Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care

Children and youth in state or statutory care (children-in-care) are at a higher risk of not having their health needs met than the general pediatric population. A literature review found a paucity of evidence on the health information needed for initial assessments of children-in-care in health rec...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thompson, Cori Denise
Other Authors: Lau, Francis Yin Yee
Language:English
en
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7917
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-79172017-04-15T17:21:39Z Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care Thompson, Cori Denise Lau, Francis Yin Yee child youth Canada child custody child health needs assessment medical assessment health information systems infant newborn child care foster home care social workers electronic health records Children and youth in state or statutory care (children-in-care) are at a higher risk of not having their health needs met than the general pediatric population. A literature review found a paucity of evidence on the health information needed for initial assessments of children-in-care in health record information systems in Canada, particularly when compared with information collected in the comparator countries the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia. This qualitative research reviewed six forms currently used in British Columbia (BC) for assessing the health needs of children-in-care, and for planning future health care delivery for these children. The forms were reviewed with social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers to understand how the forms met their needs for health information for initial assessments when a child first enters care. One researcher conducted 31 interviews with 37 participants —a mixture of social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers allowed for source triangulation— in urban and rural communities using a 19-question, nonvalidated interview tool. NVivo-10 was used to inductively encode participant interviews relying on Pava’s 9-step, nonlinear sociotechnical systems approach to identify themes and concepts raised by the interviews. The researcher conducted an informal review of relevant Ministry of Children and Family Development (MCFD) organization documents and method triangulated the results to the interview findings to identify similarities, differences, and gaps. Findings from these two analyses were compared with the literature review findings. The six forms were found to document most of the required information for typical children-in-care provided the forms were available to the care team and completed in full prior to the initial assessment. Additional forms were used for children-in-care with complex health needs. Key health information included parents’ relevant health and social information, prenatal and birth records, medical and social history of the child, immunization record, whether the child had experienced adverse childhood events, and anything that might remind the child of a stressful situation and cause the child an adverse mental or physical outcome. Complexity in acquiring the needed health information comes from a variety of circumstances. For example, the child may transition in and out of care, parents may be unavailable, and social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers may each change while the child is in care. To overcome information-sharing challenges and barriers, research participants recommended several improvements including funding changes to support medical care provider participation, an information-sharing framework, and electronic options such as a centralized child-in-care record with secure email capability. Introducing some practices from other jurisdictions, notably a senior medical advisor role and a medical assessment model, might help address process challenges when health information is missing during the initial medical assessment. These resources would help round out MCFD’s existing conceptual child-in-care health-care framework. Together these changes may support social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers to provide care to and plan for children-in-care. Graduate 0723 (Information Science), 0769 (Health Care Management), 0452 (Social Work) cdthomps@uvic.ca 2017-04-13T21:08:48Z 2017-04-13T21:08:48Z 2017 2017-04-13 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7917 English en Available to the World Wide Web http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.5/ca/
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic child
youth
Canada
child custody
child health
needs assessment
medical assessment
health information systems
infant
newborn
child care
foster home care
social workers
electronic health records
spellingShingle child
youth
Canada
child custody
child health
needs assessment
medical assessment
health information systems
infant
newborn
child care
foster home care
social workers
electronic health records
Thompson, Cori Denise
Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
description Children and youth in state or statutory care (children-in-care) are at a higher risk of not having their health needs met than the general pediatric population. A literature review found a paucity of evidence on the health information needed for initial assessments of children-in-care in health record information systems in Canada, particularly when compared with information collected in the comparator countries the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia. This qualitative research reviewed six forms currently used in British Columbia (BC) for assessing the health needs of children-in-care, and for planning future health care delivery for these children. The forms were reviewed with social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers to understand how the forms met their needs for health information for initial assessments when a child first enters care. One researcher conducted 31 interviews with 37 participants —a mixture of social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers allowed for source triangulation— in urban and rural communities using a 19-question, nonvalidated interview tool. NVivo-10 was used to inductively encode participant interviews relying on Pava’s 9-step, nonlinear sociotechnical systems approach to identify themes and concepts raised by the interviews. The researcher conducted an informal review of relevant Ministry of Children and Family Development (MCFD) organization documents and method triangulated the results to the interview findings to identify similarities, differences, and gaps. Findings from these two analyses were compared with the literature review findings. The six forms were found to document most of the required information for typical children-in-care provided the forms were available to the care team and completed in full prior to the initial assessment. Additional forms were used for children-in-care with complex health needs. Key health information included parents’ relevant health and social information, prenatal and birth records, medical and social history of the child, immunization record, whether the child had experienced adverse childhood events, and anything that might remind the child of a stressful situation and cause the child an adverse mental or physical outcome. Complexity in acquiring the needed health information comes from a variety of circumstances. For example, the child may transition in and out of care, parents may be unavailable, and social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers may each change while the child is in care. To overcome information-sharing challenges and barriers, research participants recommended several improvements including funding changes to support medical care provider participation, an information-sharing framework, and electronic options such as a centralized child-in-care record with secure email capability. Introducing some practices from other jurisdictions, notably a senior medical advisor role and a medical assessment model, might help address process challenges when health information is missing during the initial medical assessment. These resources would help round out MCFD’s existing conceptual child-in-care health-care framework. Together these changes may support social workers, foster parents, and medical care providers to provide care to and plan for children-in-care. === Graduate === 0723 (Information Science), 0769 (Health Care Management), 0452 (Social Work) === cdthomps@uvic.ca
author2 Lau, Francis Yin Yee
author_facet Lau, Francis Yin Yee
Thompson, Cori Denise
author Thompson, Cori Denise
author_sort Thompson, Cori Denise
title Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
title_short Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
title_full Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
title_fullStr Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
title_full_unstemmed Health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
title_sort health information needs for initial assessments of children-in-care
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7917
work_keys_str_mv AT thompsoncoridenise healthinformationneedsforinitialassessmentsofchildrenincare
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