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Future of Developmental Health Care in Pediatrics

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Title: Future of Developmental Health Care in Pediatrics


1
Future of DevelopmentalHealth Care in Pediatrics
  • New Models
  • Neal Halfon, MD, MPH
  • Director, UCLA Center for Healthier Children,
    Families and Communities
  • Professor of Pediatrics, Public Health, Public
    Health
  • UCLA
  • SDBP
  • 2005 Annual Meeting

2
Goals of Presentation
  • To provide a rational for why pediatric health
    services must be transformed and improved
  • To consider the implications for transforming and
    improving developmental health services in
    pediatric primary care
  • To describe new models of organization and
    delivery of pediatric primary care services
  • To consider strategies for improving how
    developmental health services are organized,
    financed and provided

3
Forces Driving Change
  • Poor Performing Systems, Poor Outcomes
  • New ideas and concepts about child development
    and what's at stake
  • Shifts in Demand
  • Consumer demand - Autism, Einstein
  • School district demand Increase School Readiness
    and Decrease Special Ed
  • Business sector demand Educated Workforce

4
Forces Driving Change
  • New approaches- technology, measures,
    connectivity-opportunity to do more, better
  • Policy Initiatives- SECCS, First 5,
  • Economic and Moral Dilemma Do too little too
    late for many children with identifiable problems
    that would benefit from early intervention-
    benefit them and benefit us.

5
Sub-optimal Child DevelopmentWhat is at Stake
  • School failure and additional costs due to
    expenditures for second chance programs
  • Special education
  • Mental health, juvenile justice
  • Diminished potential to form strong social and
    family relationships
  • Long-term costs in social dependency
  • Sub-optimal productivity-economic, social,
  • Sub-optimal health

6
Children Flying Under the Radartill School Entry
  • Many Children are not receiving the pediatric
    health services they need and are entitled to
    receive
  • Especially true for developmental services that
    are suppose to identify developmental
    disabilities and provide parents with information
    and children with interventions to optimize
    health development
  • While the parents of children with learning
    disabilities identify their children at age 3-4,
    schools do not initiate interventions till age 8.

7
Children Receiving EI, DD, Special Ed in Orange
County
  • 3.2 0-5s CSHCN (ECENA 2001)
  • 0.7 0-5s Early Start
  • 1.9 0-5s Regional center
  • 1.1 3-5s School District Special Ed.
  • 9.8 K-12 Special Ed.

8
Special Education Enrollment by Age and
Disability in Orange County (2002)
9
Policy Strategy for Improving early childhood
health and development
  • Policies that focus on treating established
    problems not sustainable - move to
    prevention/early intervention
  • Evidence for the effectiveness of interventions
    that focus on a single issue or single risk
    factor is weak
  • Risk factors and adverse outcomes cluster
    together more integrated interventions
    (services) have the potential to improve outcomes
    in multiple domains
  • Need to shift service delivery away from narrow
    single issue programs towards Broadband
    services multi-sector, multi-agency,
    multi-level- integrated approach- focused on
    shifting population outcomes

10
Ideas and Change Concepts
  • Developmental health
  • Developmental optimization
  • Integrating Personal Population Health
    approaches

11
2004 National Research Council andInstitute of
Medicine Report
12
IOM/NRC Definition of ChildrensHealth (2004)
  • Childrens health is the extent to which
  • individual children or groups of children are
    able
  • or enabled to (a) develop and realize their
  • potential, (b) satisfy their needs, and (c)
  • develop the capacities that allow them to
  • interact successfully with their biological,
  • physical, and social environments.
  • From Childrens Health, the Nations Wealth,
  • National Academies Press, 2004.

