1. Care Coordination: Empowering Families, a Promising Practice to Facilitate Medical Home Use Among Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs
- Author
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Ufer, Lisa Gorman, Moore, Julie A., Hawkins, Kristen, Gembel, Gina, Entwistle, David N., and Hoffman, David
- Subjects
Pilots -- Training ,Medical care -- Management ,Caregivers -- Practice ,Medical personnel -- Practice ,Company business management ,Health care industry - Abstract
Introduction This paper describes the care coordination training program and results of an evaluation from its pilot in seven states. Despite the importance of practice-based care coordination, only 42.3% of children with special health care needs (CYSHCN) met all needed components of care coordination as defined by the Maternal Child Health Bureau. Recognizing that children with medically complex conditions often have lower rates of achieving care coordination within a medical home, the Region 4 Midwest Genetics Collaborative worked with families to develop a training to empower families in care coordination. The Care Coordination: Empowering Families(CCEF) training provides families with the knowledge, tools, and resources to engage with health, education and family support systems. This article gives an overview of the training and comprehensive evaluation. Methods Participants were family caregivers of children with genetic conditions and other special health care needs recruited in one of seven pilot states. Evaluation data were collected from 190 participants prior to and immediately following the training. An additional follow-up assessment one full year post training was completed by 80 participants (a response rate of 42%). Results Families who attended the training report being the primary source of care coordination for their children and 83.7% see their role in their child's healthcare changing as a result of the training. The findings suggest that peer support and communication with providers increased as a result of the training over the course of the study. The data suggest that the training impacted how the family interacts with the child's doctor, including initiating conversations to prepare their child for transition to adult health care. Further, families report system-level improvements 1 year later compared to the pre-training assessment. Discussion CCEF training is a promising practice for facilitating medical home use among CYSHCN., Author(s): Lisa Gorman Ufer [sup.1] [sup.2] , Julie A. Moore [sup.1] [sup.2] , Kristen Hawkins [sup.1] [sup.2] , Gina Gembel [sup.1] [sup.2] , David N. Entwistle [sup.2] [sup.3] , David [...]
- Published
- 2018
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