health care transition cme presentation slides

73
April Barbour, MD Billie Downing, MD Kirsten Hawkins, MD, MPH Peggy McManus, MHS Nathalie Quion, MD Lisa Tuchman, MD PaBence White, MD, MA HEALTH CARE TRANSITION FOR ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS APRIL 26, 2012

Upload: others

Post on 11-May-2022

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

April  Barbour,  MD  Billie  Downing,  MD  Kirsten  Hawkins,  MD,  MPH  Peggy  McManus,  MHS  Nathalie  Quion,  MD  Lisa  Tuchman,  MD  PaBence  White,  MD,  MA            

HEALTH  CARE  TRANSITION  FOR  ADOLESCENTS  AND  YOUNG  ADULTS  

APRIL 26, 2012

Page 2: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Faculty  Disclosure  Informa3on  

•   In  the  past  12  months,  we  have  had  no  relevant  financial  rela3onships  with  the  manufacturer(s)  of  any  commercial  product(s)  and/or  provider(s)  of  commercial  services  discussed  in  this  CME  ac3vity.    

•   We  do  not  intend  to  discuss  an  unapproved/inves3ga3ve  use  of  a  commercial  product/device  in  this  presenta3on.    

Page 3: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Agenda  6:30  -­‐  7:00    Dinner    7:00  -­‐  7:05    Welcome  &  IntroducBons  

     Cyd  Campbell,  MD,  FAAP    7:05  -­‐  7:  25    The  New  AAP/AAFP/ACP  Health  Care  TransiBon                Report:    How  It  Applies  to  Your  PracBce  

       Pa3ence  White,  MD,  MA      7:25  -­‐  7:35    Q&A    7:35  -­‐  8:10        Making  TransiBon  Happen  in  Your  PracBce:  

     Pediatric,  Family  Medicine  and  Internal  Medicine          PerspecBves  — A  Panel  Discussion:          Lisa  Tuchman,  MD  ▪  April  Barbour,  MD          Billie  Downing,  MD  ▪  Kirsten  Hawkins,  MD,  MPH            Nathalie  Quion,  MD  

  8:10  –  8:25    Q&A      8:25–  8:30      Closing  Remarks  &  EvaluaBon  

         Peggy  McManus,  MHS    

Page 4: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Par3cipants  will  be  able  to:    •   Learn  about  the  core  elements  for  implemen3ng  the  new  clinical  

report  and  algorithm  developed  jointly  by  the  AAP/AAFP/ACP  to  improve  health  care  transi3on  for  youth  and  families  

 •   Learn  about  quality  improvement  strategies,  tools,  and  resources  

used  by  pediatric,  family  medicine  and  internal  medicine  prac3ces  par3cipa3ng  in  the  DC  Transi3on  Learning  Collabora3ve  and  how  to  implement  them  in  your  prac3ce      

 •   Become  familiar  with  local  resources  for  transi3on  support    

Learning  Objec3ves  

Page 5: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

The  New  AAP/AAFP/ACP    Health  Care  TransiBon  Report:      How  It  Applies  to  Your  PracBce  

     Pa3ence  White,  MD,  MA  

Page 6: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Opening  QuesBons    About  Your  TransiBon    

•   What  do  you  remember  about  your  adolescent/young  adult  years  and  health  care-­‐  when  did  you  leave  your  pediatrician  and  move  to  an  adult  health  care  provider?  

 

•   Was  your  health  care  con3nuous  or  was  there  a  gap?    

•   Did  you  leave  ac3vely  or  passively?    

Page 7: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Who  Are  CYSHCN?  

“ Children  and  youth  with  special  health  care  needs  are  those  who  have  or  are  at  increased  risk  for  a  chronic  physical,  developmental,  behavioral,  or  emo3onal  condi3on  and  who  also  require  health  and  related  services  of  a  type  or  amount  beyond  that  required  by  children  generally.”  

     

 

Source:  McPherson,  M.,  et  al.  (1998).  A  New  Defini3on  of  Children  with  Special  Health  Care  Needs.  Pediatrics.  102  (1);  137-­‐139.    

Page 8: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Prevalence   DC  (%) U.S.  (%) ProporBon  of  Youth  with  Special  Health  Care  Needs,  Ages  12-­‐17

22%  (8,235)  

18%  (4,581,950)  

  Propor3on  of  YSHCN  with  func3onal  limita3ons 17 24

  Propor3on  of  YSHCN  with  2  or  more  chronic  condi3ons 67 62

 

Propor3on  of  YSHCN  with  emo3onal,  behavioral,  or  developmental  condi3ons  

55   64  

Source:  Na3onal  Survey  of  Children  with  Special  health  Care  Needs,  2009/10  

How  Many  Youth  Need  TransiBon  Planning?  

Page 9: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

What  is  Health  Care  TransiBon?    Transi3on  is  the  deliberate  process  of  moving  seamlessly  from  child-­‐oriented  health  care  to  adult-­‐oriented  health  care.    

Components:  •   Self-­‐Determina3on  •   Person-­‐Centered  Planning  •   Prep  for  Adult  Health  Care  •   Work/Independence    •   Inclusion  in  Community  Life    •   Start  Early    

Page 10: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

WHAT  DO  DATA  TELL  US?  

