Transcript Slide 1

Health of Australian
Children in Out of Home
Care: Needs and Carer
Recognition
Melissa Kaltner
Senior Research Officer
Child Advocacy Service
Royal Children’s Hospital, Brisbane
Study Background
• Child Advocacy Service: Our role
• Initial study into health needs of children in outof-home care
• Presentation Overview:
–
–
–
–
–
Brief literature review
Methodology of study
Results
Implications
Further research
Health Needs of Australian Children in Care
• Children in out-of-home care documented
to have high health needs
– International Studies:
• 92% at least one health issue (Chernoff et al, 1994)
– Australian children in care
• 3% had no identified health problems
• Higher rates of emotional and behavioural
problems, vision problems, hearing loss, speech
difficulty and poor immunisation rates as
compared to general child population (Nathanson &
Tzioumi, 2007)
Carer Recognition of Health Needs
• Carers well placed to identify health need
– In areas with no mandatory health screen
responsibility with carer to identify need
– Studies suggest carers desire:
• More health-related training
• Improved communication
• Improved access to medical records
(Mayers Pasztor et al., 2006)
– Carers’ abilities in recognition of health need
unclear
Current Study
• Examine health need in Qld children in out-ofhome care
– Contrast with NSW findings from Nathanson &
Tzioumi (2007)
• Examine foster carer’s perception of health
need in contrast to need established via
paediatric health assessment
• Methodology:
– Study reviewing Child Health Passports completed by
Child Advocacy Service 2006 – 2007 (n = 63)
Results- Health Need Perception
• Over half (55%) of carers listed either no health concern
or one concern only for the child at presentation
Concern Type
%
Behaviour
25
Speech and language
16
Developmental
14
Dental
11
Hearing
8
Specific ADHD
6
Respiratory
6
Immunisation
5
Learning difficulty
5
Results- Referrals
• 70% of children required multiple (two or
more) referrals to varying services
Number of
Referrals
%
0
5
1
25
2
30
3
18
4
14
5
8
Results- Referrals
Child Health Referrals
QLD (%)
Paediatrician follow-up (41%)
Counselling (30%)
Audiology (26%)
Dental (21%)
Speech pathology (21%)
* Nathanson & Tzioumi, 2007
NSW*(%)
Dental (71%)
Speech therapy (34%)
Counselling (29%)
Developmental asses.
(26%)
General paediatrician
(25%)
Results- Immunisation
• Disadvantage in preventative health care
utilisation
– 68% of children fully immunised
• Similar rate to the 61% reported in NSW (Nathanson &
Tzioumi, 2007)
– General Queensland child population:
• 87 percent of children fully immunised at their 5th
birthday (ACIR, 2008)
Implications
• High level of health need and poor
preventative health utilisation
• Ability of carer to meet high numbers of
referrals, given child load per carer
– 1.9:1 children to approved carer ratio
– 30% carers with 3+ children
 centralised health service delivery
Implications
• Carer recognition of health issues
– need for health education for carers and child
protection staff
• Necessity of comprehensive,
multidisciplinary health screens for all
children in care
– Follow-up necessary to ensure referrals met
Long-term Outcomes for Health Screening
Relative odds ratios of healthcare service utilisation for Illinois
children in care vs. children receiving Medicaid (Jaudes et al., 2010)
Medicaid
Emergency Room
Presentation
Children in Care
Dental Visit/Yr
Physician Visit/Yr
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
Nb. Odds ratios controlled for gender, ethnicity, age and region of state
*All significant at p < .0001.
4
4.5
Acknowledgments
• Royal Children’s Hospital Foundation Brisbane
• Co-author: Karin Rissel, CN & CPLO, CAS
Contact: [email protected]