* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Medical Home and Early Childhood Systems
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Medical Homes and Young Children: Glossary of Terms This glossary provides additional definitions and context for a number of terms used in the May 2012 Build paper, Medical Homes and Young Children. Anticipatory guidance. As used in the medical world and applied to pediatric practices, “anticipatory guidance” is an expected component of well-child care that involves the practitioner giving the parents information about what to expect regarding the child’s growth and development. It recognizes the role of the child health practitioner in helping to educate and support parents to support their child’s growth and development and know when to seek help. Bright Futures (see definition of “evidence-informed guidelines”) provides detailed guidance to child health practitioners on providing anticipatory guidance, organized by the child’s age and developmental trajectories. Care coordination. Care coordination generally refers to the role a specific individual (care coordinator) takes on to ensure that the child and family receive the services and supports needed to address child’s health and development concerns and that these services are themselves coordinated. Where young children are concerned, this may involve connecting the family as well as the child to services and supports, responding to “social determinants of health” (see definition) as well as biomedical determinants. To do so often requires additional understanding of the family situation beyond that obtained by the primary practitioner and the capacity to connect the family to services outside the medical community with which the primary practitioner is most familiar. There is increasing emphasis in providing care coordination to delineate the role of the care coordinator in independently getting to know and build a relationship with the family and in ensuring that care coordination extends beyond recommending possible services to providing “clinical referrals for care” (see definition). While care coordination for patients with chronic or complex medical conditions may focus primarily on ensuring the coordination across different clinical services, care coordination for young children often involves linkages to a variety of services and supports to strengthen “protective factors” (see definition). Child health outcomes. The medical community has adopted a very broad definition of child health: “the extent to which individual children or groups of children are able or enabled to (a) develop and realize their potential, (b) satisfy their needs, and (c) develop the capacities that 1 allow them to interact successfully with their biological, physical, and social environments.” This moves well beyond the clinical treatment of disease or injury or health maintenance in the context of existing health conditions. As applied to very young children, this effectively encompasses the five domains of school readiness established in the educational world: physical health and motor development, social and emotional development, approaches to learning, language and literacy development, and general cognition. This does not mean that the child health practitioner is solely responsible for meeting these goals for child health for the practitioner’s patients – but it does mean that the practitioner has some responsibility to contribute to the identification of concerns (see definition of “developmental surveillance”) and a first response to them, in the context of what is available. Clinical referral for care. When a primary health practitioner makes a referral of a patient to a sub-specialist, the practitioner generally expects three things to occur. First, an appointment with the sub-specialist will be scheduled. Second, the primary health practitioner will be provided information on the appointment and any subsequent treatment. Third, the primary health practitioner will continue to provide primary care and be part of subsequent decisions about the patient’s ongoing care and treatment. Clinical care referrals go beyond making recommendations for possible services to scheduling and following up on them. In the human services world, referrals often mean simply suggesting other services. It is very important to define what “referrals” entail in developing “care coordination” (see definition) strategies. Developmental screening. When practitioners conduct well-child visits, they must assess where children are on developmental trajectories related to physical, cognitive, social, and emotional development. This involves “developmental screening,” an organized set of activities for identifying a broad range of potential developmental issues and concerns both through direct observation and testing of the child and through gathering information from parents, through such developmental screening tools as Ages and Stages or PEDs. These are generally brief tools that help to indicate whether there may be a problem or concern, and are not a diagnosis. Such screening can lead to recommendations for more detailed assessments (such as referrals to Part C early intervention programs for diagnosis of developmental delays or to a mental health specialist for diagnosis of mental health conditions such as autism spectral disorders), to additional or focused anticipatory guidance around certain issues, or to care coordination for additional preventive or developmental supports. Developmental surveillance. Developmental surveillance is the ongoing process of getting the “big picture” on children’s development, with particular attention to eliciting parent concerns and monitoring psychological and social risk factors that can deter development. While developmental screening is often a part of developmental surveillance, developmental 2 surveillance is a broader concept. The AAP recommends both developmental screening and developmental surveillance. Evidence-informed guidelines (Bright Futures). The Affordable Care Act requires all insurers