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A MultiYear Initiative

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Mary Margaret Gottesman, PhD, RN, CPNP, National Chair ... Rocky Mountain Pediatrix Cardiology. Richard C. 'Mort' Wasserman, MD, MPH ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A MultiYear Initiative


1
  • A Multi-Year Initiative
  • of the National Association of Pediatric Nurse
    Practitioners
  • Mary Margaret Gottesman, PhD, RN, CPNP, National
    Chair
  • The Ohio State University, gottesman.6_at_osu.edu

2
Supported by
and
Gerber Products Company
3
The Steering Work Group
Mary Margaret Gottesman, PhD, RN, CPNP, Ohio,
National Chair Margaret Brady, PhD, RN, CPNP,
California, Resources Chris Calamaro, PhD, RN,
CPNP, Pennsylvania, School-Age Barbara Deloian,
PhD, RN, CPNP, Colorado, Infancy Karen
Duderstadt, RN, MSN, CPNP, California, Advocacy
Bonnie Gance-Cleveland, PhD, RN, CPNP,
Arkansas, Research Lynn Gilbert, PhD, RN, CPNP,
Colorado, Early Childhood Linda Jonides, RN, MS,
CPNP, Michigan, Adolescence Carolyn Montoya, RN,
MS, CPNP, New Mexico, Cultural Appropriateness
4
Why HEAT now?
  • Overweight has doubled among 2-5 year olds and
    tripled among 6-18 year olds since the 1970s.
  • 1 in 7 US children and teens are obese
  • 1 in 10 infants and toddlers are overweight
  • Effective reversal of overweight is difficult to
    achieve and seldom long lasting.
  • (Foster, Wadden, Matris, et al., 2003 Hedley, et
    al., 2004, Ogden, Flegal, Carrol,
  • Johnson, 2002 Summerbell, Ashton, Campbell,
    Edmunds, Kelly, Waters, 2005 )

5
What about their future?
  • Leading Causes of Death in the US
  • Minino, Arias, Kochanek, Murphy,
    Smith 2002
  • Cause of Death Death rate/100,000
  • Heart disease 258.2
  • Cancer 200.9
  • Cerebrovascular disease 60.9

6
How did this happen?
  • Actual Causes of Death in the US
  • Mokdad, Marks, Stroup,
    Gerberding, 2004
  • Actual Cause in 1990 in 2000
  • Tobacco 19 18.1
  • Poor diet/physical 14 16.6
  • inactivity
  • Alcohol 5 3.5

7
Whats happening in primary care?
  • Time Devoted to Anticipatory Guidance
    during Wellness Visits
  • Goldstein, Dworkin,
    Bernstein, 1999
  • Average visit length 17.8 minutes
  • Average time in advisement 2.4 minutes
  • Nutrition 31.7 seconds
  • Growth 6.4 seconds
  • Exercise 1.6 seconds

8
How well do primary care providers care for
overweight children?
  • Routinely include all recommended elements of
  • Pediatricians PNPs
  • Family history 23.6 24.5
  • H P 7.3 8.5
  • Lab evaluations 16.5 14.6
  • Barlow, Dietz, Klish, Trowbridge, 2002

9
What about today?
  • Obesity was a diagnosis in only 0.93 of well
    child visits for children 2-18 years of age,
    despite a 15 occurrence. (NAMCS NHAMCS,
    1997-2000)
  • Children with a diagnosis of obesity were 2.5
    times more likely to receive diet counseling and
    more than 3 times as likely to receive exercise
    counseling as children without the diagnosis, but
    it was not 100.
  • BP monitoring occurred in only 37 of well visits
    with pediatricians.
  • There are disparities in provision of care by
    gender, insurance, and ethnicity.
  • Only 36.7 of overweight children, teens, or
    their parents were told they were overweight.
    (NHANES, 1999-2002)
  • (Cook, Weitzman, Auinger, Barlow, 2005 MMWR,
    54 (34), 848-849)

