Health System Change Is Goal of New Foundation Grants
PALO ALTO – Six grants recently awarded by the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health address a breadth of issues aimed at improving the health care systems that serve children with special health care needs and their families.
Ang mga gawad:
A National Study of Patient and Family Advisory Councils in U.S. Children’s Hospitals
Institute para sa Pasyente at Nakasentro sa Pamilya na Pangangalaga
Patient- and Family-Centered Care is an accepted quality standard for adult and pediatric care, but its principles have not been widely adopted as drivers of health care systems improvement. To address this, some hospitals and health plans have developed Patient and Family Advisory Councils (PFAC). This grant will support work to understand current PFAC practices in U.S. children’s hospitals, define the characteristics of high-performing councils, and develop and distribute policy and practice recommendations nationwide.
Publishing and Disseminating A National Research Agenda for Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs (CYSHCN)
University of Colorado, Denver
The U.S. health care system is not well equipped to serve children and youth with special health care needs. With federal funding, the CYSHCN National Research Network has identified six problems in the system as high-priority areas for research. This award will support development of a national research agenda to encourage funders, advocates, and researchers to address those areas. The grantees will publish several peer-reviewed articles in a supplement to Akademikong Pediatrics, followed by family-friendly versions of the articles. They also will disseminate the research agenda through a webinar series and presentations at national conferences.
California-based Nurse-led Discharge Learning (CANDLE) Collaborative – Phase II
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
Between 20 and 45 percent of children with special health care needs experience problems after hospital discharge that require active intervention. Many of these problems could be prevented by improved discharge planning. Previous foundation grants supported development of pediatric-specific hospital discharge standards. Phase I of this project followed up on that work by supporting nurses as leaders in adopting new discharge standards at several California hospitals. Phase II, guided by a national advisory committee, will provide evidence of implementation and measurement of adherence to discharge standards in these hospitals. Implementation tools and measures to promote similar quality improvement activities in other children’s hospitals will be developed and disseminated.
Improving Access to Durable Medical Equipment and Supplies Through the California Children’s Services Program – Phase II
National Health Law Program, Inc. (NHeLP)
Children with special health care needs often endure unnecessarily long and sometimes harmful delays in accessing essential medical equipment and supplies. In California, the source of these delays often can be traced to the complex and overlapping patchwork of government programs designed to address children’s needs. Key among those programs is California Children’s Services (CCS). Past work funded by the foundation has led to a guide for legal advocates so they can assist families in navigating the CCS program. With these new funds, the grantee will identify and address two of the major gaps in obtaining equipment, and will develop and deploy an advocacy strategy for addressing these gaps.
Children’s Regional Integrated Service System (CRISS) Activities Addressing California Children’s Services Whole Child Model Implementation
Lucile Salter Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford
Recently the state Department of Health Care Services has turned over responsibility for California Children’s Services activities to Medi-Cal managed care organizations in 21 counties under a new program called the Whole Child Model (WCM). Building on a previous award, this funding will allow the grantee to continue monitoring the WCM program implementation to ensure that children continue to receive high-quality care, including access to appropriate pediatric specialty care, pharmaceuticals, durable medical equipment, and support services under the managed care plans.
Orange County Care Coordination Collaborative for Kids: Access to Care for CSHCN
Children’s Hospital of Orange County Foundation
Orange County recently transitioned children served by California Children’s Services to a managed care plan under the Whole Child Model program. The grantee has received previous funding from the foundation, and has successfully improved service delivery in the county by establishing better communication, coordination, and implementation of best practices among providers of service for CSHCN. This grant will provide support for identifying and addressing barriers to care that may arise as families attempt to access care. Products from this work will contribute to statewide discussions about the transition to managed care by sharing insights from the Orange County implementation.
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Tungkol sa Foundation: Ang Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health ay isang pampublikong kawanggawa, na itinatag noong 1997. Ang misyon nito ay itaas ang priyoridad ng kalusugan ng mga bata, at pataasin ang kalidad at accessibility ng pangangalaga sa kalusugan ng mga bata sa pamamagitan ng pamumuno at direktang pamumuhunan. Sa pamamagitan ng Programa nito para sa mga Batang may Espesyal na Pangangailangan sa Pangangalaga sa Pangkalusugan, sinusuportahan ng foundation ang pagbuo ng isang mataas na kalidad na sistema ng pangangalagang pangkalusugan na nagreresulta sa mas magandang resulta sa kalusugan para sa mga bata at pinahusay na kalidad ng buhay para sa mga pamilya. Gumagana ang Foundation sa pagkakahanay sa Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford at sa mga programa sa kalusugan ng bata ng Stanford University.
