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About Medical HomeWhat is a Medical Home?A Medical Home is not a house, office, or hospital, but rather an approach to providing comprehensive primary care. In a medical home, a
pediatric clinician works in partnership with the family/patient to assure that the medical and non-medical needs of the child/youth
are met. Through this partnership, the clinician can help the family/patient access and coordinate specialty care, educational
services, out-of-home care, family support, and other public and private community services that are important to the overall
health of the child and family.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) describes the ideal Medical Home as one that provides "accessible, continuous, comprehensive, family centered, coordinated, compassionate, and culturally effective care." Though many Medical Home implementations focus on children with special health care needs, "every child deserves a Medical Home." AAP Policy Statements ([American: 2004], [Rushton: 2005], [Cooley: 2004], [Council: 2005])have codified the role of pediatricians and other primary care clinicians in providing comprehensive care for children with
chronic and complex conditions and defined the Medical Home concept. A 2007 article emphasized the importance of care coordination
in providing a medical home. [McAllister: 2007]
In 2007, the AAP, American Academy of Family Physicians, American College of Physicians, and American Osteopathic Association
developed the Joint Principles of the Patient-Centered Medical Home. Key components that have particular applicability to pediatric settings include (from www.medicalhomeinfo.org):
Information about integrating the Medical Home concept into your practice is available through AAP Medical Home Training Programs & Materials and the Center for Medical Home Improvement, as well as throughout this MedHome Portal.
Who are Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs?Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs (CYSHCN) are "those who have or are at increased risk for a chronic physical,
developmental, behavioral, or emotional condition and who also require health and related services of a type or amount beyond
that required by children generally." [McPherson: 1998] Studies have found the prevalence of children in the United States meeting these criteria to be 12.8% [van: 2004] to 15.6% [Newacheck: 2005]. The National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs 2005/2006 found 13.9% of the nation's and 11% of Utah's children
met this definition of children with special health care needs. For information about the study and data from each state,
see www.CSHCNdata.org.
For More Information:Information about the Medical Home concept, implementation, and related topics, is available at the National Center of Medical Home Initiatives for Children with Special Health Care Needs web site, www.medicalhomeinfo.org, sponsored by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The site offers access to comprehensive information about national and
local resources related to Medical Home and CSHCN.
The mission of the Center for Medical Home Improvement (www.medicalhomeimprovement.org) is to establish and support networks of parent/professional teams to improve the quality of primary care medical homes for
children and youth with special health care needs and their families. Useful tools, assessments, and resources are available
on their web site.
For more information about Medical Home and links to several other Medical Home web sites, see General Medical Home Info on the AAP's medicalhomeinfo site, where you will also find a comprehensive Medical Home Bibliography.
Page BibliographyAmerican Academy of Pediatrics Medical Home Initiatives for Children With Special Needs Project Advisory Committee. Cooley WC. Council on Children with Disabilities. McAllister JW, Presler E, Cooley WC. McPherson M, Arango P, Fox H, Lauver C, McManus M, Newacheck PW, Perrin JM, Shonkoff JP, Strickland B. Newacheck PW, Kim SE. Rushton FE Jr. van Dyck PC, Kogan MD, McPherson MG, Weissman GR, Newacheck PW. |
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