1 / 12

The Childhood Asthma Initiative

The Childhood Asthma Initiative. The Impact of Chronic Care Coordination on Young Children (Age 0 to 5) with Asthma A Statewide Evaluation of the California Community Asthma Intervention David Núñez, MD, MPH Mina Lai, MPH Toshi Hayashi, PhD Pradeep Gidwani, MD, MPH. Asthma Statistics.

Download Presentation

The Childhood Asthma Initiative

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Childhood Asthma Initiative The Impact of Chronic Care Coordination on Young Children (Age 0 to 5) with Asthma A Statewide Evaluation of the California Community Asthma Intervention David Núñez, MD, MPH Mina Lai, MPH Toshi Hayashi, PhD Pradeep Gidwani, MD, MPH

  2. Asthma Statistics • Asthma affects 9 million children in the U.S. • Asthma accounts for 14.7 million missed school days and 11.8 million missed work days annually • In 2002, 4,261 deaths due to asthma; 187 children under 18 • $14 billion in asthma-related healthcare each year • 1.9 million asthma-related visits to hospital emergency departments in 2002; 727,000 for children under 18 • Children aged 0 to 4 years have the highest rates of hospitalization and ED visits for asthma

  3. Childhood Asthma Initiative First Five California established the Childhood Asthma Initiative in 2000 with Proposition 10 (tobacco tax): • For children with asthma <5 years old • In communities with greatest asthma disparities • Enrollees: 72% Latino, 14% African American, 5% Caucasian, 4% Asian/PI, 5% other

  4. Goals • Improve quality of life for children and their families • Increase access to quality health care • Decrease asthma morbidity and mortality • Decrease ER and hospitalization visits

  5. Social-Medical Model of Care

  6. Program Components • Community asthma coalitions • Asthma treatment services • Outpatient clinic-based services • Community intervention services • Asthma coordinator services

  7. AC Services Provided • Basic asthma education • Assess home environment & assist in implementing environmental control measures • Instruct on proper use of medications/devices • Reinforce asthma management plan • Refer to community resources • Refer to MediCal/Healthy Families/California Kids • Coordinate care with health care providers • Coordinate care with child care providers

  8. Evaluation • Pre-interview and post-interview with parents or caregivers • 1,920 out of 2,460 total enrollees had 2 interviews or more • Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel chi-square test used for analysis

  9. Evaluation (cont.) Outcome measures include: • Possession of a written asthma management plan • Hospitalizations • Emergency room visits • Childcare/preschool days, work days missed • Asthma symptoms • Quality of Life

  10. Outcome Measures

  11. Care Coordination In the Home: • Use asthma coordinators • Provide in-home environmental assessment and environmental control supplies In the Community: • Collaborate with other community asthma programs, policymakers, organizations Linking the clinic, home and community: • Consistent education • Consistent communication • Consistent written asthma action plan

  12. Why does it work? • Improves communication • Addresses cultural competency • Enables parents to be more active in child’s care • Provides social support for the family and asthmatic child • Streamlines delivery of health care services

More Related