Title: Health Care for Children and Youth
1Health Care for Children and Youth
2Key Themes in Health Care
- Fragmentation of Service
- Turf intense
- Institutional
- Professional
- Regional
3Key Themes in Health Care
- Public frustration
- Political suspicion
- Black watch
- Budget battles
4Environmental Scan - Societal
- Children at highest risk live in families that
are themselves at least somewhat disenfranchised - Societal instinct is to protect children
- Their inherent value
- Their vulnerabilities
- They hold the future
5Environmental Scan Population / Demographics
- The determinants of health of children
predominantly reside outside of care models - Very complicated
- Children decreasing in proportion of population
- Mortality is decreasing
6Environmental Scan - Political
- Dont vote themselves not a constituency
- All of health care is seen as an interest group
- Child health care sector is an interest group
within the larger group - We use children to manipulate the system
- Politicians fear child health issues
7Environmental Scan System
- People in child health are nice people
8Environmental Scan
- Should be opportunities to support the needs of
children.
9Magical Thinking
- Federal Government
- Essentially a Provincial problem
- Provincial Governments
- We should maintain delivery system status
quo - if system management was better, we could
make it work
10Magical Thinking
- Public
- We can afford it all
- as long as my taxes dont increase
- Health Authority
- If we work fast enough, we can fix everything.
11Magical Thinking
- Hospitals
- If we had control and more resources we could
each meet all demands of our populations - Community
- If we had more resources, we could reduce the
demands
12Parallel Play
- Government - budget process es
- Health Authorities and Delivery Sites
- for the most part, work independently within a
single framework - can share from time to time
- as long as theres enough space and toys to
accommodate all
13Getting Child Health on the National Agenda
Define your Agenda
Build Consensus
Get to the Table
14Getting Child Health on the National Agenda
- Focus on high-risk groups
- Use Evidence
15High Risk
- Aboriginal Children
- Immigrant / Refugee Children
- Children with Chronic Diseases
- Prevention / Promotion
16How to get to the Table
- Define your agenda
- High risk groups
- Must be priority
- In an equitable world, relative risk should be
more important that attributable risk - (has never been accomplished)
17How to get to the Table
- Define your agenda
- Prevention through healthy lifestyles
- Diabetes
- Nutrition
- Exercise
- Prevention of Injuries
- Mental Health
18Using Evidence
19Using Evidence
20Using EvidenceSocio-economic Factors
MCHP
21Using EvidencePYLL Males
Age-adjusted rate of PYLL per 1,000 males age 1 -
74
MCHP
22Using EvidenceInjury Mortality Rates
MCHP
23Using EvidenceBreast Feeding Rates
Percent of newborns breastfeeding at hospital
discharge
MCHP
24Using EvidenceInfant Mortality Rates
Rate of death per 1000 infants (age less than one
year)
MCHP
25Aboriginal Child Health
Infant Mortality Northwest Territories 1966 - 72
26Aboriginal Child Health
Neonatal and Postnatal Mortality / 1,000 Reserve
and Non-reserve 1976 - 82
27Canadian infant mortality trends
5 year average per 1,000 live births
28Using EvidenceImmunization Rates MCHP
Crude 1 year old immunization percent with
complete immunization schedule for children born
1994 - 1997
Registered First Nations
All Other Manitobans
MCHP
29Aboriginal Child Health
- Injury
- Hyperbilirubinemia
- Rheumatic Fever
- Congenital Heart Disease
- Otitis Media
- Pneumonia
- Meningitis
- Tuberculosis
- Type 2 Diabetes
30Aboriginal Child Health
- Glutaric Aciduria
- Rickets
- Metabolic Disease
- Congenitally Dislocated Hips
- Glomerulonephritis
- IgA Nephropathy
- Suicide / Depression
31Relative Risk for Hospitalization for 30 Leading
Causes 1992 Status Indian vs. Other
Risk Higher
Risk Lower
32Aboriginal Child Health
- Below the Curve
- Eating Disorders
- Cystic Fibrosis
- VU Reflux
33Immigrant and Refugee Families
- About 62,000 immigrant and refugee children
arrive in Canada each year. - In 2001, Canada received 26,513 refugees (based
on well-founded fear of persecution, often
displaced for their own protection without option
to remain) - Of 10 million worldwide refugees in 1997
- 5.7 million from the Middle East
- 2.9 million from Africa
- 2 million from Europe
- 1.7 million from Central America
34Immigrant and Refugee Families
- Epidemiology
- Tuberculosis and Hepatitis B
- Primary Care
- Anemia, dental caries, intestinal parasites,
nutritional deficiencies and immunization
irregularities in newly arrived refugees from
developing countries -
35Immigrant and Refugee Families
- Mental and emotional health problems are the
major burden of illness - Migration stress
- Loss of personal and cultural identity
- Depression
- Post-traumatic stress disorder
-
36Immigrant and Refugee Families
- Cross cultural differences in diet, smoking,
information-seeking patterns, communication
styles, perceptions about the risk of acquiring
HIV, and ideas about the prevention of diseases. - Cultural impact on health beliefs and taboos may
be more profound in the areas of mental health
and reproductive health. - cmaj/vol-159/issue-4/
-
37Children with Chronic Diseases
- cancer
- asthma
- type I diabetes
-
38Using Evidence
- The need for more research is self evident
- however while research helps to quantify outcomes
- the real need is for meaningful interventions
39Getting Child Health on the National Agenda
Build Consensus
Get to the Table
- Build consensus
- Get involved
- Bring what you uniquely offer
- Stop being victims
40Build a Consensus
- Fragmentation is a dream to politicians and
bureaucrats - It supports the status quo
- Allows decision-making to be deferred
- Hammer it out inside the tent
41Build consensus
- Focus on
- Integration and Accountability
- NOT
- Autonomy and Control
- Find balance
42Building an Accountable Organization
Mark Samuel Impaq
43Build consensus
- Be open to change
- You cant make it better
without changing it.
44Build consensus
- Define Common Standards of care
- Create Seamless Transitions
- Improve measurement / Standards process
- Low volume / high risk
- Volume and Outcome are Linked
- Break down Silos
45Goals
- Integration
- Manage continuum / seamlessness
- Improve standards
- Improve accountabilities
- Find efficiencies
- No Gaming
46Getting Child Health on the National Agenda
Position your issues
- Need to serve children
- Need to serve politics
47Get involved
- Child and youth health professionals need to
participate - Avoid Isolation
- National and Local Organizations
- Infiltrate
48Get Involved
- Bring the strengths of Child Health
- Family centred
- Focus on patient safety
- Integrated Care
- Multi-professional roles / teams
49Get involved
- At every possible table
- At every point of leverage
- Get your elbows up. Stand up for yourself.
- Dont use children
50Position your issues
- Need to serve children
- Need to help politicians serve children
- Teach the public
- Teach the media
51