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Improving Health Care for Kids in Child Welfare Programs

Children in state protective service programs face any number of challenges, not the least of which is getting good health care.

Children in state protective service programs face any number of challenges, not the least of which is getting good health care. Indeed, according to the Center for Health Care Strategies (CHCS), between 2007 and 2009, "not a single child welfare agency in the nation achieved substantial conformity with the federal Child and Family Services Review, which assesses the extent to which child welfare agencies meet standards [regarding a child's health and well-being]."
Those years happen to be the time period CHCS worked with nine managed care organizations (MCOs) nationwide to identify and pilot ways to improve the process and outcomes of health care for children and youth in the child welfare system. These collaborations, funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, were compiled in a publication called Improving Outcomes for Children in Child Welfare: A Medicaid Managed Care Toolkit. CHCS calls it a resource "for state policymakers, MCOs, and others considering effective quality improvement approaches for a small but significantly high-need subset of the Medicaid child population."

That population includes about half a million kids -- "only about 3 percent of the overall Medicaid child population, but their expenditures are huge and extremely disproportionate," says Kamala Allen, director of child health quality and vice president for program operations at CHCS, and the toolkit's lead author.

Almost all of the kids entering child welfare have physical health problems, and more than half of them have two or more chronic conditions. About half of them also have significant emotional and behavioral health conditions as well. With the constant disruptions and fluctuations in their living situations and caregivers, the coordination and consistency needed to deliver effective health care for these kids is severely challenged.

Allen's group selected nine health plans and grouped them into three areas targeted for improvement: access to care, coordination of care and appropriate use of psychotropic prescriptions. "We supplied the overarching goal -- improve QI [quality] -- and their charge was to look at their data and pick and refine their specific goals," Allen says. Over the three-year period, CHCS provided technical assistance, regular phone calls and held quarterly meetings to help the plans customize their approaches to suit their membership's needs.

Here's what each plan accomplished -- or didn't::

"One of [the] themes in all our research was that success came from the ability to establish partnerships and trust between the health plan and welfare agency," Allen reports. Indeed, two plans that didn't "get traction," CareOregon and Health Net of California (not featured in the report), couldn't get buy-in from stakeholders.

There are two important takeaways, Allen says. First, health care for kids in foster care can be improved significantly, especially when effective partnerships between child welfare agencies are established and nurtured. Also, change takes time. "This research took three years," she says.

David Levine
27 March 20123

http://www.governing.com/topics/health-human-services/col-improving-health-care-kids-child-welfare-programs.html

 

 


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