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Coordinating Comprehensive Health Care with Home Visits for New Families: A Case Study of Home Visitation Integration with the Family-Centered Medical Home at Carolina Health Centers. Katy Sides Director of Research Institute for Child Success Sally Baggett
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Coordinating Comprehensive Health Care with Home Visits for New Families: A Case Study of Home Visitation Integration with the Family-Centered Medical Home at Carolina Health Centers Katy Sides Director of Research Institute for Child Success Sally Baggett Director of Family Support and Child Development Services Carolina Health Centers, Inc. October 17, 2014
Home Visiting: Building Parental Ability for Better Child Health and Development • Benefits of Maternal And Child Home Visiting Programs: • Child health, • Child development and school readiness, • Family economic self-sufficiency, • Linkages and referrals, • Maternal health, • Positive parenting practices, and • Reductions in child maltreatment • Home visitation programs give parents and caregivers the full appropriate developmental and health picture of their children.
Home Visiting Programs in SC • Nurse-Family Partnership • Healthy Families America • Parent Child Home Program • Parents as Teachers • Early Head Start • Early Steps to School Success • Healthy Start • Healthy Steps • Family Check-Up
Introduction to the Patient-Centered Medical Home The Joint Principles of the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) • Personal physician • Physician-directed medical practice • Whole-person orientation • Care is coordinated and/or integrated • Quality and safety • Enhanced access • Payment Graph adapted fromNational Committee on Quality Assurance
Differences Between Traditional Primary Care and the Medical Home Graph adapted from Qualis Health
Key Elements of a Medical Home for Children • Population-based approach • Chronic condition supports • Coordinated care • Parental involvement • Clinical practice standards • Newborn screening • Child and family education • Community agency involvement
Home Visitation and PCMH Collaboration Benefits of Collaboration: • Information sharing • Care coordination • Referral facilitation • Community needs • Assisting transition • Assisting parent communication • Reinforcing advice • Monitoring well health • Fostering cultural competence • Performing environmental and safety assessments • Parental depression identification • Meeting the needs of complex health care in the home Cost of NFP
The Continuum of Integration Graph adapted from Institute of Medicine of the National Academies Committee on Integration of Primary Care and Public Health
The perception of families of the medical home as a trusted source of information; • The medical home as a natural point of contact to engage all families, even hard to reach families, with young children; • The opportunity to expose families to consistent health messaging from medical professionals as well as from nonmedical professionals that is necessary to change behaviors. The Children’s Center Model Capitalizes on:
The Children’s Center Movement through the Continuum of Integration
Common Outcomes Lead to Improved Outcomes Chart adapted from Carolina Health Centers, Inc.
Applicability of the Model at The Children’s Center to other FCMHs • Opportunities within South Carolina • Opportunities across the nation
Impacting the Early Childhood System Graph adapted from James M. Perrin
KATY SIDES Director of Research ksides@instituteforchildsuccess.org SALLY BAGGETT Director of Family Support & Child Development Services sbaggett@carolinahealthcenters.org