What  do  youth  say  they    want  in  transiBon?    

Page 11: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Youth  With  DisabiliBes:  Stated  Needs  for  Success  in  Adulthood  

 PRIORITIES:  

1.        Career  development-­‐making  $$$  

2.        Independent  living  skills  

3.        Finding  quality  medical  care-­‐what  to  do  in  an  emergency  

4.        Legal  rights    

5.        Protect  themselves  from  crime    

6.        Obtain  financing  for  school  

Source:  Point  of  Departure,  a  PACER  Center  Publica3on  Fall,  1996  

Page 12: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

WHAT  DO  DATA  TELL  US?  

What  proporBon  of  parents  report  receiving  adequate  transiBon  support  for  their  YSHCN?  

Page 13: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

ProporBon  of  Youth  with  Special  Needs  Who  Receive  Services  Needed  to  Make  TransiBon  

to  Adult  Health  Care       DC  (%) U.S.  (%) Total  YSHCN  meeBng  transiBon  measure

34%  (2,385)  

40%  (1,708,799)  

Gender   Male 28 37   Female 42 44 Race/Ethnicity   Black 31 28   White 51 46   Hispanic NA 25 Insurance   Private  insurance  only 50 50   Public  insurance  only 20 26   Uninsured NA 20 Presence  of  a  medical  home   With  a  medical  home 44 55   Without  a  medical  home 28 29 NA  =  sample  size  too  small  for  reliable  esBmates.

Source:  NS-­‐CSHCN  2009/2010  

Page 14: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

WHAT  DO  DATA  TELL  US?    

How  prepared  are  youth  for  managing  their  care  in  the  adult  health  care  system?    

Page 15: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Internal  Medicine  Nephrologists  (n=35)  Survey Components Percentages

Percent of transitioned patients < 2% in 95% of practices

Transitioned patients came with an introduction 75% Transitioned patients know their meds 45% Transitioned patients know their disease 30% Transitioned patients ask questions 20% Parents of transitioned patients ask questions 69% Transitioned adults believed they had a difficult transition 40%

   Source:  Maria  Ferris,  MD,  PhD,  MPH,  UNC  Kidney  Center  2011  

Page 16: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

What  do  pediatric  and  adult  physicians  say  they  do  and  need  to  assist  YSHCN?  

WHAT  DO  DATA  TELL  US?  

Page 17: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Areas  to  Consider  to  Bridge    the  HCT  Gap:  Provider  Needs/AcBviBes  

Adult  HCP   Pediatric  HCP      •   95%  want  ini3al  and  ongoing  communica3on  

with  previous  providers  •   100%  request  a    medical  history  (wrigen  

summary)  and  disease  info  

•   47%  assist  youth  with  referral  to  adult  physician      •   27%  create  portable  medical  record  •   23%  offer  consulta3ve  support  to  family  or  

internal  medicine  physicians  •   80%  find  it  difficult  to  break  the  bond  with  

youth/family  

•   Youth  ready  to  make  independent  health  decisions  

•   Disease  management  skills  (know  disease/meds/make  appt/refill  prescrip3ons,  etc.)  

•   Youth  guardianship  issues  clarified  

•   84%  of  youth  lack  knowledge  about  condi3on  •   33%    of  pediatricians  discuss  consent  and  

confiden3ally  issues  before  18  •   12%  of  pediatricians  create  Individual  transi3on  

plan  

•   Medical  home    •   Financing  (insurance),  infrastructure  •   Increase  medical  knowledge  of  pediatric  

diseases  •   More  adult  providers  (gen  and  sub)  

•   Medical  home    •   Financing  (insurance),  infrastructure  •   Assist  in  medical  knowledge  of  adult  providers  •   More  adult  providers  (gen  and  sub)  

Source:  DC  Provider  Survey,  AAP  Periodic  Survey,  Annals  Int  Med  Adult  Provider  Survey  

Page 18: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

What  to  do?    Where  to  start?  

Page 19: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Professional  SocieBes  &  Health  Care  TransiBon  

In  the  past  and  currently…    

•   Medical  transi3on  services  provided  by:  Ø  patchwork  of  pediatric  clinics  mostly  in  university  subspecialty  sejng      Ø   less  common  to  have  transi3on  services  in  primary  care  sejng    

•   Na3onal  data  reveal  ligle  progress  made  in  transi3on  from  pediatric  to  adult  health  care  in  last  decade.  

