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What is the Medical Home for Children with Chronic Medical Conditions? Insights for Improvement. Elisabeth Dellon, MD, MPH: Pediatric Pulmonology Michael Steiner, MD: General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Rachael Carr, BA. Healthcare for Children with Special Healthcare Needs .
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What is the Medical Home for Children with Chronic Medical Conditions?Insights for Improvement Elisabeth Dellon, MD, MPH: Pediatric Pulmonology Michael Steiner, MD: General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Rachael Carr, BA
Healthcare for Children with Special Healthcare Needs • Children and families with special healthcare needs (CSHCN) often straddle primary (PCP) and subspecialty care • Understanding and improving that interplay has the potential to simultaneously improve health outcomes and lower the cost of care
Healthcare for Children with Special Healthcare Needs • Primary care medical homes and subspecialty physician shortage • Right care, right time • Ideally high quality, accessible care would occur in medical homes when possible • Subspecialty care would be accessible, and used by PCPs and families only when needed
Study • Objective: Examine the interplay between families, PCP, and specialty care for CSHCN from multiple perspectives. • Goal: To identify variables that impact where and when families use PCP or specialist for care • Eventually be able to ‘turn-up’ or ‘turn-down’ important variables so that care is pursued where quality will be highest and cost lowest
Methods • 3 phase study, mixed methods study • 1st Phase • Survey and interview families of CSHCN as they return for specialty care • Explore perspectives on child’s health • Medical home qualities of both PCP and specialty care setting • Why they decide to seek care at specialist or PCP for a discrete problem
Methods • 2nd Phase • Survey subjects’ PCP offices about practice characteristics • Catalog a series of patient contacts with subspecialty nurses or administrators • Review PCP clinical notes for those subjects past 12 months • Review specialist clinical notes for past 12 months
Methods • 3rd Phase---preparing to enroll • Brief survey to large volume of children seeking specialty care to better understand how demographic variables impact specialty v. PCP decisions
Reasons For Calls to Specialty Nurses • Total of 866 calls logged by 15 specialty nurses • 704 calls (81%) were related to the medical condition addressed by the specialist
Family Perception of Medical Home Characteristics of PCP Care
PCP Report of Medical Home Characteristics of PCP Practice • 75% response rate • 19% Medical home designation by NCQA
Family Perception of Medical Home Characteristics of Specialty Care
Next Steps • Analyze and compare chart extraction data from PCP and specialist clinical notes • Examine documented communication between those • Large sample to further examine sociodemographic characteristics
Summary • CSHCN have multiple problems & see multiple specialists • Report more specialty visits per year than PCP visits • Parents contact their specialists for care of the chronic medical problems, and PCP for typical childhood illnesses • Many parent contacts to specialists could be handled at PCP office
Summary • Parental decisions of who to call for questions seem most influenced by • Provider who knows child best • Access to appointments and convenient location • Trust • Families perceive less medical home characteristics at PCP than reported by those practices • Families perceive more medical home characteristics in specialty care than PCP
Discussion • Current care for CSHCN likely maldistributed, with too high of a proportion of care done at specialists • Changing family decision about care seeking for CSHCN could dramatically affect this • Could increase contact with PCP, lower contact with specialist which would improve specialist access • Need to increase parent sense that PCP has • Knowledge of child’s condition • Access and convenience • Trustworthy
Discussion • Do PCPs help create this problem by not actively managing chronic problems where specialist has seen child? • Eg “You need to call UNC for that” • Do specialists worsen this by • Too many F/U appointments instead of transferring care back to PCP • Not communicating to PCP • Giving family message that only a specialist should care for this problem
Questions • Questions • Elisabeth_dellon@med.unc.edu • Msteiner@med.unc.edu • Thank you to Access Care/Medicaid for funding study • Thank you to Steve Wegner and Alan Stiles for guidance and supervision of project