310 likes | 445 Views
2. Call Objectives. At the end of this conference call, participants will be able to:Identify which Practicing Safety (PS) tools were reported to be the most useful in each of the 3 bundlesRecall at least 2 qualitative themes uncovered by post in-depth interviewsAnalyze the office supports and systems that enable successful adoption of interventionsList at least 2 lessons learned from the QuIIN PS projectTest 1 or more tools with your own practice team to improve assessment/screening and a34729
E N D
1. Office Based Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect: Lessons Learned from the Practicing Safety QuIIN Project Diane Abatemarco, PhD, MSW, CO-PI
Ruth Gubernick, MPH, QI Advisor
Steve Kairys, MD, MPH, FAAP, Co-PI
2. 2 Call Objectives At the end of this conference call, participants will be able to:
Identify which Practicing Safety (PS) tools were reported to be the most useful in each of the 3 bundles
Recall at least 2 qualitative themes uncovered by post in-depth interviews
Analyze the office supports and systems that enable successful adoption of interventions
List at least 2 lessons learned from the QuIIN PS project
Test 1 or more tools with your own practice team to improve assessment/screening and anticipatory guidance for 1 or more of the PS focused topics
3. 3 Practicing Safety: The Need In 2006, an estimated 906,000 children were found to be victims of child abuse and neglect in the United States and Puerto Rico*
64.1% were victims of neglect
16.0% were physically abused
Children under the age of 4 continue to have the highest rate of victimization
Over one-quarter (30%) of the 906,000 victims were under the age of 4
Nearly 80% (79.4%) of perpetrators of child maltreatment were parents.
Pediatricians are in a unique position to address topics that can prevent child abuse and neglect
Pediatricians can see a child a total of 13 times for well child visits before age 4
Literature documents the high value that parents place on the education and advice shared with them by their pediatrician
*Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration on Children, Youth and Families. Child Maltreatment 2006. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2008
4. 4 Practicing Safety Project Aims Improve assessment/screening and anticipatory guidance by pediatric physicians and staff with parents/caregivers on topics of crying, maternal depression, toilet training, and discipline (to 100% by November 2009).
Test use of the Practicing Safety tools for education by pediatric physicians and staff with parents/caregivers on topics of crying, maternal depression, toilet training, and discipline.
Test the usefulness of the Practicing Safety tools and ease of use of the tools; and determine strategies for use of the tools.
5. 5 Practicing Safety Project Methods Modified Learning Collaborative with 14 teams (lead physician plus 2 others from practice)
Model for Improvement; Plan, Do, Study, Act; small tests of change
Prework period (April 2009)
Baseline chart review
Pre-Inventory Survey
Learning Session 1(May 2009)
Action Period (June-November 2009)
Monthly Chart Review/Chart Documentation Forms
10 charts of patients at the 2-month visit (infant and mother/caregiver bundles)
10 charts of patients at the 18-month visit (toddler bundle)
Monthly Progress Reports
Monthly Team Calls
Review of Run Charts to guide improvements (posted to a Project Workspace Web site)
Follow-up (November 2009)
Post-Inventory Survey
Post Toolkit Evaluation Survey
Post-Telephone Interviews
6. 6
7. 7 Practicing Safety Toolkit 3 Bundles
Infant: coping with crying
Mother/Caregiver: maternal depression, bonding/attachment
Toddler: effective discipline, toilet training
Each bundle includes a practice guide as well as tools for each topic
8. 8 Infant Bundle
9. 9 Mother/Caregiver Bundle
10. 10 Toddler Bundle: Discipline
11. 11 Toddler Bundle: Toilet Training
12. 12 Practicing Safety Results: Assessment/Screening and Anticipatory Guidance
13. 13 Infant
14. 14 Mother/Caregiver
15. 15 Toddler: Discipline
16. 16 Toddler: Toilet Training
17. 17 Practicing Safety Results: Usefulness of Tools
18. 18
19. 19
20. 20
21. 21 Practicing Safety Results: Office Systems Inventory
22. 22
23. 23
24. 24 Average Time spent at 2- and 18-month well child visits from pre to post intervention
25. 25 Practicing Safety Results: Qualitative Themes
26. 26 Qualitative Themes Consistent use of PS toolkit
Systemization of risk
Changes to chart documentation
Community resource linkages
Initiation of meetings
Improved medical education
Implementation of QI methodology
Increased awareness
Challenges
Unanticipated positive outcomes
27. 27 Practicing Safety Lessons Learned Practices need guidance in order to incorporate practice-based protocols that address child abuse and neglect prevention as part of well-child care
Pediatricians, once supported and mentored, are excited to offer families more concrete and systematic guidance in these areas
Practicing Safety can inform more successful implementation of enhanced care and assists practices in establishing a medical home
Parents are receptive to guidance on these topics and believe these issues are of significant concern
Practicing Safety provided an opportunity for enhanced clinical education for physicians, nurses, residents, etc
28. 28 Practicing Safety Lessons Learned (con’t.) Practices tailored tools to fit their patient population.
Some practices incorporated tools for more than the project prescribed well-child visit based on age.
Some practices collapsed the suggested “green” and “yellow” assessment questions and anticipatory guidance and used both levels routinely as primary prevention topics at well-visits for all of their families with children in the targeted age ranges
Some practices found a need for multi-lingual, low literacy and more graphic materials for parents
Just participating in PS raised awareness of child abuse and neglect issues for all roles in the pediatric office
Chart documentation is key to determining improvements in care
29. 29 Practicing Safety Lessons Learned (con’t.) It is important to have an engaged practice champion to succeed & leadership support, teams enhance practice change
Some practices found it challenging to promote the bigger picture of their work to the rest of the practice physicians and staff – the importance of testing and measuring prior to full-on implementation
Administrative and clinical priorities compete with making change (H1N1, EMR implementation, staff turnover)
Coding and reimbursement remain a challenge
The project motivated practices to link with community.
Lastly, practices would like more info on diffusion.
30. 30 Any PS Teams on the Call?
Share your experiences and lessons learned!
What is your proudest accomplishment?
What lesson do you find important for others interested in making change?
31. 31 Additional Resources Practicing Safety QuIIN Web Page: http://www.aap.org/qualityimprovement/quiin/PracticingSafety.html
Project Staff
Jill Healy, QuIIN Project Manager jhealy@aap.org
Tammy Hurley, Manager, Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention Activities thurley@aap.org
32. 32 Thank you! Questions