•   4  years  ago-­‐improving  health  care  transi3ons  was  voted  a  “top  10”  AAP  priority  

•   Surveys  of  pediatricians,  family  physicians  and  internists  begin  to  clarify  transi3on  issues  and  reveal  the  need  for  more  informa3on  and  support  re:  transi3on  

Page 20: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

New  Health  Care  TransiBon  Clinical  Report  

What  was  needed:  •   Pediatricians  and  adult  health  care  providers  request  tools  and  concrete  methods/

processes  to  address  barriers  and  improve  care    What  was  developed:  Goal  of  broad  disseminaBon  of  HCT  •   2  years  ago,  AAP/ACP/AAFP  Transi3on  Authoring  Group  established  to  develop  a  

clinical  report  Ø   Prac3cal,  detailed  guidance  (including  a  step-­‐by-­‐step  algorithm)  on  how  to  

plan  and  implement  beger  health  care  transi3ons  for  all  pa3ents  Ø   Integra3ng  transi3on  planning  into  the  medical  home  and  ongoing  chronic  

care  management  Ø   Providing  guidance  for  financial  support  of  HCT  

•   “Suppor3ng  the  Health  Care  Transi3on  from  Adolescence  to  Adulthood  in  the  Medical  Home”  (Pediatrics,  July  2011)  –  clinical  report  jointly  authored  by  the  AAP,  the  AAFP,  and  the  ACP      

Page 21: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Health  Care  TransiBon  Clinical  Report  

•   Targets  all  youth,  beginning  at  age  12  

•   Algorithmic  structure  provides  logical  framework  Ø  Branching  for  youth  with  special  health  care  needs  Ø  Applica3on  for  primary  and  specialty  prac3ces  serving  children  and  adults  with  variety  of  condi3ons  

Ø  Structure  for  training,  con3nuing  educa3on,  &  research  

•   Provides  explicit  prac3ce-­‐based  guidance  for  planning,  decisionmaking,  and  documenta3on  processes  

•   Extends  through  the  transfer  of  care  to  an  adult  medical  home  and  adult  specialists  

Page 22: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides
Page 23: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides
Page 24: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Health  Care  TransiBon  Milestones  (transi3on  visits  from  the  algorithm)  

•   Age  12  –  Youth  and  family  aware  of  the  prac3ce’s  health  care  transi3on  and  transfer  policy  

•   Age  14  –  Health  care  transi3on  planning  ini3ated  

•   Age  16  –  Discussion  of  youth  and  parental  expecta3ons  and  preferences  regarding  adult  health  care  

•   Age  18  –  Transi3on  to  adult  model  of  care  even  if  remain  in  a  pediatric  sejng  before  moving  to  adult  model  of  care  (appropriate  guardianship  issues  addressed  for  cogni3ve  ability)  

•   Age  18-­‐22  –  Transfer  of  care  to  adult  medical  home  and  specialists  

Page 25: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

NaBonal  Health  Care  TransiBon  Center    •   MCHB-­‐funded  resource  center,  called  GotTransi3on?  •   Responsible  for  developing  transi3on  tools  aligned  with  clinical  

report  and  fostering  prac3ce  changes    •   Use  of  Learning  Collabora3ve  (LC)  methodology  used  by  the  

Na3onal  Ini3a3ve  for  Children’s  Healthcare  Quality  (NICHQ)  and  pioneered  by  the  Ins3tute  for  Healthcare  Improvement  (IHI).    Ø  Primary  care  expert  panel  in  DC  led  the  way  developing    

o  LC  charter    o  The  6  core  HCT  elements  based  on  the  algorithm    o  Transi3on  tools    o  HCT  index  for  evalua3on  

Ø  LCs  in  DC,  Denver,  Boston,  NH              

For more information: www.GotTransition.org

Page 26: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

ImplementaBon:  6  Core  Elements    

PreparaBon:  coordinaBon  of  care  •  Crea3on  of  prac3ce  transi<on  policy  (Element  #1)  •  A  registry  to  pilot  the  process  and  track  progress  (Element  #2)  •  A  readiness  skills  checklist  (Element  #3)  

Planning:  part  of  each  adolescent  visit,  clarify  roles  of  parents/youth/providers  •  A  transi3on  ac3on  plan  (Element  #4)  •  A  portable  medical  summary  (Element  #4)  •  Condi3on-­‐specific  “fact  sheets”(Element  #5)  

Transfer:  IdenBficaBon  and  acBve  communicaBon  with  adult  providers  •  Transfer  checklist  (Element  #5)  •  Availability  of  pediatrician  as  consultant  for  new  adult  provider  (Element  #6)  •  Direct  communica3on  with  new  adult  provider  (Element  #6)  

Ø   Phone  conversa3on  Ø   Agreement  on  3ming  of  transfer  Ø   Adult  prac3ce  welcomes  youth  into  prac3ce,  reviews  adult  transi3on  policy  and  

youth  readiness  skills  

Page 27: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Pediatric  Health  Care  TransiBon    Transfer  of  Care  Checklist  

<PaBent  Name>        <Date  of  Birth>   Date  q    Transfer  of  care  policy  discussed  with  youth  and  family  

q    Transfer  of  care  op3ons  discussed  with  youth  and  family  

q    Pediatric  primary  care  prac3ce  confirms  transfer  with  adult  primary  care  prac3ce  

q    Final  youth  readiness  assessment  completed  

q    Transfer  of  care  package  prepared  or  updated  (for  all  youth,  for  YSHCN)  including              portable  medical  summary,  readiness  assessment,  emergency  care  plan,  transi3on  plan              and  medical  condi3on  fact  sheets        

q    Transfer  of  care  package  communicated  to  adult  primary  care  provider  via  best  available              means  (mail,  fax,  email,  electronic  health  informa3on  transfer)  

q    Ini3al  visit  with  new  adult  primary  care  provider  scheduled    

q    Follow-­‐up  communica3on  with  emerging  adult  (and  family  as  appropriate)  by  pediatric              primary  care  team  regarding  comple3on  of  transfer  of  care  and  level  of  sa3sfac3on  with              result    

q    Follow-­‐up  communica3on  with  new  adult  primary  care  team  by  pediatric  primary  care              team  regarding  comple3on  of  transfer  of  care  and  level  of  sa3sfac3on  with  results;                  iden3fy  any  future  plans/needs  for  on-­‐going  communica3on  or  consulta3on    

