Title: Focus on MCH
1Focus on MCH
- KALHD Mid-Year Meeting
- June 19 and 20, 2007
2Agenda
- Background
- Outcome Data
- Survey Summary
- Proposal
- Discussion
- Consensus/Next steps
3Background
- 2006 MCH Block Grant Reductions
- KDHE/KALHD Prioritization
- No time
- 2007 More Reductions
- Try again
- New formula - Children in poverty
- Essentially population based
- Major dislocation of funding
4Conclusion
Budget Reductions New Formula Problems
5Try Something Else
- Added more members to the workgroup
- Develop KALHD proposal
- Start with the assumption that increased funding
would be necessary -- create a proposal and new
formula - Data
- Survey
- Prioritize
- Accountability
- Just in caseAccreditation? Regions?
6MCH Team Members (20)
7Staff
- Edie Snethen
- Sara Spinks
- Dennis Kriesel (KAC)
- Sarah Carkhuff-Fizell (KHI)
- Laura Harrington (KHI)
- Gianfranco Pezzino (KHI)
- Vanessa Lamoreaux (KDHE)
8Prenatal Care
9Preterm and low birth weight
10(No Transcript)
11Staff presentations
- Laura Harrington
- Dennis Kriesel
12Laura HarringtonKansas Health Institute
- KALHDs Survey of Maternal and Child Health
Programs in Local Health Departments
13Why did we conduct a survey?
- What is happening in communities at present?
- Which areas need additional focus and/or funding?
- Need to know
- Services and activities that are/ are not
currently provided in the community - Who provides the activities and services?
14Survey Goals
- Develop an understanding of
- current MCH activities/services provided by LHDs
- partnerships between LHDs and other community
organizations - location of MCH services/activities in the
community - gaps in MCH services/activities
- priorities of MCH programs in LHDs
15Survey Structure
- Organized around the Federal MCH Bureaus
Essential Services - Infrastructure Services
- Infrastructure Building Services
- Population-Based Services
- Enabling Services
- Direct Health Services
16Survey Structure, continued
- List of activities/services
- Respondents mark where in the community each
service/activity is offered, including these
options - LHD (using MCH grant funds)
- LHD (not using MCH grant funds)
- Private Physician(s)
- Hospital(s)
- Safety Network Clinics
- Community partnership/collaborative
- Activity not provided in the community currently
- Other, please specify
- Respondents could choose as many answers as were
applicable
17Overview of Respondents
- 61/100 total respondents (61 response rate)
- 14 Frontier Counties
- 22 Rural Counties
- 13 Densely Settled Rural Counties
- 7 Semi-Urban Counties
- 5 Urban Counties
18Top 10 Results in LHDs, using MCH Block grant
funds
- 1. Breastfeeding support (91 of communities)
- 2. Provide SIDS prevention education (84)
- 3. Provide home visits by a lay person to some
homes (84) - 4. Provide referral and linkage to medical
prenatal care (79) - 5. Post-partum education (77)
- 6. Provide universal home visits by lay visitor
to all new parents (76) - 7. Referral to a medical home (75)
- 8. Provide home visits by a registered nurse to
some homes (74) - 9. Prenatal education (73)
- 10. Referral to a dental care provider (72)
19Top 10 Results in LHDs,not using MCH Block Grant
Funds
- 1. Administer childhood immunizations (80 of
communities) - 2. Provide nutritional educational services (79)
- 3. Provide immunization outreach (78)
- 4. Assist in establishing eligibility for public
programs such as HealthWave or Medicaid (71) - 5. Educate and refer to other health and
prescription plans (71) - 6. Pregnancy detection (68)
- 7. Referral to a dental care provider (65)
- 8. Assess and refer on nutritional issues (64)
- 9. Referral to a medical home (62)
- 10. Educate the community about importance of
childhood immunizations (61)
20Services Commonly Covered in LHDs with and
without MCH Grant Funds
- In Top 10
- Referral to a dental care provider
- Referral to a medical home
- In Top 15 (in addition to above)
- Assist in establishing eligibility for public
programs such as HealthWave or Medicaid - Provide referral and linkage to medical prenatal
care
21Interpretation of Services Offered in LHDs
- With MCH Block Grant Funds
- 4/10 services are Population-Based Services
- 6/10 services are Enabling Services
- Without MCH Block Grant Funds
- 2/10 services are Population-Based Services
- 5/10 services are Enabling Services
- 3/10 services are Direct Health Services
22Private Physician(s)
- 3/10 of the top ranked activities under the
direction of private physicians begin with
assess and refer for(e.g.) - Mental health issues
- Substance abuse issues
- Nutritional issues
- Activities and services ranged from 64-0
covered by Private Physicians - Possibility for greater partnerships and
collaboratives with private physicians?