13
From Maturational toTransactional Development
  • Transactional Model
  • Bi-directional gene-environment Interactions
  • Continuous optimization process
  • Promote optimal development
  • Continuous surveillance of developmental
    competency
  • Developmental Assets
  • Early Intervention
  • Maturational Model
  • Unfolding of presetgenome
  • Stages and milestones
  • Prevent disabilities (chronic disease model)
  • Screen for disabilities
  • Deficit based/focus
  • Hell grow out of it

14
Strategies to ImproveSchool Readiness
Trajectories
15
Risk and protective factors
16
Ideas and Change Concepts
  • Developmental health
  • Developmental optimization
  • Integrating Personal and Population Health
    Approaches

17
Young Children at Risk
18
Normal Development OutcomesAlong Four
Measurement Domains
19
Development outcomes for a child with
cerebralpalsy. High cognitive and emotional
functioning areable to compensate for decreased
physical functioning.
20
Development outcomes for a child with cerebral
palsy andlow compensatory outcomes in other
domains.Lack of protective factors reduces
overall functioning.
21
Ideas and Change Concepts
  • Developmental health
  • Developmental optimization
  • Integrating Personal Population Health
    approaches

22
Population based Strategies forOptimizing Early
Child Health andDevelopment
  • Optimizing early childhood health and brain
    development requires
  • Integration of clinical, targeted prevention,
    universal and broader social interventions
  • Curve shifting strategies that minimize risks and
    maximize protective factors are necessary
  • Broadband policies that align levels of
    government and service delivery sectors (silos)
    within government in a common effort
  • Place based programs that integrate early
    childhood services and program into a more
    integrated system of care providing the
    scaffolding that optimize developmental
    trajectories

23
Optimizing Individual and PopulationHealthFour
Basic Strategies
  • 1. Individual focus, diagnosis, treatment
  • 2. Individual prevention and promotion
  • 3. Targeted promotion and prevention
  • 4. Universal curve shifting programs

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Interventions to OptimizeHealthy Development
Well-Being
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Optimizing Early Child Healthand Development
  • Optimizing early childhood health and brain
    development requires
  • Integration of clinical, targeted prevention,
    universal and broader social interventions
  • Curve shifting strategies that minimize risks and
    maximize protective factors are necessary
  • Place based programs that integrate early
    childhood services and program into a more
    integrated system of care providing the
    scaffolding that optimize developmental
    trajectories
  • Broadband policies that align levels of
    government and service delivery sectors (silos)
    within government in a common effort

30
Optimizing Early Child Healthand Development
  • Optimizing early childhood health and brain
    development requires
  • Integration of clinical, targeted prevention,
    universal and broader social interventions
  • Curve shifting strategies that minimize risks and
    maximize protective factors are necessary
  • Place based programs that integrate early
    childhood services and program into a more
    integrated system of care providing the
    scaffolding that optimize developmental
    trajectories
  • Broadband Policies that align levels of
    government and service delivery sectors (silos)
    within government in a common effort

31
National Early Childhood SystemBuilding
Initiatives
  • England Sure Start
  • 1998 national initiative to end child poverty
  • Department of Health and Education along with
    Treasury
  • 500 programs 2004, 1/3 of under fours living
    poverty,
  • Australia-National Early Childhood Agenda
  • Best Start Victoria, Platforms in Melbourne
  • Families First- New South Wales
  • Canada
  • Better Beginnings Better Futures-Quebec
  • Early Years- Ontario, Torontos First Duty,
  • US
  • State Early Childhood Comprehensive Systems
    Initiative
  • Many State programsFirst 5

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State Early ChildhoodComprehensive Systems
Initiative
  • Goal
  • Plan for and build a more comprehensive and
    integrated system among the current uneven, and
    often ineffective, mix of services for young
    children.
  • States Receive Funding for
  • Two years of strategic planning
  • Three years of implementation

34
State Early ChildhoodComprehensive Systems
Initiative
  • Five Components Improving and Integrating
    Programs and Services to form a System of Care
  • Health Care- Medical Home for all children
  • Early Care and Education
  • Social/Emotional Health
  • Parent Education
  • Family Support

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New Models
  • Delivery of developmental services