Page 28: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

<PaBent  Name>          <Date  of  Birth>   Date  

q    Adult  primary  care  team  receives  transfer  request  from  pediatric  primary  care              prac3ce  (  phone  call,  email  or  fax  depending  on  the  complexity  of  the  health  condi3on)  

q    Adult  primary  care  team  provides  “new  young  adult  pa3ent”  informa3on  packet  to            pediatric  primary  care  team  and/or  directly  to  youth  (and  family  as  appropriate)    

q    Pediatric  primary  care  team  confirms  transfer  with  adult  primary  care  team    

q    Transfer  of  care  package  received  by  adult  primary  care  team  via  preferred  or  best              available  means  (mail,  fax,  email,  electronic  records  transfer)  

q    Transfer  of  care  package  reviewed  and  incorporated  into  adult  primary  care  record  (for            all  youth,  for  YSHCN)  

q    Young  adult  new  pa3ent  visit  with  new  adult  primary  care  provider  scheduled  

q    Follow-­‐up  communica3on  from  pediatric  primary  care  team  regarding  comple3on  of              transfer  of  care  and  level  of  sa3sfac3on  with  results;  iden3fy  any  future  plans/needs              for  on-­‐going  communica3on  or  consulta3on    

Pediatric  Health  Care  TransiBon    Transfer  of  Care  Checklist  

Page 29: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Designing  a  LC  for  Health  Care  TransiBon  

•   Unique  features  Ø  Dyads  of  pediatric  and  adult  prac3ces  Ø  Involvement  of  care  coordinators  Ø  Consumer  involvement  Ø  Working  across  organiza3ons  and            systems  to  improve  care    

•   Design  and  3melines  Ø  Teaching  and  learning  strategies  Ø  Incorporate  elements  to  fit  each            prac3ce’s  processes  Ø  Prac<ce,  accountability,  shared  learning  

Page 30: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

DC  as  a  NaBonal  TransiBon  Model    •   First  of  four  LC  to  par3cipate  •   Funded  by  the  DC  Department  of  Health  and  operated  by    

The  Na3onal  Alliance  to  Advance  Adolescent  Health    •   Iden3fied  five  sites  and  teams  from  each  site  with  lead  

MD,  care  coordinator,  and  consumer  Ø   GW  Internal  Medicine  

Dr.  April  Barbour,  Holly  Segal/Lauren  Leatherman,  Nikki  Owens  Ø   Howard  University  Family  Medicine  

Dr.  Billie  Downing,  Luis  Nunez,  Blesilda  Licud,  and  Ashley  Taper  Ø   Children’s  NaBonal  Medical  Center  Adolescent  Health  Center  

Dr.  Lisa  Tuchman,  Theresa  Graves,  and  Angela  Gerst  Ø   Children’s  NaBonal  Medical  Center  Adams  Morgan  Clinic  

Dr.  Nathalie  Quion,  Yan  Orellana,  and  TjaMeika  Davenport      Ø   Georgetown  Adolescent  Clinic  

Dr.  Kirsten  Hawkins,  Maria  Aramburu,  Janet  Osherow,  Drucilla  Howard  

Page 31: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

DC  as  a  NaBonal  TransiBon  Model:    Learning  CollaboraBve  Teams  

Howard University Hospital Team

Children’s National Medical

Center Team Georgetown University Hospital Team

George Washington University Medical Center Team CNMC Children’s Health Center -

Adam’s Morgan Team

Page 32: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Goal  of  Learning  CollaboraBves:  incorporate  the  6  core  elements  into  their  pracBce  processes    

•   Develop    a  wrigen  health  care  transi3on  (privacy  and  consent)  policy  for  families,  pa3ents,  and  staff  

•   Develop  a  transi3on  registry  to  know  which  pa3ents  are  in  the  process  and  tracking  major  steps  in  their  progress  

•   Test  and  use  transi3on  prepara3on  and  planning  tools  Ø   Portable  medical  summary  Ø   Readiness  assessments  Ø   Healthcare  transi3on  plans  Ø   Chronic  condi3on  fact  sheets  Ø   Transfer  checklists  

•   U3lize  an  adult  model  of  care  at  18  yrs  (if  cogni3vely  appropriate)    •   Transfer  prepared  youth  and  family  to  adult  medical  homes      

Page 33: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

EvaluaBon:    Medical  Home  Health  Care  TransiBon  Index    

•   Indicator  #1:  Office  health  care  transi3on  (privacy  and  consent)  policy    

•   Indicator  #2:  Staff  and  provider  HCT  knowledge  and  skills  and  coordina3on  of  care    

•   Indicator  #3:  Iden3fica3on  of  transi3oning  youth/young  adults  (registries)  