to cover primary and preventive health services for young children, based on “evidence-informed guidelines” established by the federal Health Services and Resources Administration (HRSA). This is a reference to Bright Futures, a comprehensive set of guidelines and protocols for wellchild visits developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics – which incorporates detailed recommendations for “anticipatory guidance” (see definition) to address all aspects related to “child health outcomes” (see definition). Federal recognition of Bright Futures as an expected standard of care is an important step to fostering child health practices that meet the goals for “child health outcomes” (see definition). Life course model of health. This term has been incorporated into the Institute of Medicine’s Children’s Health: The Nation’s Wealth report and its set of recommendations for improving child health status. The “life course model” recognizes the interplay and interdependence between biology, behavior, social environment, and physical environment in children’s health and the trajectory of child health over time. The latter suggests the critical importance of setting a positive trajectory in the earliest years of life as the scaffolding for future development. Medical home (patient-centered medical home, health home. A common-sense definition, as applied to patients generally, is a health practitioner or office providing ongoing and continuous primary and routine care for a patient, as well as overseeing any subspecialty care needed by the patient. Often referred to as a “patient-centered medical home,” the medical home practitioner or office is expected to establish a relationship with the patient that is on a continuing basis, find out and know the patient’s medical history and context, and involve the patient in making decisions about care and treatment. The term “health home” is an effort to ensure the definition extends beyond medical and clinical care. Population health. “Population health” refers to the health of populations or groups of people, which may be defined geographically, by age, gender, ethnicity, socio-economic background, or any other factor. By examining population health, it may be possible to identify factors within the larger community or society that contribute to the health of the population as a whole and which involve responses that go beyond individual patient actions. This can include different “social determinants of health” (see definition), such as discrimination and social exclusion or the presence of toxins in the neighborhood. The medical home involves the health practitioner’s ongoing relationship with specific patients and providing them with individual services, but the medical home also can act beyond caring for individual patients to taking a role in the community to address larger population health issues and concerns. 3 Resilience. Resilience, or the ability to bounce back from setbacks, represents an orientation to life and the world that strongly contributes to health. According to the research, some children are more naturally resilient than others, but the child’s environment can foster greater resiliency. Further, children do better in families where their parents themselves are resilient. Children or adults who have experienced “toxic stress” (see definition) are much less likely to exhibit resiliency and be much more likely to experience poor health outcomes. Risk and Protective Factors. Risk and protective factors have been used in the juvenile justice and substance abuse world for decades to help to explain social deviancy, and have many similarities with the “social determinants of health” (see definition) and “resiliency” (see definition) literatures. Increasingly, states are using the Strengthening Families protective factor framework in developing early childhood services. That framework identifies five protective factors associated with child abuse prevention among young children: (1) parental resilience, (2) social connections, (3) concrete support in times of need, (4) knowledge of parenting and child development, and (5) social and emotional competence of children. Social determinants of health. Social determinants of health refer to those factors that contribute to health that are social, and not biomedical, in nature. The term is in particular use in international efforts to improve children’s health, drawing upon a large a multi-disciplinary research base to define determinants that contribute to good and poor health. The World Health Organization’s Social Determinants of Health: The Solid Facts enumerates ten social determinants: (1) the social gradient (resource/opportunity inequality), (2) stress, (3) early life (e.g. life course developmental trajectory), (4) social exclusion, (5) work, (6) unemployment, (7) social support, (8) addiction, (9) food, and (10) transport. Toxic Stress, Early Childhood Adversity, and Adverse Childhood Experiences. Toxic stress is a term employed by the Center for the Development Child to describe severe, prolonged, and/or unmitigated stress (usually related to abuse, neglect, or parental stress) on young children and its profound adverse impact on brain development. Toxic stress is triggered by early childhood adversity, but adversity and stress alone do not necessarily lead to toxic stress, provided there are sufficient compensating, nurturing, and supporting protective factors. Research on Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs – as reported by adults regarding their childhood experiences), has shown that multiple adverse childhood experiences are associated with greater adult morbidity and risky health behaviors, with those findings applying to persons of higher as well as lower socio-economic status. In general, the literature on toxic stress, early childhood adversity, and adverse childhood experiences points to the importance of prevention and early intervention to strengthen protective factors in children’s lives and address social determinants of health that can adversely impact them. 4