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Project Overview . Partnership among UC Davis, The Children's Partnership, and California School Health Centers Association GoalsAssess the feasibility of school-based telehealth in rural areas of CaliforniaCreate a plan for implementing and sustaining school-based telehealthFresno and Plumas counties.
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1. December 2, 2008 Feasibility of School-Based Telehealth in Rural California
2. Project Overview Partnership among UC Davis, The Children’s Partnership, and California School Health Centers Association
Goals
Assess the feasibility of school-based telehealth in rural areas of California
Create a plan for implementing and sustaining school-based telehealth
Fresno and Plumas counties
3. Objectives Identify health/mental health care needs of children
Identify current capacity, existing assets, and resources to meet needs
Identify role of telehealth to meet needs
Identify receptivity to providing telehealth in schools (for Plumas, receptivity to school-based health care)
Identify key community partners and identify their roles in implementing school-based services
Develop plan for implementing school-based telehealth
4. Key Questions How does the delivery of services using telehealth technology differ in school districts with school health centers versus without such clinic infrastructure?
What are the specific conditions necessary to support the application of telehealth in schools?
5. Partners Collaboration is key to success
Critical to have local partners lead activities and bring on additional local partners
Successful local/state-based collaboration - Plumas
Sierra Institute for Community and Environment · Plumas Unified School District · Plumas County Public Health · Plumas County Mental Health · Local Health Districts · UC Davis · California School Health Centers Association · The Children’s Partnership · Northern Sierra Rural Health Network · California School Nurses Organization
6. Activities: Plumas County Core project team formed (May 2008)
Sierra Institute for Community and Environment
Northern Sierra Regional Health Network
UC Davis
California School Health Centers Association
The Children’s Partnership
Meetings with community stakeholders (July 2008)
Focus groups (September 2008)
Elementary School: parents; teachers, nurses, and staff
High School: Parents; students; teachers, nurses, and staff
Parents of children with special health care needs (district wide)
Development of plan
7. Assessment Questions Health and mental health care needs of children and adolescents?
Language and cultural needs?
Current capacity to meet these needs?
Who are the key stakeholders?
Receptivity to/interest in to providing additional health services in the schools? Via telehealth?
Potential challenges and concerns?
What are the technology capacity and needs?
8. Findings: Needs Behavioral health care needs (training for teachers, school staff to identify children with behavior health issues; limited assessments; lack of expertise to provide interventions)
Health education needs (nutrition, healthy lifestyles, sex education, using the health care system, other)
Nurses are stretched thin -- 2.25 RNs for 3000 students across large geographic area
No pediatricians in Plumas County
One community does not have a hospital
9. Findings: Needs Lack of specialists (families drive hundreds of miles for specialty care for their children)
Transportation within community, especially in bad weather
Getting an accurate diagnosis, especially for CSHCN
Dental health services
Lack of Latino/Native American providers
Need better coordination of currently available services
Lack of health insurance
10. Findings: Community Assets A number of community resources in Plumas County; though not being effectively utilized because of lack of coordination, limited outreach, or distance
Schools as hubs for all types of community services and appropriate place to address health care needs of Plumas children, families, community members
Every school has telehealth equipment; school nurses and other staff are experienced in using it
Health providers using telehealth
Enthusiasm for project
11. Findings: Community Interest Enthusiasm for school-based telehealth
Interest in being a part of designing/implementing project
School principals and district staff supportive
Youth excited about helping to implement program through designing project, outreach, other activities
Providers expressed interest in finding ways to use telehealth to better coordinate care for school children
County public health department engaged in integrating this project with its programs
12. Concerns and Cautions Program must not place additional burdens on school nurses or other school staff
Implement one program and do it well, rather than try to implement too many activities
Make sure program is sustainable
Parents need to be involved
Must get buy-in from all levels of school district
Don’t ‘outsource’; use local services before going out of county
13. Next Steps in Plumas Pilot behavioral health intervention:
Training for school staff to identify children with behaviors impacting school performance
Teachers, nurses, primary care providers trained in evidence-based assessment tools
Subspecialty consultation
Small grant from UC Davis
Develop grant proposals
Strong collaboration
Build in sustainability, including strategies for reimbursement
Develop replicable model
14. Next Steps in Fresno How does having existing school-based health centers change the conditions needed to support a telehealth project?
How do the questions, challenges differ?
Similar assessment questions
15. The Children’s Partnership www.childrenspartnership.org
Jenny Kattlove
(310) 270-7167
jkattlove@childrenspartnership.org