•   Indicator  #4:  Transi3on  prepara3on  (readiness  assessments)  

•   Indicator  #5:  Transi3on  planning  (transi3on  plans)  

•   Indicator  #6:  Transfer  of  care  or  transi3on  to  adult  model  of  care  Ø  Assessments  for  pediatric  and  adult  prac3ces  Ø  Each  HCT  team  self  assess  at  baseline  and  9  months  Ø  4  levels  for  each  indictor  and  2  op3ons  (par3al  or  complete)  within  each  indicator    

     

Page 34: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

0  

1  

2  

3  

4  

5  

6  

7  

8  

1   2   3   4   5   6  

Scores  

Core  Elements    

Pre  LC,  Feb.  2011  

Post  LC,  Oct.  2011  

Pre  and  Post  HCT  Index  Scores  ―  DC  

Page 35: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Moving  Forward:  Next  Steps  Build  sustained  transi3on  system  improvements  and  accelerate  the  adop3on  of  best  prac3ces  in  HCT  in  DC.    

•   Disseminate  and  imbed  transi3on  processes  into  pediatric  and  adult  medical  home  prac3ces  and  specialty  clinics  through  training,  coaching,  and  dissemina3on  of  transi3on  tools  

•   Expand  transi3on  training  opportuni3es  for  health  care  professionals    •   Work  with  public  and  private  insurers  and  health  plans  on:    

Ø  outreach  and  educa3on  to  families  and  youth  Ø  care  management  support  Ø  payment  and  quality  incen3ves  for  health  care  providers  

•   Develop  youth  and  parent  leadership  on  transi3on  and  educa3on  opportuni3es  to  build  awareness    

•   Complete  more  HCT  research  to  find  most  effec3ve  approaches  for  beger  outcomes    

 

Page 36: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Thank  You  [email protected]  

Page 37: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Panel  Discussion  Core  Element  #  1  Lisa  Tuchman,  MD:  Pediatric  HCT  Policy    April  Barbour,  MD:  Adult  HCT  Policy  –  Privacy  &  Consent    

Core  Element  #  2,  3  Billie  Downing,  MD:  Registry  &  Readiness  Assessment    

Core  Element  #  4  Kirsten  Hawkins,  MD,  MPH:  Portable  Medical  Summary    

Core  Elements  #  3,  4,  5,  6  Nathalie  Quion,  MD:  Care  Coordina3on    

Facilitator:  PaBence  White,  MD,  MA              

Page 38: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Core  Element  #1:  Pediatric  HCT  Policy  

Lisa  Tuchman,  MD,  MPH  Assistant  Professor  of  Pediatrics  

Center  for  Clinical  and  Community  Research  Division  of  Adolescent  and  Young  Adult  Medicine  

Page 39: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Policy:  Why  is  it  important?  

•   Building  consensus    •   Addressing  fairness    •   Mee3ng  expecta3ons    •   Allowing  for  planning  and  systema3c  processes-­‐  hard  3meline  

Page 40: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Policy    at  CNMC’s  Adolescent  Clinic  

Ø   The  Adolescent  Health  Center  is  commiged  to  helping  all  of  our  pa3ents  make  a  smooth  transi3on  from  pediatric  to  adult  health  care.    

Ø   This  process  requires  working  with  you  to  plan  and  prepare  your  transi3on  star3ng  around  your  14th  birthday.      

Ø   According  to  hospital  policy,  all  pa3ents  are  expected  to  transi3on  from  CNMC  to  an  adult  primary  care  medical  home  by  age  22  years.      

Ø   We  will  provide  you  with  ongoing  resources  to  help  you  to  take  increasing  responsibility  for  your  own  health  care  to  the  best  of  your  abili3es.    

Ø   We  are  also  able  to  help  you  select  a  medical  provider  that  par3cipates  with  your  insurance,  to  organize  your  medical  records,  and  to  support  all  other  aspects  of  planning  for  this  important  transi3on  as  part                      of  lifelong  prepara3on  for  a  successful  and  well  adult  life.  

Page 41: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Policy:    ImplementaBon  Strategies  

•   Sat  down  as  a  team  (MD,  RN,  consumer)  to  generate  a  list  of  things  important  to  include    

•   Wrote  a  drau  collabora3vely  (template)  •   Shared  with  care  team  members:  mul3ple  providers,  administrators,  pa3ents,  families  Ø  Revised  several  3mes  based  on  feedback  

•   Came  to  consensus  that  it  was  as  good  as  we  could  make  it  

•   Posted  it  on  wai3ng  room  check-­‐in  windows  Ø  Packets  at  front  desk,  provider  conference  room    

Page 42: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Policy:  Challenges  

•   Gejng  team  consensus,  especially  regarding  age  limits  

•   Gejng  honest,  thoughvul  and  construc3ve  feedback  (Youth/Parents)  Ø  Asking  the  right  way/the  right  ques3ons  

•   Pos3ng  and  having  it  distributed  systema3cally  

•   Gejng  the  team  to  prac3ce  by  the  policy    

 

Page 43: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Policy:  Benefits  

•   Families  who  reviewed  the  pilot  policy  said  they  were  grateful  for  the  informa3on    Ø  Many  wished  they’d  had  it  when  their  older  children  were  transi3oning  

       

•   Now  everyone  (youth/parents/providers)  understands:  Ø  What  is  expected  in  the  transi3on  process  Ø  Over  what  3me  frame  the  process  will  occur  

Page 44: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Core  Element  #1:    Adult  Privacy  and  Consent  Policy  

           

April  Barbour  MD,  MPH,  FACP  Associate  Professor  of  Medicine  

Program  Director,  Primary  Care  Residency  Division  Director,  General  Internal  Medicine  

Department  of  Medicine  George  Washington  University  

Page 45: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Privacy  and  Consent  Policy:  Why  is  it  important?  

