Title: American Academy of Pediatrics
1American Academy of Pediatrics Saturday, August
16, 2008 Dennis Vickers, MD, Chairman Theresa
McDaniel, M.A. Director, Organizational
Development Mcdt_at_sinai.org The speakers in this
session have no relevant financial relationships
with the manufacturer(s) of any commercial
product(s) and/or provider of commercial services
discussed in this CME activity. The speakers
will not discuss or demonstrate pharmaceuticals
and/or medical devices that are not approved by
the FDA and/or medical or surgical procedures
that involve an unapproved or off-label use of
an approved device or pharmaceutical.
2Learning Objectives
- Understand and discuss the importance of
community integration and involvement in advising
and setting direction for your health care
organization. - Describe an example of how one urban healthcare
institution (SHS) partnered with a local
community-based organization to achieve strategic
goals - Describe potential next steps for your
organizations for developing effective
partnerships and collaboration
3Learning Objectives
- Understand and discuss the importance
- of community integration and
- involvement in advising and setting
- direction for your health care
- organization.
4Why Engage the Community?
- Helping to obtain funding
- Access to target patient populations
- Building your organizations capacity
- Increased support for organizational goals and
strategies - Gaining trust and respect from community members
5Why Engage the Community?
- Healthier communities
- Decrease in health disparities
- Provision of culturally and linguistically
appropriate services - Increased patient satisfaction
- Increased collaborations
- Input on services and processes
6Why Engage the Community
- Laws Guidelines
- Title VI
- Office of Minority Health
- CLAS Standards
-
7CLAS Standards
- 14 Standards Three Themes
- Culturally Competent Care (3)
- Language Access Services (4)
- Organizational Supports (7)
8- Culturally Competent Care
- Ensure that patients receive effective,
understandable, and respectful care - compatible
with their cultural health beliefs and practices
and preferred language - Implement strategies to recruit, retain and
promote at all levels - a diverse staff that
are representative of the service area - Ensure that staff at all levels receive on-going
education and training
9- Language Access Services
- Offer and provide language assistance services at
all points of contact (bi-lingual
staff/interpreters) at no cost - Provide in their preferred language,
verbal/written notice of rights to receive
language assistance services - Assure competence of language assistance provided
Family and friends should not be used - Make available patient-related materials and
signage in languages of service area
10- Organizational Supports
- Develop/implement a strategic plan for CLAS
standards - Conduct initial/on-going assessment of CLAS
activities - Race, ethnicity and spoken language are collected
- Maintain current demographics of patient
population - Partnership with community (CLAS activities)
- Conflict resolution/grievance process that is C/L
sensitive - Make available progress towards CLAS standards
11Why Engage the Community?
- A young Cambodian patient has been in a car
accident. She is - in a coma, showing no brain activity at all,
being kept alive - by life support systems. Her doctors
professional opinion is - that there is no hope for a recovery, and feel
that it is time to - end life support. The patients parents, both of
whom are - devout Buddhists, are struggling with this
suggestion, as they - believe that everything that happens to a person
in his or her - lifetime has a purpose. To end a life before its
appointed time - is murder and can affect the hopes of
reincarnation of both the - person whose life is ended and the one who ends
the life.
12Learning Objectives
- Describe an example of how one urban
- healthcare institution (SHS) partnered
- with a local community-based
- organization to achieve strategic goals
13- Sinai Health System
- Mount Sinai Hospital
- Sinai Childrens Hospital
- Sinai Community Institute
- Sinai Medical Group
- Schwab Rehabilitation Hospital
14Sinai Caregiver Demographics African-American
36 Latino 20 Caucasian
17 Asian/Pacific Islander 20
15Sinai Patient Demographics African-American
56 Latino 20 Caucasian
17 Asian/Pacific Islander
.2 Other 1
16We actively seek to address language or cultural
disparities for our patients
17Our staff look and talk like our patients and
are sensitive and respectful to differences in
beliefs and attitudes toward health and illness.
18Mujeres Latinas en Accion Celebrating 35 years
of empowering Latinas and their families
A bilingual/bicultural agency, seeks to empower
women, their families and youth to be
self-reliant and able to take full advantage of
available opportunities and create new
opportunities to improve the quality of their
lives
19Mujeres Latinas en Accion Celebrating 35 years
of empowering Latinas and their families
- Domestic Violence
- Sexual Assault
- Women in Transition
- Peace Program
- Parent Support
- Proyecto Juventud
- Latina Leadership
- Child Care Services
- SASS
- Sanctuary
- Mother and Daughter
20- Impact to Organizational Goals
- Customer Service
- Employee Satisfaction
- Health outcomes
- Partnerships/CEO priority
21- Navigation and Way-Finding
22 23- Physical environments and improved patient
experience
24- Internal Education Training
- Co-Facilitation
- Validation
25- External Education Training
- Co-Facilitation
- Validation
26Patient Advocacy
27Community Outreach
28- Collaboration with Mujeres/others
- 17 hospital speakers provided
- 48 presentations
- 16 health fairs,
- a health information table at the nearby Mexican
Consulate for Chicago.
29Learning Objectives
- Describe next steps for your
- organizations for developing effective
- community partnerships and
- collaboration
30What is a Community?
- a framework for living rather than
- political jurisdiction a complex
- network of people, institutions,
- shared interests, locality and a sense of
- psychological belonging
31The Communities You Serve
- Nationality
- Ethnicity
- Sexual identity
- Religious beliefs
- Age group
- Physical attributes
- Cultural
- Class
32Engaging Communities
- Getting to know and understand your
- communities requires engaging in a broad
- range of activities thinking creatively to
- involve traditional partners as well as non-
- traditional partners.
33Key Individuals
- Informal leaders who may not have titles but are
influencers in the community - Who are significant sources of information and
are critical to communicating with diverse
residents
34Media
- Directed at those from diverse cultures and/or
who speak a primary language other than English - Including print/newspapers (formal/informal)
- Radio
- Television
35Primary Places of Contact
- Schools
- Religious organizations
- Community centers
- Markets
- Community organizations
36How to Engage Communities
- Obtain data on your communities
- Focus groups
- Other organizations
- Survey/census/community reports
- Collect and document demographics
37How to Engage Communities
- Integrate into your organization
- Community educators
- Input on policy
- Advisory groups
- Drills/fairs/meetings/education
- Tours
- Hire from the community
38How to Engage Communities
- Selection of partner organizations
- Similar mission, vision, values
- Supplementary service
- Location
- Existing relationships
- Serve patient population
39Next Steps
- Selection of partner organizations
- Identify your communities
- Collect data
- Determine outcomes and goals
- Get involved!
40Bibliography
- The Hospitals, Language Culture Research
Framework Domain six Community Engagement - The Cultural Competency Self-Assessment Protocol
for Managed Care Organizations, Lumetra - Cultural Competency QIO Regional Training, August
2005