Title: The PatientFamily Centered Medical Home
1The Patient/Family Centered Medical Home
- Carolyn J. Allshouse
- Sr. Program Planner-Minnesota Department of
Health - State Coordinator, Family Voices of Minnesota
- Carolyn.allshouse_at_state.mn.us
2Family Voices a national network focused on
family-centered care
- Family Voices aims to achieve family-centered
care for all children and youth with special
health care needs and/or disabilities. Through
our national network, we - Provide families tools to make informed
decisions, - Advocate for improved public and private
policies, - Build partnerships among professionals and
families, and - Serve as a trusted resource on health care.
-
3Patient/Family-Centered Medical Home in Minnesota
- Medical Home Learning Collaborative began in 2004
focused on children with chronic, complex health
conditions and disabilities - Based upon the NICHQ (National Initiatives for
Child Health Quality) Medical Home Collaborative - Consumers and families as quality improvement
partners, supporters and drivers
4Defining Patient/Family Centered Care
- Patient and family centered care redefines
relationships in health care. - It means having meaningful partnerships with
patients and families at the clinical level
with the experience of care ... - AND
5The concept of patient/family-centered
partnerships means
- Partnerships with patients and families in
quality improvement and in policy and program
development, health care redesign, education of
physicians and other health professionals, and
research -
- Institute for
Family-Centered Care
6Defining Patient/Family-Centered Care
- Recognizes that everyone has unique expertise and
experience that has equal value. - Family-centered care utilizes
- this expertise as programs are
- developed, implemented,
- evaluated and, in the care of
- individual patients
7Patient/Family Centered Care in Quality
Improvement
- Making patients and their families truly the
force that drives everything else in health care
is perhaps the most revolutionary tool of all.
Its importance is evident at the system level,
but it comes through even more strongly at the
personal level. - Donald Berwick, CEO The Institute for Healthcare
Improvement
8Utilize all your resources
- Consumers and families are resources to
- Evaluate systems and services
- Suggest creative ideas for improvements
- Explain how services really work
- Help professionals understand other systems
- Energize and support health professionals
9Strategies for PFCC
- Include consumers and families on all quality
improvement teams - Implement consumer/family advisory councils
- Connect with consumer/family advisory councils in
the community - Utilize consumers and families in training staff
- Utilize patient/family perception surveys
10Medical Home - A patient and family-centered
approach to an otherwise chaotic system
- The Quality Standard for 21st Century Primary
Care - A medical home is a community-based primary care
setting which provides and coordinates high
quality, planned, patient and family-centered
health promotion, acute illness care and chronic
condition management. -
-
CMHI 2008
11Medical Home Learning Collaborative in Minnesota
- 25 Teams across the State working to improve the
quality of care provided to children with special
health care needs - Each team includes
- A primary care provider, a clinic based care
coordinator and at least two parents of children
with special health care needs - Teams expand to include others Parents, other
clinic staff, school and community
12Measuring improvement
- Medical Home provider and parent index
- Self rating tool that measures Medical
Homeness, filled out once each year - Parent surveys are collected that ask the
family/patient about their health care experience - Monthly reports number of children identified,
number of care plans, what they are working on. - Learning Session evaluations how will they apply
what they learn
13Medical Home Family Index completed by Team
Parent Partners
14Family Perception of Medical Home
- Child visited an emergency room. (previous 3
months) - 46 of the medical home teams showed improvement
that is a decline in ED use. - Child missed school or adult missed work due to
childs poor health (previous 12 months) - 69 of the participating clinics improved in this
area that is fewer missed school / work days.
15Family Perception of Medical Home Services
Provided
- Help or advice over the phone
- 54 improved in the ability to consistently
provide needed advice - Discuss what happened at a specialist visit
- 62 improved in following up with families after
specialty care was received - Ease in accessing specialty care
- 46 of the teams saw improvement
16Whats Different Now
- Care coordinator identified
- Systematic way of identifying patients with
complex needs and implementing improvements for
them - Care Plans developed and updated
- Improved scheduling
- Longer appointments
- Planned Care Visits
- Direct rooming when needed
- Pre-visit planning
17Whats Different Now
- Improved Access
- Direct numbers / e-mail
- Changes in physical environment
- Direct access to lab
- Added evening clinic
- Linguistically Diverse Materials
18Whats Different Now
- Engaged Supported Patients and Families
- Engaged communities connecting with clinics
- Improved communication with specialty care
19We have a care plan that is always with us, the
hospital and clinic are aware of the special
needsand openly give Miriam that much needed
extra time and gentleness. All these little
changes are making a significant difference not
only for Miriam, but for our family.
20Being a part of the Medical Home team has been a
very rewarding experience. It has been an honor
to share some of our experiences and help
structure services and resources for other
families. Claire (Codys mom)