•   Consistent  with  the  law  •   Clarifies  roles  of  pa3ents  and  parents  in  decision-­‐making  

•   Creates  a  safe  and  comfortable  environment  for  those  18  and  over  to  discuss  private  concerns  regarding  their  health  

•   Builds  pa3ent  competencies  and  pa3ent-­‐centeredness  

•   Ensures  consistency  within  the  prac3ce  

Page 46: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Privacy  and  Consent    at  GW’s  Internal  Medicine  Clinic  

The  Medical  Faculty  Associates  welcomes  all  youth  and  young  adults  including  those  with  chronic  pediatric  condi3ons  and  complex  health  care  needs.  We  provide  an  adult  model  of  care  for  all  of  our  pa3ents  18  years  and  older  with  modifica3ons  as  needed  depending  on  the  pa3ent’s  intellectual  ability  and  guardianship  status.  In  order  to  make  this  a  smooth  transi3on,  we  ask  that  all  new  young  adult  pa3ents  provide  a  portable  medical  summary  or  copies  of  their  medical  records  and  in  the  case  of  pa3ents  with  complex  chronic  condi3ons,  a  current  care  plan.  We  will  also  make  every  effort  to  coordinate  the  transfer  of  care  with  our  new  pa3ent’s  prior  medical  home  including  direct  communica3on  with  the  pediatric  medical  home  team,  and  assistance  with  the  transfer  of  specialty  care  to  adult  specialists  as  needed.    (cont’d  on  next)  

               

Page 47: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Privacy  and  Consent    at  GW’s  Internal  Medicine  Clinic  

Our  approach  to  the  care  of  young  adults  age  18  and  older  meets  HIPAA  and  state  privacy  and  consent  requirements  making  the  young  adult  the  sole  decision-­‐maker  about  care  and  about  the  sharing  of  personal  health  informa3on.  This  means  that  we  do  not  discuss  any  aspect  of  your  care  with  anyone  else  unless  you  specifically  ask  that  we  do.  We  understand  that  many  people  involve  family  and  close  friends  in  their  health  care  decisions  and  would  like  their  physician  to  share  informa3on  with  those  close  to  them.  To  allow  others  to  be  involved  in  your  healthcare  decisions  requires  legal  authority  through  the  signed  consent  of  the  young  adult  which  we  have  in  clinic.  For  those  that  cannot  provide  consent,  we  would  need  a  legally  valid  custodial  care  or  power  of  agorney  documenta3on,  or  an  adjudicated  guardianship  arrangement.          

     

Page 48: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Privacy  and  Consent  Policy:  ImplementaBon  Strategies  

•   Developed  and  revised  with  team  of  MD,  RN,  and  young  adult  consumer  

•   Shared  with  other  clinic  staff  

•   Revised  

•   Reviewed  by  legal  staff  

•   Posted  

Page 49: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Privacy  and  Consent  Policy:  Challenges  

•   Difficul3es  when  consent,  privacy,  and  guardianship  issues  have  not  been  discussed  prior  to  age  18  

•   Many  parents  unaware  of  HIPAA  requirements  and  want  to  be  present  during  visit  

•   Assessing  pa3ent’s  decision-­‐making  ability  

Page 50: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Privacy  and  Consent  Policy:  Benefits  

•   Pa3ent  Sa3sfac3on  Ø  Clear  expecta3ons  

•   Provider  Sa3sfac3on  Ø  Able  to  focus  interven3ons  

•   Improved  adherence  and  outcomes  

Page 51: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

             

 

Core  Elements  #2  and  3:  TransiBon  Registry  and    Readiness  Assessment  

 Billie  Downing,  MD,  FAAFP  

Assistant  Professor  Howard  University  Hospital  

   

Page 52: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Registry:  Why  is  it  important?  

•   Crea3on  of  a  paper  or  electronic  database  used  to  document/track  youth  with  special  health  care  needs  as  they  move  through  the  transi3on  process  

•   Systema3cally  iden3fies  youth  and  young  adult  pa3ents  needing  self-­‐care  management  assistance  and  planning  for  an  adult  model  of  care  

•   Helps  to  individualize  pa3ent  visits  consistent  with  transi3on  clinical  recommenda3ons    

Page 53: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Registry    at  Howard’s  Family  Medicine  Clinic:  

ImplementaBon  Strategies  •   Iden3fied  youth  ages  12-­‐17  and  young  adults  ages  18-­‐26  to  populate  the  registry  