10
Life Course Health Development Framework
Time Frames Multiple Developmental
Stages of Life Course Prenatal?Infancy?Childhood
?Adolescence Transitions/Turning Points
Family?Preschool?School?Workplace Crosscutting
Historical, Economic, Political ???????????????
The Context of ? Health
Development Genetic Endowment Physical
Environment Social Environment Family
Environment Psychological Environment
Culture/Policy Environment Health Care System
The Process of Health ? Development Design
Features Strategies Resources chosen
Growth, maturation Health Development
Processes Physiological pathways
Psychological pathways ? Behavioral pathways?
Developmental Health Outcomes Life expectancy
Functional abilities Cognition, mood,
growth, activity Disease, disability School
readiness performance
Regulatory Processes of Health Development Critica
l and sensitive periods Psycho-neuro-endocrine-
immune regulation
Halfon Hochstein,2002
11
Halfon Hochstein, 2002
12
HEAT Mission
To improve child health through
relationship-based, culturally appropriate
interventions enhancing practitioner
effectiveness in working with families to develop
optimal habits in nutrition and physical activity.
13
HEAT Goal
  • Prevention of overweight in childhood and
    identification of children at risk for overweight.

14
How did we do it?
  • Use of existing meta-analyses and expert
    recommendations
  • Institute of Medicine (IOM)
  • National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
  • American Heart Association (AHA)
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
  • American Dietetic Association (ADA)
  • American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
  • Cochrane Collaborative
  • Two comprehensive literature reviews

15
Our main messages
  • Regardless of age, the foundation of good health
    is best achieved by
  • High quality nutrition and a physically active
    lifestyle
  • A balance between energy intake and energy
    expenditure

16
Major Components of the Guideline
  • Introduction
  • Four age groups divisions
  • Infancy
  • Early Childhood
  • School Age
  • Teen
  • Five divisions within each age group
  • Early identification
  • Development, communication and relationships
  • Nutrition essentials
  • Physical activity and sedentary behavior
  • Advocacy

17
Whats different?
  • Focus on the family, not just the individual
  • Professional-family partnership
  • Developmental context of feeding and physical
    activity
  • Advocacy
  • Guidance to enhance cultural appropriateness

18
Expert Reviewers
  • Michael C. Barth, PhD
  • Executive Vice President, IFC Consulting
  • National Program Director, Healthy Steps for
    Young Children
  • Diane Berry, PhD, CANP
  • Assistant Professor
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill -
    School of Nursing
  • Deborah Cummins, PhD
  • Director, Research/Evidence Analysis
  • American Dietetic Association
  • Scott M. Gee, MD
  • Medical Director, Prevention and Health
    Information
  • The Permanente Medical Group, Inc.
  • Esther Myers, PhD, RD, FADA
  • Research and Scientific Affairs
  • American Dietetic Association

19
Implementation Resources
  • Age-based pre-visit assessment checklist
  • Age-based health professional history exam form
  • Age-based parent guidance handouts
  • Card-sort activity to engage parents, children
    and teens in setting their own goals for
    lifestyle improvement.
  • Practitioner cue cards for brief motivational
    interviewing process to support partnership with
    the family for change.
  • Practitioner cultural guides
  • Additional handouts addressing common problems in
    nutrition and activity to support decisions to
    change.

20
Making implementation happen
  • Use of motivational interviewing skills and
    process with family members
  • A guideline implementation in practice audit
    checklist
  • Use of a rapid cycle improvement processes to
    change practice

21
Next steps
  • Testing the guideline in practice
  • Primary Aim
  • To evaluate the effectiveness of the clinical
    practice guideline in preventing overweight in a
    sample of children birth to 3 years of age.
  • Secondary Aim
  • To evaluate the effectiveness of the clinical
    practice guideline in changing practitioner and
    parent behaviors.
  • Tertiary Aim
  • To identify barriers to following the guidelines
    experienced by practitioners and parents.
  • Review and critique content of the guideline and
    the supporting materials by parents, children,
    and teens from ethnic minority groups.

22
Where can I learn more?
  • Identifying and Preventing Overweight
  • in
  • Childhood Clinical Practice Guideline and
    Resource Kit
  • Please visit http//www.napnap.org
  • for more information.
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