1 / 24

Increasing Screening in the Private Sector Task Force

Increasing Screening in the Private Sector Task Force. Gale R Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP Medical Director Epidemiology and Surveillance and STD & TB Control Erie County Department of Health Buffalo, New York November 1, 2006. Adolescent STI Services: Challenges and Opportunities.

Download Presentation

Increasing Screening in the Private Sector Task Force

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. Increasing Screening in the Private Sector Task Force Gale R Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP Medical Director Epidemiology and Surveillance and STD & TB Control Erie County Department of Health Buffalo, New York November 1, 2006

  2. Adolescent STI Services:Challenges and Opportunities • Health systems level • Provider level • Patient (adolescent) level

  3. Adolescent STI Services:Challenges and Opportunities Systems Level

  4. Systems Level: Opportunities • New opportunities for routine non-invasive STI testing • Urine nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs) for STIs • New Pap smear guidelines – 1st Pap at 3 years after start sex or at 21 years old • Chlamydia testing sexually active 16-25 year old females is HEDIS measure

  5. Systems Level: Opportunities • All 50 states and D.C. have laws allowing minors right to consent for STI testing and treatment • 30 states include HIV testing and treatment in STI services to which minors may consent • Federal funding for STI testing and care

  6. New York State Minors Reproductive Rights Law • A minor (person <18 yrs), may be counseled, tested and treated for STIs without a parent or guardian's consent, as long as the minor understands the risks and benefits of the proposed and alternative treatments. • “Information about STIs cannot be released to parents or guardians without the patient’s permission.”

  7. Systems Level: Challenges NYS Insurance Law Section 3234 • Mandates that health insurance companies provide to their members/subscribers an explanation of benefits (EOB) statement following a filed claim under any policy providing hospital or medical expense benefits (Circular Letter No. 7, March 24, 2005). • EOB must contain information about the date, cost and scope of health care services received. • no exception relating to the age of the member receiving the service or the nature of that service.

  8. Systems Level: Challenges$$$$$$$$ • Adolescent age group most likely to be uninsured • Copayments may be barrier for youth receiving care • How to bill for “confidential” health care services? • Explanation of Benefits may result in disclosure to parent • Difficult to bill for sexual health services • More time in visit not reimbursed • Cannot bill for “first” pelvic exam

  9. Systems Level: ChallengesAccess/Availability • Health plans may not offer urine STI NAAT tests • Many providers do not offer STI services • Limited time available for health care visit • Limited provider office hours • Adolescent access to transportation

  10. Adolescent STI Services: Challenges and Opportunities Provider Level

  11. Provider Level: Knowledge • Not aware of non-invasive STI test options • new urine chlamydia NAATs • New Pap test guidelines • Unfamiliar with minors’ rights to consent for STI care • Lack of STI clinical training • Unclear how to bill for confidential STI services

  12. Provider Level: Skill • Many not skilled or comfortable offering confidential sexual health services to adolescents • Performing an “atraumatic parentectomy” • Discussing sexual health, including sexual activity information

  13. Provider Level: Beliefs • Assume that chlamydia is not a health problem in their adolescent patient population • Low priority and lack of time • Perceive inadequate reimbursement and financial disincentives for providing sexual health services

  14. Adolescent STI Services: Challenges and Opportunities Adolescent Patient Level

  15. Patient Level: Knowledge • Teens unaware of need for preventive health care services • Lack of knowledge regarding STIs • Most have no symptoms • Usually need a test to identify infection

  16. Patient Level: Beliefs • Falsely perceive low STI-risk • stigma • Perceive primary care provider does not want to address sexual health needs • Health care is a low priority • Believe cannot receive confidential services

  17. Is this hopeless????

  18. Providing Confidential Care for Adolescent Healthcare in Primary Care Settings A Region II Infertility Prevention Project Demonstration Project Partnership with the Foundation for Healthy Living

  19. The Foundation For Health Living (FHL), Albany, NY • Non-profit, 501(c)3 health services and research foundation • Mission to increase and disseminate knowledge about health care and improve health of NYS residents. • Affiliated with HealthNow New York, Inc. • Blue Cross Blue Shield subsidiary • A leading NYS health plan • Serves members from over 53 counties in Upstate NY

  20. Providing Confidentiality for Adolescent Health Care: A Demonstration Project • Develop a consensus statement on adolescent confidentiality in health care in private practice settings • Develop a set of recommendations for the NYSDOH and NYS Insurance Department to address gaps in adolescent confidentiality in the provision of STI-related care for commercially insured clients in private practice settings.

  21. Providing Confidentiality for Adolescent Health CareAdvisory Work Group • Comprised of adolescent health care stakeholders • NYSDOH • New York State Insurance Department • health plans • prominent pediatricians • adolescent health physicians

  22. PCAHC Demonstration Project Objectives • To better understand the need for confidential adolescent health care • Identify barriers to confidential adolescent health care • Review the current legal and regulatory state as it pertains to confidential adolescent health care • Propose a series of recommendations for short and long term solutions to remove barriers • Collate and disseminate findings from proceedings. • Wherever possible, facilitate translation of outcomes and products for use throughout the nation.

  23. PCAHC Demonstration Project Activities • Create an advisory work group of medical, health and policy experts • Identify national experts who will help inform workgroup activities • Convene 2 PCAHC meetings • Stakeholders will convene meetings with local stakeholders to vet recommendations • Review the NYS Reproductive Minor’s Right’s Law • Review reproductive health recommendations from professional medical societies, adolescent health providers and advocacy organizations • Consider the unique barriers related to the provision of confidential reproductive health services for commercially insured adolescents • Assess model provider-patient confidentiality tools across the country • Consider educational interventions and materials tailored to health care providers, parents and adolescents

  24. PCAHC Demonstration Project Outcomes • Develop consensus statement on adolescent confidentiality in health care • Provide recommendations to NYSDOH and Insurance Department to address gaps in adolescent confidentiality • Publish and disseminate findings, lessons learned and recommendations, emphasizing both local and national implications. • Conduct assessment among identified health plans to determine if they made or plan to make any changes related to the provision of confidential STD-related care as a result of demonstration project recommendations.

More Related