•   Iden3fied  relevant  categories  for  the  registries  Ø  Name,  DOB,  Diagnoses,  Severity,  HSCSN,  PCP,  Severity,  Contact  Date,  Last  Seen,  Next  Contact,  Transi3on  Policy  (youth  and  young  adult),  Transi3on  Visit,  Readiness  Assessment,  Ac3on  Plan  

•   Physician  populated/popula3ng  the  registries  and  tracking  progress  

Page 54: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

 TransiBon  Registry:  Challenges  

•   Moving  from  a  paper  version  to  electronic  version  

•   Informa3on  to  populate  registry  from  different  sources    

•   Imbedding  the  registry  func3ons  and  popula3on  management  into  ongoing  clinical  processes  with  assistance  from  primary  care  team  

•   Using  the  registry  as  a  dynamic  tool  and  upda3ng  it  

   

Page 55: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Registry:  Benefits  

•   Iden3fies  youth  and  young  adults  in  prac3ce  and  documents  their  transi3on  status  especially  for  a  pilot  transi3on  effort  in  the  prac3ce  

•   Organizes  youth/young  adults  in  your  prac3ce  in  a  database  and  iden3fies  their  needs  and  affords  the  opportunity  for  quality  assurance  projects  

•   Ensures  youth/families  receive  recommended  transi3on  support  services  

•   Helps  to  proac3vely  iden3fy  pa3ents  needing  transi3on  support  

Page 56: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Readiness  Assessment:  Why  is  it  important?  

•   Evaluate  youth  and  young  adults’  current  healthcare  knowledge  base  and  skills  and  iden3fy  areas  that  need  further  educa3on  

•   Youth/young  adults  and  parents  learn  more  about  managing  their  condi3on  and  becoming  ready  for  an  adult  model  of  care  

•   Everyone  is  informed  about  what’s  to  come  

•   Providers  and  families  are  able  to  work  together  with  their  provider  to  gain  the  necessary  skills    

Page 57: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

•   Readiness  assessments  for  youth  and  for  parents  

•   21  item  scale:  Ø  Ques3ons  ask  about  understanding  of  health  needs  or  disability,  ability  to  make  appointments/get  prescrip3on  refills,  knowledge  of  what  to  do  in  emergency,  and  a  general  readiness  scale  

•   Pa3ent  answers  ques3ons  rated  as:  “Yes  I  do  this;  I  want  to  do  this;  I  need  to  learn  to  do  this;  Someone  else  will  have  to  do  this  for  me”  

TransiBon  Readiness  Assessment    at  Howard’s  Family  Medicine  Clinic:  

ImplementaBon  Strategies  

Page 58: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Readiness  Assessment: Challenges  

•   Addressing  range  of  pa3ent  educa3on  levels  into  youth  and  parent  assessment  that  can  be  used  by  en3re  prac3ce  

•   Iden3fying  prac3ce  process  for  how  all  youth/young  adults    and  parents  receive  and  fill  out  assessment  

•   How  to  incorporate  readiness  assessment  into  transi3on  plan  and  into  visit  discussions/follow-­‐up  

•   How  to  incorporate  readiness  assessment  into  EMR  so  it  can  be  updated  

•   Have  available  updated  readiness  assessment  for  transfer  packet  for  adult  provider  

•   Time  constraints    

Page 59: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

TransiBon  Readiness  Assessment: Benefits  

•   Solicits  greater  involvement  of  pa3ents/families  in  understanding  their  healthcare  readiness  

•   Allows  the  prac33oner  to  assess  the  pa3ents’  transi3on  status  

•   Allows  the  prac33oner  to  make  a  plan  based  on  the  assessment  

•   Ul3mately,  improves  the  management  of  chronic  condi3on  and  the  independence  of  youth/young  adults  in  their  own  care  

Page 60: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Core  Elements  #4:    Portable  Medical  Summary  Kirsten  Hawkins,  MD,  MPH,  FAAP  

Chief,  Sec3on  of  Adolescent  Medicine  Georgetown  University  

Page 61: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Portable  Medical  Summary:    Why  is  it  important?  

•   Ensures  medical  informa3on  is  up-­‐to-­‐date  

•   Ability  to  consolidate  and  communicate  with  clear  informa3on  to  be  shared  via  Ø  Email  Ø  Fax  Ø  Phone  Ø  In  person  Ø  Across  health  systems  (e.g.  HSCSN,  DDS,  DMH)  

•   Facilitates  transi3on  of  care  from  pediatric/adolescent  to  adult  health  care  prac3ces  

Page 62: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Portable  Medical  Summary      at  Georgetown’s  Adolescent  Clinic:  

ImplementaBon  Strategies  •   Components  of  portable  medical  summary  

Ø   Basic  pa3ent  personal  and  contact  informa3on  Ø  Medical  providers,  emergency  contacts  Ø   Diagnosis  Ø   Per3nent  history  Ø   Current  medica3ons,  equipment  needs  Ø   Allergies  Ø   Immuniza3ons  Ø   Special  notes  —  guardianship  status,  communica3on  preferences  

•   Share  with  young  adult/family  (before  age  18)  &  providers  

•   Developed  with  our  ins3tu3on’s  HIT  team  to  generate  from  EMR  

Page 63: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Portable  Medical  Summary:      Challenges  

