The Influence of Setting on Care Coordination for Childhood Asthma.
Health Promot Pract. 2015 Jul 31;
Authors: Kelly RP, Stoll SC, Bryant-Stephens T, Janevic MR, Lara M, Ohadike YU, Persky V, Ramos-Valencia G, Uyeda K, Malveaux FJ
Abstract
Asthma affects 7.1 million children in the United States, disproportionately burdening African American and Latino children. Barriers to asthma control include insufficient patient education and fragmented care. Care coordination represents a compelling approach to improve quality of care and address disparities in asthma. The sites of The Merck Childhood Asthma Network Care Coordination Programs implemented different models of care coordination to suit specific settings-school district, clinic or health care system, and community-and organizational structures. A variety of qualitative data sources were analyzed to determine the role setting played in the manifestation of care coordination at each site. There were inherent strengths and challenges of implementing care coordination in each of the settings, and each site used unique strategies to deliver their programs. The relationship between the lead implementing unit and entities that provided (1) access to the priority population and (2) clinical services to program participants played a critical role in the structure of the programs. The level of support and infrastructure provided by these entities to the lead implementing unit influenced how participants were identified and how asthma care coordinators were integrated into the clinical care team.
PMID: 26232778 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]
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