Session topics

56
Teach the US about Providing Healthcare to the Uninsured Stan Shaffer, MD Founder, Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Kendra Wyatt Strategist, Community Access, Cerner

description

What Haiti Can Teach the US about Providing Healthcare to the Uninsured Stan Shaffer, MD Founder, Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Kendra Wyatt Strategist, Community Access, Cerner. Session topics. Delivering Care in Haiti Medical Pathology – Social Pathology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Session topics

Page 1: Session topics

What Haiti Can Teach the US about Providing Healthcare to the Uninsured

Stan Shaffer, MDFounder, Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies

Kendra WyattStrategist, Community Access, Cerner

Page 2: Session topics

Session topicsDelivering Care in Haiti

Medical Pathology – Social Pathology

Community Focus – Community Engagement

Measuring Outcome – Measuring Impact

The Principles and Comparisons

Medical Home TheoryKansas City, Missouri: Jackson Country Free Clinic

Lasso the Power of Community and Information Technology Austin, Texas: Indigent Care Collaboration

JaxCare, Jacksonville, Florida

Health Banks- Privacy, Portability with PurposeLive from the WHO Standards Meeting, Kenya

Page 3: Session topics

Lifetime risk of death from pregnancy

Sweden 1:30,000

United States of America 1:4000

World average 1:75

Haiti 1:16

Afghanistan 1:6

Maternal Mortality

Page 4: Session topics
Page 5: Session topics

Percent of deliveries with skilled birth attendant

Page 6: Session topics

Child Mortality

● = 5,000 child deaths / year

Page 7: Session topics

Child Mortality - Haiti(< 5 years)

Page 8: Session topics

Neonatal Mortality - Haiti(< 28 days)

Page 9: Session topics

Potential for Basic Interventions

Jones, Child Survival II, 2003; Lancet 362:65-71

• Clean delivery, breast feeding, antibiotics → Sepsis deaths ↓94%

• Prenatal tetanus vaccine → Tetanus deaths ↓81%

• Malaria prevention→ Low birth weight deaths ↓59%

• Neonatal resuscitation → asphyxia deaths ↓39%

Page 10: Session topics
Page 11: Session topics
Page 12: Session topics
Page 13: Session topics
Page 14: Session topics
Page 15: Session topics
Page 16: Session topics
Page 17: Session topics
Page 18: Session topics
Page 19: Session topics
Page 20: Session topics
Page 21: Session topics
Page 22: Session topics

HaitiCountry wide

(WHO statistics)

Baseline Community

Survey

Prenatal Care(percent of total)

79 51

Births Attended by Skilled Health Staff(percent of total)

24 13

Neonatal Mortality Rate(deaths per 1,000 live births)

34 40

Community Survey Results

Page 23: Session topics

Why didn’t you go to the hospital?

1. Too far

2. Too expensive

3. Untrustworthy

Underlying Medical pathologyis Social pathology

Community Survey Results

Page 24: Session topics
Page 25: Session topics
Page 26: Session topics

Why didn’t you go to the hospital?

1. Too far → Community services

2. Too expensive → Free care3. Untrustworthy → Quality

Consistency Hospitality

The need

Page 27: Session topics

Models of Maternity Care

Obstetricians

Nurse Midwives

Matrones

HospitalComprehensiveExpensiveRemote

Birthing Home

HomeLimited careInexpensiveConvenient

Page 28: Session topics

Pregnancy planning Prenatal care and triage Prevention of infections

Syphilis, HIV, Malaria Safe birth

Clean delivery Skilled birth attendants

Breast feeding support Vaccinations Nutrition and micro-nutrient

supplementation Child development

Road to Health

Continuity of Care

Page 29: Session topics

Health Information Technology

• Outcome monitoring• Quality assurance• Performance improvement• Communication• Resource sharing• Health mapping• Community health atlas

Page 30: Session topics
Page 31: Session topics

Community Health Atlas

Page 32: Session topics

Home visitsSanté Communautaire

Education

HIV - DOT

Vit A

Page 33: Session topics

Santé Santé CommunautaireCommunautaire

Elimination of Intestinal Parasites

Page 34: Session topics
Page 35: Session topics

Maternal Transfers Number

Vaginal bleeding 21*

Postdates 19

Hypertension/Pre-eclampsia 17

Preterm labor 12

Repeat C-Section 9

Prolonged labor 8

Abnormal fetal position 2

Prolonged ROM 2

Eclampsia 2*

Large uterine size 1

Fetal death 1

Page 36: Session topics

2005-2006 delivery data

Page 37: Session topics

HaitiCountry wide

(WHO statistics)

Baseline Community

Survey

MNCommunity 2005-2006

Prenatal Care(percent of total)

79 51 99

Births Attended by Skilled Health Staff(percent of total)

24 13 91

Maternal Mortality Ratio(pregnancy related maternal deaths per 100,000 live births)

680 ---- 498

Neonatal Mortality Rate(deaths per 1,000 live births)

34 40 9

Maison de NaissancePrimary Outcome Measures

Page 38: Session topics
Page 39: Session topics

Community Engagement

Employment

Mothers clubs

Community activism

Vaccination campaigns

Seeking water, housing, micro-loan programs

Page 40: Session topics

The value of a society is increased only as it cares for its most

vulnerable.John Rawls

not just for the countries with high child mortality, but also for countries that could have changed the situation.