42
A 2020 Vision of Pediatric CareStrategic Goals
  • Automatic and affordable health insurance for all
    children and parents
  • Comprehensive benefitspreventive care, medical
    care, dental care, mental health care,
    developmental services
  • Medical home with a designated physician or
    pediatric nurse practitioner responsible for
    every child

43
2020 Vision of Pediatric CareStrategic Goals
for the Medical Home
  • Information and resources for parents and
    childcare providers
  • Hubs of health development connectivity--
    automatic linkage to developmental services,
    early interventions, child care, and school-based
    services
  • Use of information technology--reminders for
    visits, e-mail with pediatric clinician, parent
    information
  • Commitment to quality improvement with measurable
    accountability

44
Developmental Services
  • Assessment Services
  • Surveillance community wide approaches
  • Screening- targeted or universal
  • Assessments- focused on those who need it
  • Anticipatory Guidance and Education
  • Developmental Interventions
  • Care Coordination

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New National Surveys for AssessingContent of
Health Supervision forU.S. Children under 3
Years of Age
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Factors Associated with provision
ofDevelopmental Services
  • Physician/staff capacity
  • Lack of non-physician to do DA
  • Lack of training
  • Unfamiliarity with DA instruments
  • Office resources
  • Time limitations
  • Inadequate reimbursement
  • Inability to bill and be reimbursed separately
  • Unfamiliarity with CPT codes for DA
  • Community resources
  • Lack of developmental diagnostic/treatment
  • services
  • Lack of programs to refer to

55
Targeted Initiatives
  • Improving Pediatric Developmental Services to
    Optimize the Medical Home

56
Innovations to Improve Delivery ofDevelopmental
Services and toCreate Medical Homes
  • Practice redesign - Healthy Steps
  • Improve Connectivity Help me Grow, CHADIS
  • Improve Accountability - CAHMI PHD
  • Improve Quality NICHQ, CCHQ
  • Improve Systems- OC DS Pathways

57
HS Specialist 7 Services
  • Enhanced WC Care
  • Home Visits
  • Telephone Line
  • Child Development
  • Family Check-Ups
  • Written Materials
  • Parent Groups
  • Linkages to Resources

2 HS Specialists/site (1 per 100 families)
A Physician-Developmental Specialist Partnership
58
Innovations to Improve Delivery ofDevelopmental
Services andto Create Medical Homes
  • Practice redesign - Healthy Steps
  • Improve Connectivity Help Me Grow, CHADIS
  • Improve Accountability - CAHMI PHD
  • Improve Quality NICHQ, CCHQ
  • Improve Systems- Orange County, Ca

59
Help Me Grow- The Process
  • Child Health Provider
  • Language/Behavior/Parenting Concerns
  • 1-800-Help Me Grow
  • Referrals Language Eval Play and Support Groups
  • Two Week Follow-Up Contact Enrolled
  • Feedback to Child Health Provider

60
Technology for enhancingConnectivity
  • Promotes greater connectivity, communication,
    collaboration, and continuity
  • Provides basis for greater service integration
    and alignment of services across sectors

61
Technology Emerging Example
  • Individual Practice-Based
  • Technologies
  • Telemedicine
  • Rochester model
  • CHADIS

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Innovations to Improve Delivery ofDevelopmental
Services andto Create Medical Homes
  • Practice redesign - Healthy Steps
  • Improve Connectivity Help Me Grow, CHADIS
  • Improve Accountability - CAHMI PHD
  • Improve Quality NICHQ CCHQ
  • Improve Systems- Orange County, Ca

64
Innovations to Improve Delivery ofDevelopmental
Services and to CreateMedical Homes
  • Practice redesign - Healthy Steps
  • Improve Connectivity - Child Serve
  • Improve Accountability - CAHMI PHD
  • Improve Quality NICHQ CCHQ
  • Improve Systems- OC DS Pathways

65
Improving AccountabilityDevelopmental Carefor
Young Children CAHMI PHD
  • Seven Core Measures in the PHDS
  • Anticipatory Guidance (Bright Futures and AAP
    Criteria)
  • Getting Health Information
  • Follow-Up for Children At Risk for
    Developmental/Behavioral Delays
  • Assessment of Smoking, Alcohol or Other Substance
    Abuse
  • Assessment of Well-Being and Safety in the Family
  • Family Centered Care
  • Helpfulness and Effect of Care Provided