23Hospitals
- 3/10 services began with assess and refer
- 4/10 services are related to patient education
- Nutritional education services
- Post-partum education
- Prenatal education
- Parental childbirth education
24Safety Network Clinics
- The highest reported percentage for any one
activity supported by Safety Network Clinics is
17. - In most communities, Safety Network Clinics are
not providing many MCH Essential Services
(range17-0). - 3/10 services began with Educate the community
about(e.g.) - Childhood immunizations
- Importance of other MCH issues
- Importance of prenatal care
25Community Partnerships/ Collaboratives
- 2/10 services are providing services
- Substance abuse services
- Mental health services
- 5/10 services related to community collaboration
- Participating in collaborations, partnerships,
coalitions, and workgroups on related topics
26Top 10 Services which LHDs Reported as Not
Currently Provided in the Community
- 1. Direct health services for juvenile detention
centers (71) - 2. Link to MCH-related services through community
hotline (63) - 3. Monitor health disparities among racial
ethnic groups (51) - 4. Provide universal risk screenings for all new
parents (48) - 5. Direct health services for incarcerated women
(45) - 6. Target services to racial and ethnic groups to
reduce health status disparities (42) - 7. Provide lead screening for pregnant women
(41) - 8. Develop reports on MCH status in the community
for policymakers and stakeholders (other than
KDHE) (40) - 9. Provide maternal depression screening (40)
- 10. Participate in policy development on MCH
issues (35)
27Dennis KrieselKansas Association of Counties
28The Data What We Used
- Four measures were selected that closely linked
to MCH activities and could serve as potential
topics for legislative discussions - Inadequate Prenatal Care
- No Prenatal Care
- Low Birth Weight
- Premature births
29Challenges in Data Acquisition
- Original source was Kansas Information for
Communities (KIC) - KIC blocked information in all categories where
fewer than six cases existed - Information for selected categories was requested
and provided by KDHE - Missing information filled via 2005 Annual
Summary of Vital Statistics
30KS MCH Measures (2000-2005)
31MCH Measures by Density Class
32Low Birth Weight
33No Prenatal Care
34Premature Births
35Inadequate Prenatal Care
36LPA AuditLow Birth weight and Premature Babies
Reviewing Programs Aimed At Reducing Their
Incidence and Associated Costs (June 2003)
37Draft Proposal
38Draft Proposal
- Based on MCH 2010 and Needs Assessment
- Prioritize adequate prenatal care
- 90
- No care
- Prioritize improvement in birth weight
- Population risk reduction
39State Contribution Ranking
40Local Contribution Ranking
41The math
- 2005 Births -- 39,701
- 2005 Inadequate Prenatal Care -- 4,907
- 2005 No Prenatal Care -- 397
42More math
- 40,000 births x 90 36,000
- Currently, 35,000 adequate prenatal care
- 1,000 to reach 90 goal
- Assumptions
- Nursing caseworker - 45,000
- Caseload - 50 per caseworker
- 1,000/50 20 caseworkers
- 20 x 45,000 900,000
43And more math
- 400 no prenatal care
- Assumptions
- No coverage
- 1,000 to provide prenatal coverage
- 400 x 1,000 400,000
44And even more math
- 40,000 births
- Assumptions
- Population wide risk reduction education and
strategies - 5 per birth
- 40,000 x 5 200,000
45Summary
- 900,000 increase prenatal care
- 400,000 increase coverage
- 200,000 other risk reduction strategies
- 1,500,000 total proposal
46Next steps
- OK?
- Begin discussions
- KDHE
- KAC
- Other partners, stakeholders or supporters
- Refine data and survey analysis
- Develop new formula to apply if increased funding
is received - Develop an ongoing KALHD MCH workgroup?