William Foege

Child survival…a measure of civilization…

Page 41: Session topics

This isn’t charity work, it’s social justice.Paul Farmer

Page 42: Session topics

Childbirth in a Haitian Village

Implications for the Un and Under-insured

in the States

Page 43: Session topics

Partners In HealthHealthcare as a Right vs Commodity

“Anywhere you have extreme poverty and no

national health insurance, no promise

of health care regardless of social

standing, that's where you see the sharp

limitations of market-based health care.”

Paul Farmer

Page 44: Session topics

A medical home is defined as primary care that is accessible, continuous, comprehensive, family centered, coordinated, compassionate, and

culturally effective.  A medical home addresses how a

primary health care professional works in partnership with the family/patient to assure that all of the medical and non-medical needs of the patient are met. 

The physician should be known to the person/family and should be able to

develop a partnership of mutual responsibility and trust with them.

Definition: Medical Home

Page 45: Session topics

Agriculture Productivity

Government

Entrepreneurism

Outreach

Via Football Clubs

Faith Partnerships

Community Health Workers

Baby,Mama,

Family

Cell PhoneConnectivityPower

HomeCement

FloorTile Roof

Virtual Consults

Education(BTI)Business Technology

Institute

Drinking WaterWaste

Management

MN Health Bank

Les Cayes Hospital

Haitian School of Midwifery

Maison de NaissanceProviding a Physical Birth Home

Data CenterVirtual Consults

Midwives

MN

Page 46: Session topics

Medical Home Theory

Page 47: Session topics

So what do they do in Texas?

Page 48: Session topics

The Mother of them all….Indigent Care Collaboration, Austin Texas

AUSTIN/TRAVIS COUNTY HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT

AUSTIN TRAVIS COUNTY MENTAL HEALTH MENTAL RETARDATION CENTER (ATCMHMR)

AUSTIN WOMEN'S HOSPITALCENTRAL TEXAS MEDICAL CENTER CITY OF AUSTIN COMMUNITY CARE

SERVICES DEPARTMENT JOHNS COMMUNITY HOSPITAL LONE STAR CIRCLE OF CARE PEOPLE'S COMMUNITY CLINIC PLANNED PARENTHOOD OF THE TEXAS

CAPITAL REGION ROUND ROCK HEALTH CLINIC ST. DAVID'S HEALTH CARE SETON FAMILY OF HOSPITALS TRAVIS COUNTY HEALTHCARE

DISTRICTTRAVIS COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY UT SCHOOL OF NURSINGVOLUNTEER HEALTHCARE CLINIC WILLIAMSON COUNTY AND CITIES

HEALTH DISTRICT

All Members of the Safety Net Community ParticipateCommunity Health RecordCommunity Health Workers

Page 49: Session topics

Virtual Medical Home Framework

Nutrition

Pharmacy

Government

Health Plan

Employer

Community Foundation

Philanthropy

Sports Clubs

Grandmothers

FaithHealth Ministry

Community Health Worker

Education

Affordable Housing

Appropriate Clothing Medical Home

FQHC, Safety Net

Hospital Health System

Specialist

Public Health

Community Center

Mobile Clinic

HospiceBirth Center

PersonFamily

Environment

Page 50: Session topics

Jacksonville Health Information Network

Community Health RecordA Virtual Medical Home

JaxCareClaims

•Communit

y

Electronic

Health

Record

ShandsJacksonville

Baptist Health System

SMS

Mayo Clinic Hospital Cerner

St. Vincent’sMedical Center

IDX

MemorialHospital

MediTech

University of Florida

IDX

.M. Sulzbacher(FQHC)

Med Mgr

Brooks Rehabilitatio

nHospital

MediTech

HL7 Interfaces,Data Extracts

.csv Files

McKesson

Cerner

Duval County Health Department Med

Claims

Jacksonville Health Information NetworkAccessible via a secure internet site (SSL 128-bit encryption)

Cerner

AllScripts

Duval County Health Department

HMS

Page 51: Session topics

Person Controlled Health Record BankThe Virtual Medical Home

Page 52: Session topics

A New Healthcare Transaction: Health BanksH.R.2991Independent Health Record Trust Act of 2007

Charter for not-for-profit, cooperative institutions with member-owned accounts

IHRBs could save money and livesSale of data with revenue considered tax-free incomeGives providers access to data in emergencies

Vision for a “New Transaction”

Saving money and lives using non-centric, consumer-driven independent health record banks

•"By offering member-owned accounts, independent health record banks have one focus—the patient.”

•- U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan.

Paul RyanU.S. Rep, R-Wis

Dennis MooreU.S. Rep, D-Kan

Page 53: Session topics

Kansas City Employer Initiative

Page 54: Session topics

Live From Kenya & the WHO

Speaker will update attendees on results of the WHO Health Information Standards Conference Held December 4-7, 2007

Page 55: Session topics

Finance Health & Medical Homes Not Sickcare

Information Technology is like

Clean Water

Global Lessons

Page 56: Session topics

Resources

Stan Shaffer, MDMaison de [email protected]

Kendra WyattCerner [email protected]

Partners In HealthPIH.org

Bridget McCandless, Medical Director, Jackson County Free [email protected]

Ann Kitchen, Executive Director, Indigent Care [email protected]

Rhonda Poirier, Executive Director, [email protected]