, extracted perivascular fat regions, and calculated vessel-specific fat attenuation index (FAI) measurements associated with coronary vascular inflammation. Clinical risk factors, including body mass index (BMI), smoking history, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), and blood pressure, were incorporated into the software analysis to refine the inflammation-based risk assessment. The platform generated a comprehensive cardiac inflammation profile that integrated coronary plaque characteristics with biologic inflammatory markers. The interpreting cardiologist reviewed both the primary CCTA findings and the AI-generated FAI metrics. The combined report concluded: (1) no obstructive coronary artery disease, (2) mixed noncalcified plaque within the proximal left anterior descending (LAD) artery, and (3) elevated FAI values indicating increased vascular inflammatory activity. Based on these findings, therapy intensification was recommended.

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