Reducing Barriers to a Medical Home Approach Objectives Increased - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

reducing barriers to a medical home approach objectives
SMART_READER_LITE
LIVE PREVIEW

Reducing Barriers to a Medical Home Approach Objectives Increased - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Colorado MCH Conference March 7-9, 2012 Reducing Barriers to a Medical Home Approach Objectives Increased understanding of the background and context for the MCH medical home priority Increased understanding of components of local logic


slide-1
SLIDE 1

Reducing Barriers to a Medical Home Approach

Colorado MCH Conference March 7-9, 2012

slide-2
SLIDE 2

Objectives

 Increased understanding of the background and

context for the MCH medical home priority

 Increased understanding of components of local

logic model and action plan

 Increased knowledge of technical assistance and

resources to support local planning for and implementation of the MCH medical home priority

slide-3
SLIDE 3

MCH MEDICAL HOME PRIORITY

Rachel Hutson, MSN, RN, CPNP Children and Youth Branch Director Jane Gerberding, RN Local Systems Nurse Consultant Jennifer Schroeder, PhD JAS Associates, Systems Evaluation Consultant

slide-4
SLIDE 4

MCH Priorities – Progress to Date

2010 Needs Assessment Identification of 9 MCH Priorities Development of 9 MCH Implementation Teams (MITs) Development of STATE level logic models & action plans Development of LOCAL level logic models & action plans State & Local Implementation!

slide-5
SLIDE 5

Identification of the MCH Priorities

 How/why medical home was selected as

a priority?

 What qualitative and quantitative data

was used in the selection process?

slide-6
SLIDE 6

MCH National Performance and Outcome Measures

NPM 3: The percent of children with special

health care needs age 0-18 who receive coordinated, ongoing, comprehensive care within a medical home

National Outcome 2: All children will receive

comprehensive, coordinated care within a medical home

slide-7
SLIDE 7

Colorado Medical Home Data

 59.3 percent of children/youth ages 0-17 meet the

criteria for having a medical home

 43.1 percent of children/youth ages 0-17 who

have a special health care need meet the criteria for having a medical home versus 62.6 percent of children/youth without a special health care need From the National Survey of Children’s Health (2007)

slide-8
SLIDE 8

Colorado Medical Home Data

The Colorado Medical Home Advisory helped provide qualitative data related to the identification

  • f barriers to a medical home approach

 Lack of adequate communication and collaboration

amongst medical home efforts

 Policies that do not support a medial home approach

and/or lack of policies that support a medical home approach

 Lack of consumer voice and influence on decision-

making

 Lack of adequate support for providers  Lack of adequate support for community-based systems

slide-9
SLIDE 9

MCH Priorities – Progress to Date

2010 Needs Assessment Identification of 9 MCH Priorities Development of 9 MCH Implementation Teams (MITs) Development of STATE level logic models & action plans Development of LOCAL level logic models & action plans State & Local Implementation!

slide-10
SLIDE 10

Medical Home MIT

MIT Team Lead:

 Rachel Hutson

MIT participants include:

 Children and Youth Branch staff  Other Prevention Services Division Staff

who are focused on medical home

 External partners

slide-11
SLIDE 11

MCH Priorities – Progress to Date

2010 Needs Assessment Identification of 9 MCH Priorities Development of 9 MCH Implementation Teams (MITs) Development of STATE level logic models & action plans Development of LOCAL level logic models & action plans State & Local Implementation!

slide-12
SLIDE 12

State Logic Model and Action Plan

 State and local logic models mirror one other  State and local action plans contain the same

strategies

 Action plan strategies are focused on the base

  • f the pyramid
slide-13
SLIDE 13

Core Public Health Services Delivered by Maternal & Child Health Agencies

Infrastructure-building Services

Needs assessment, evaluation, program planning, policy development, coalition development and management, standards development, workforce development, systems-building initiatives, and information systems.

Enabling Services

Classroom health education, CYSHCN care coordination, motivational interviewing and client education.

Population-based Services

Statewide newborn screening, school district-wide health education, child care and health care provider training and

  • utreach, public education/messaging.

Direct Health Care Services

(gap filling) Basic health services and health services for children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN).

slide-14
SLIDE 14

State Logic Model and Action Plan

Designated CDPHE staff serve as leads for each of the strategies:

 Mobilizing partnerships: Rachel Hutson and Medical

Home Policy Coordinator

 Policy: Medical Home Policy Coordinator  Consumer voice: Eileen Forlenza and Anne-Marie

Braga

 Provider support: Zula Solomon  Community support: Jane Gerberding

slide-15
SLIDE 15

MCH Priorities – Progress to Date

2010 Needs Assessment Identification of 9 MCH Priorities Development of 9 MCH Implementation Teams (MITs) Development of STATE level logic models & action plans Development of LOCAL level logic models & action plans State & Local Implementation!

slide-16
SLIDE 16

LOCAL LOGIC MODEL

slide-17
SLIDE 17

Local logic model

Long term impact:

 All children and youth, including those with

special health care needs, receive comprehensive coordinated care within a medical home Four strategies:

 Mobilizing partnerships  Policy  Consumer voice  Provider support

slide-18
SLIDE 18

LOCAL ACTION PLAN

slide-19
SLIDE 19

Local Action Plan

The action plan has been shaped and informed by the experiences of several key groups who have been working on medical home issues at the community level:

 local HCP systems building efforts;  local Early Childhood Health Integration grantees; and  local pilot communities from the Medical Home HRSA

grant (Boulder, Summit, Mesa and Larimer)

slide-20
SLIDE 20

Local Action Plan

Early childhood focus: The medical home action plans must include at least one

  • bjective focused on the early childhood population

 Importance of early identification of and support related to

special needs

 Opportunity to align and leverage resources with existing

early childhood efforts

slide-21
SLIDE 21

Local Action Plan

Components of the Action Plan Template

 Context  Goals  Objectives  Target population  Criteria for success/as measured by  Strategies  Milestones/Key activities  Monitoring plan

slide-22
SLIDE 22

Using the Action Plan Template

Objective A: Mobilize partnerships

 A.1.1: Identify key stakeholder group  A.1.2: Creating a team charter  A.1.3: Identifying barriers  A.1.4: Identifying collaborative action steps  A.1.5: Identifying roles  A.1.6: Strategic learning  A.1.7-9: Evaluating collaboration  A.1.10: Medical home technical assistance

slide-23
SLIDE 23

Using the Action Plan Template

Objective A: Mobilize partnerships

 Discuss some examples of what a local action

plan might include

 Three groups of 10  40 minutes

slide-24
SLIDE 24

Wrap Up

 Highlights from small group discussions  Additional questions and/or technical

assistance needs

 Upcoming technical assistance

  • pportunities
slide-25
SLIDE 25

THANK YOU