Transcript Slide 1

Illinois Children’s Healthcare Foundation
CHILDREN’S MENTAL HEALTH INITIATIVE
Building Systems of Care: Community by Community
Fostering Creativity Through Shared Ideas
Anita Berry MSN, CNP, APN
Director, Healthy Steps for Young Children Program
Advocate Health Care
Project Director, Enhancing Developmentally Oriented Primary Care
Objectives
Participants will be able to
• Identify the importance of Integrating primary
care and mental health
• Understand Enhancing Developmentally
Oriented Primary Care (EDOPC) and how they
work in Illinois
• Clarify the concept of a Medical Home
Primary Care and Mental Health
What Do Community Resources Tell Us about
Communicating With Primary Care Providers?
• difficult to access needed records and forms
• lack of response to requests for medical records or
prescriptions for service
• spend too much time on seemingly simple tasks
– reaching the appropriate practice staff member,
securing signed forms
• conflicting information regarding level of detail desired in
reports
Primary Care and Mental Health
What is it All about?
AAP Mental Health Task Force
Plan*
Facilitate needed
system change
Incremental
practice change
Build skills
AAP Task Force on Mental Health, June 2010, Pediatrics
EDOPC Key Partners
Advocate Health Care
Healthy Steps for Young
Children Program
Illinois Chapter American
Academy of Pediatric
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EDOPC Goals
• Improve delivery and financing of
preventive health and developmental
services for children birth to three
• Build on existing programs to develop a
range of strategies for primary care
settings
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EDOPC Topics for Training
• Developmental Screening and Referral
• Social and Emotional Development: Screening
Strategies for Primary Care Physicians
• Identifying Postpartum Depression During
Well-Child Visit: Resources for Screening,
Referral,
and Treatment
• Early Autism Detection and Referral
• Domestic Violence Effects on Children:
Detection, Screening and Referral in Primary
Care
• Obesity Prevention in the Early Years
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Additional EDOPC Topics for Training
• Effective Discipline in the Early Years
• Coordinating Care Between EI and the Primary
Care Medical Home Project
• Psychosocial Developmental Screening and
Referral for Children Aged Five to Eight Years
• Coordinating Care Between Early Intervention
and the Primary Care Medical Home
• Bright Futures Guidelines for Health
Supervision (beginning July 2011)
EDOPC Methods
• On site presentations to
entire practice staff and
topic specific community
resources
• Educational Teleconferences
• Hospital Grand Rounds or
Department Meetings
• Web based training
• Technical Assistance –
email, phone, on site
• Local and National
Conferences
EDOPC Training in Illinois
• 1250 primary care providers
• 3200 allied healthcare staff
• 80% of Federally Qualified Health Centers
• 153 private practices
• 30 Residency, Nurse Practitioner, and Physician
Assistant programs
EDOPC Provider Survey
Providers who received intense EDOPC training,
which includes technical assistance, were more
likely to have a higher screening rate than
providers with little or no EDOPC training.
Trained
Little or no training
PPD-59%
PPD-25%
Dev-89%
Dev-69%
SE-37%
SE-17%
Medicaid Data Analysis - 2009
• Rise in percent of well child visits with developmental screen
2002 = 15%
2009 = 32%
• percent of providers conducting at least one developmental screen in a
year increased
2002 = 13%
2009 = 46%
• The percent of EI recipients screened for development by primary care
provider before beginning EI services 1
2002 = 18%
2009 = 54%
So Where Are We Going?
Task Force on Vision in Pediatrics
By the year 2020
Mental health care will
constitute a significant part
of pediatric practice
Why do this?
Research
findings
Unique
Access of
Pediatric PCP
High
prevalence of
mental
health
problems
Mental
health
service
shortage
AAP Task Force on Mental Health*
Transformation of
practice
• New knowledge
and skills
• Payment structures
• Collaborative
relationships
• Office systems and
resource
Greater role for
pediatric PCP in mental
health care
•
•
•
•
•
Prevention
Early recognition
Referral
Treatment
Medical home
enhancement
AAP Task Force on Mental Health, June 2010, Pediatrics
Proposed Mental Health Screening of
Children and Adolescents *
Age 0-5
• Use of validated screening tool for those with abnormal
developmental or autism screening results
• For any child with poor growth, behavioral, psychosocial
concerns
5Adolescence
• Use validated screening instruments for all children in this
age group at health maintenance visits
• Use also at time of family disruption, school problems,
behavioral problem, recurrent somatic complaints etc
Adolescence
• Screen all adolescents for substance abuse at health
maintenance visits
• Other appropriate times
AAP Task Force on Mental Health, June 2010, Pediatrics
Proposed Screening and Surveillance of Family
and Social Environment for Risk Factors*
Update child and family
psychosocial history at each
health maintenance visit
Screen for maternal depression
in the first year of life of the
child or when indicated
*AAP Task Force on Mental Health, June 2010, Pediatrics
Pediatric Primary Care Providers as a
Mental Health Provider?
???
Developing collaborative relationships
Definition of HEALTH/MEDICAL HOME
Care that is:
Accessible
Family-Centered
Comprehensive
Continuous
Coordinated
Compassionate
Culturally-effective
A partnership between primary care physicians/ nurse practitioners and families
Care Coordination is Key
• Through a Medical Home partnership, PCPs
can help the family access and coordinate
–
–
–
–
–
specialty care
educational services
in and out-of-home care
family support
other community services
• PCPs and Community Resources must work
together to coordinate care
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Summary
• Primary care needs to be included in planning for
a system of mental health care
• EDOPC training and technical assistance improves
providers ability to screen, treat, and follow up
with children and make appropriate referrals to
community resources
• A medical home is a partnership to help families
access and coordinate care
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