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State and National Initiatives to Improve the Quality of Health Care for Children

State and National Initiatives to Improve the Quality of Health Care for Children. Wanda D. Barfield, MD, MPH 13 th Annual Maternal Child Health Epidemiology Conference December 12, 2007. What is Healthcare Quality?.

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State and National Initiatives to Improve the Quality of Health Care for Children

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  1. State and National Initiatives to Improve the Quality of Health Care for Children Wanda D. Barfield, MD, MPH 13th Annual Maternal Child Health Epidemiology Conference December 12, 2007

  2. What is Healthcare Quality? • “The degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge” (IOM) • “Doing the right thing, at the right time, for the right person, and having the best possible result ” (AHRQ)

  3. Elements of Quality Healthcare • Safe. Helps and does not cause harm. • Effective. Research shows positive (good) results. • Patient-centered. Healthcare providers treat patients with respect, accounting for patient's (family's) values about health and quality of life. • Timely. Getting needed at a time when it will do the most good. • Efficient. Treatment/Intervention does not waste money or time. • Equitable. Everyone is entitled to high quality healthcare.

  4. “Dennis Quaid's newborns reportedly harmed by medical mix-up”

  5. To err is human…. To err systematically is inhumane….

  6. Targeting Quality Health Care National State Region/county Institution/providers Family/Community Individual

  7. Relative Health and Safety of US Children

  8. Is Quality Healthcare for Children Different than Adults? U.S. children Have overall good physical health, but are experiencing increasing chronic illness Experience disproportionate rates of poverty and limited health service resources Depend on caregivers Major focus on preventive health, and developmental surveillance Immunizations, Newborn screening, Anticipatory guidance Yes, but……

  9. The Quality of Children’s Health Care is No Better than Adults (and May Be Worse) % Receiving Recommended Care Source: McGlynn et al, NEJM 2003; 348:2635-45, and Mangione-Smith, et al, NEJM, 2007; 357:1515-23.

  10. Disparities:An Abyss within the Quality Chasm Source: Smith et al. Pediatrics 2006:117;1763-70

  11. What is Needed to Change Quality (and Outcomes) of Care for Children? • Leadership (Board, Executive, Professional) • Engagement of patients, families, and community • Technical Expertise (Improvement Science) • Data and Tools (Health Information Technology)

  12. Why is this important to you? Children’s Health Care is: Mostly preventative Predominantly outpatient Locally delivered and organized State regulated Substantially funded through state programs Incorporated in state’s public health role (e.g., immunizations, newborn screening) Part of state-federal programs (Medicaid, SCHIP)

  13. Session Objectives • Overview quality within the levels of the healthcare system • Learn about strategies needed to promote, enable, and sustain improved quality of care • Demonstrate the usefulness of collaborating organizations in quality improvement • Understand the use of data to measure quality improvement

  14. Plenary Speakers • Judith Shaw, EdD, MPH, RN • Executive Director, Vermont Child Health Improvement Program (VCHIP) • Associate Professor of Pediatrics, University of Vermont College of Medicine

  15. Plenary Speakers • Doris Hanna, RN, CPNP, ScD • Director, National Initiative for Children’s Healthcare Quality (NICHQ), Pediatric Affinity Group • Project Executive, Childhood Obesity Action Network

  16. Plenary Speakers • Christina Bethell, PhD, MPH, MBA • Associate Professor, Oregon Health and Science University • Founding Director, Child and Adolesecent Health Measurement Initiative (CAHMI)

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