66
Performance in12 Managed Care OrganizationsWA
State, CA and Ohio
  • Range
  • Anticipatory Guidance 60.5-76.9
  • Health Information 60.9-83.6
  • Follow-Up for Children at Risk 35.5-65.7
  • Assessment of Well-Being/Safety 15.2-34.6
  • Assessment of Smoking, Drugs 43.1-65.9
  • Family Centered Care 59.5-74.5

67
Innovations to Improve Delivery ofDevelopmental
Services andto Create Medical Homes
  • Practice redesign - Healthy Steps
  • Improve Connectivity Help Me Grow
  • Create Pathways- Denver System
  • Improve Accountability - CAHMI PHD
  • Improve Quality NICHQ, CCHQ
  • Improve Systems- OC DS Pathways

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Re-engineering Strategies forDevelopmental
Service SystemChange
  • Place-based Strategy
  • Sector-based Strategy
  • Innovation Strategy
  • Finance Strategy

72
Place Based Strategy
  • Focus on the unique contextual needs and assets
    of particular community
  • Build place based/ community specific service
    delivery pathways
  • Integrate across sectors, phases of service
    delivery platforms
  • Take advantage of school readiness sites, city
    and local community identity, expertise

73
Sector Strategy
  • Encourage Collaborative Learning and System
    Change within Sectors
  • Pediatrics/child health sector
  • Early care and education, community service
  • IDEA funded DD and EI sector
  • Business/ Payers of health care
  • Build on Sector Strengths, common professional
    goals, finance goals,
  • Focus on Building Capacity in each sector
  • Knowledge, skills, tools, relationships,
    connections,

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Innovation Strategies
  • Foster, Adopt and Adapt Innovations within
    communities and sectors
  • Take advantage of sector, community, desires to
    change, improve
  • Pediatric Sector
  • Reach Out and Read in all practices
  • PEDS in all child care centers
  • Healthy Steps in training sites, Healthy Steps
    lite in clinics
  • Maternal Depression screening with links to
    mental health services

76
Finance Strategies
  • Maximizing Federal and State public program
    revenues
  • Leveraging existing resources across public and
    private sectors
  • Matching strategies- donors, public programs
  • Legislative, and administrative changes
  • Develop new strategies
  • WinWin partnerships with business

77
Improving Early Childhood Health Care
Developmental Services
  • Vision for what the early childhood health system
    will look like
  • Strategic Communications re
  • Development Health and School Readiness
  • Medical Home
  • Developmental Services
  • Re-engineering current systems
  • Connecting medical home and child care
  • Improving capacity of medical home to provide
    developmental services

78
Improving Early Childhood Health Care
Developmental Services
  • Consider State or County-Wide Agenda Setting
    Strategy to
  • Bring the various players in the health sector
    together
  • Create a common vision about the importance of
    improving developmental services, service
    delivery pathways, and systems change strategies
  • Consider a health care sector strategy focused on
    improving the development and function of medical
    homes

79
Improving Early Childhood Health Care
Developmental Services
  • Develop policy strategies that overcome barriers
    for fully functional medical homes
  • Reimbursement and contracting changes to create
    incentives for the provision of developmental
    services
  • Coding and reimbursement strategies
  • Medicaid Contract language
  • Quality measurement and monitoring strategies
    focused on provision of developmental services

80
New Roles For Early ChildhoodAdvocates
  • Transactionalist
  • Curve shifters
  • Pathway builders
  • Innovators and system changers
  • Sector Bridger's
  • Conveners, collaborators, learners
  • Community Capacity Enhancers
  • Leverage financiers

81
  • UCLA Center for Healthier Children,
  • Families and Communities
  • National Center for Infancy and Early
  • Childhood Health Policy

http.//healthychild.ucla.edu
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