•   Time-­‐consuming  to  create  in  EMR  

•   Georgetown’s  current  EMR  version:  Ø  Automa3cally  updates  from  current  visit  Ø  Requires  upda3ng  problem,  medica3on  and  allergy  lists  separately  

•   Providers  need  training  to  locate  and  generate  portable  medical  summary  

•   Dissemina3on  to  and  u3liza3on  by  other  providers  within  the  system  

Page 64: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Portable  Medical  Summary:      Benefits  

•   Improves  understanding  and  self-­‐care  management  

•   Prevents  duplica3on  of  tests/procedures  •   Youth/young  adults/parents  don’t  have  to  repeat      

informa3on  to  mul3ple  providers  

•   Improves  pa3ent  safety  

•   Ensures  adult  providers  have  accurate  informa3on  

Page 65: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Core  Elements  #3,  4,  5,  6:    Care  CoordinaBon  Nathalie  Quion,  MD  

Associate  Medical  Director  Children’s  Health  Center,  NW  

Children’s  Na3onal  Medical  Center  

Page 66: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Care  CoordinaBon:    Why  is  it  important?  

•   Helps  families  cope  with  feelings/health  care  responsibili3es  in  moving  to  a  new  system  and  new  providers  

•   Helps  prac3ce  to  be  more  pa3ent  and  family-­‐centered  •   Builds  a  team-­‐based  approach  to  care  •   Creates  efficiencies  •   Helps  to  link  to  other  health  and  related  services  •   Reinforces  the  transi3on  process  within  the  prac3ce    

Ø   Going  over  HCT  policy  Ø   Upda3ng  registry    Ø   Assis3ng  with  readiness  assessments    Ø   Clarifying  transi3on  plan    Ø   Gathering  key  informa3on  for  transfer  Ø   Communica3ng  with  the  adult  care  coordinator/provider  Ø   Being  available  for  ques3ons  from  adult  providers  auer  youth  transfers  

Page 67: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Who  Are  Parent  Navigators?  •   Parent  navigators  provide  care  coordina3on  support      •   The  Parent  Navigator  Program    

Ø   Began  in  2009  at  Children’s  Na3onal  Medical  Center  in  the  Goldberg  Center  for  Community  and  Pediatric  Health    

Ø   Built  upon  families’  need  for    o   peer  to  peer  support  o   community  resources  o   guidance  in  naviga3ng  services  

•   A  Parent  Navigator        Ø   Is  a  parent  of  a  child  with  special  health  care  needs  Ø   Is  knowledgeable  about  developmental  disabili3es  and  the  health  

care  delivery  system    Ø   Imparts  their  knowledge  to  other  families  of  children  with  special  

health  care  needs  

 

Page 68: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Parent  Navigators/Care  Coordinators:  ImplementaBon  Strategies  

•   Voice  of  parents  and  families  in    Ø   Crea3ng  the  prac3ce  transi3on  policy    Ø   Implemen3ng  prac3ce  processes  to  facilitate  transi3on  

•   Help  maintain  the  transi3on  registry    •   Support  parents  and  families  emo3onally  and  logis3cally  

through  the  transi3on  process  •   Maintain  a  library  of  community  resources  regarding  

transi3on  •   Discusses  the  readiness  assessment  and  transi3on  plan  

progress  •   Coordinates  the  transfer  of  informa3on  to  adult  providers  

Page 69: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Care  Coordinators:  Challenges  

•   Sustained  funding  for  care  coordina3on  (NCQA  medical  home  designa3on)  

•   Ini3al  and  ongoing  training  

•   Defini3on  of  clear  roles  and  func3ons  in  job  descrip3on  related  to  transi3on    

Page 70: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Care  Coordinators:  Benefits  •   Families  are  more  sa3sfied  with  their  visits    

•   Parents  seeing  the  value  of  having  teens,  if  able,  take  on  more  responsibility  for  their  own  care  

•   Planning  for  transi3on  early  is  much  beger  than  wai3ng  3ll  the  last  minute  for  everyone    

•   The  earlier  that  families  and  youth  learn  about  the  transi3on  process,  the  more  prepared  they  feel  

•   Comfort  in  having  an  organized  transfer  process  in  place  and  knowing  that  families  feel  more  confident  that  informa3on/needs  of  their  child  have  been  adequately  communicated  to  the  adult  provider  

Page 71: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

•   Health  Services  for  Children  with  Special  Needs,  Inc.  •   DC  Learning  Collabora3ve  Teams  

•   DC  Department  of  Health  •   Local  Chapters  of  the  American  Academy  of  Pediatrics,  American  Academy  of  Family  Physicians,                                                                    &  American  College  of  Physicians    

•   Georgetown  University  School  of  Nursing  and  Health  Studies  •   DC  Chapter  of  the  Na3onal  Associa3on  of  Social  Workers  •   Transi3on  CME  Planning  Commigee  

Thank  you  to  everyone  who  made  this  evening  a  success!  

Page 72: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

For  more  informa3on  on  health  care  transi3on  resources  or  training,  please  contact:  

[email protected]  [email protected]  

 

Page 73: Health Care Transition CME Presentation Slides

Please  remember  to  fill  out  an  evalua3on  form  prior  to  leaving.