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Boston,
MA
Medical Home
Training Program - November 17, 2001
Target Audience | Course
Objectives | State
Resource Info |Schedule | Faculty
Overview
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and Shriners Hospitals for Children
offered its Every Child Deserves a Medical Home Training Program in
Boston in November 17, 2001 at the Shriners Hospital. The program aims to support
pediatric health care providers, children with special health care needs and
their families, and communities interested in the well being of these special
needs children in a changing health care environment.
Target
Audience
The target audience included pediatric health professionals and their staff,
other professionals, families of children with special needs, managed care
professionals, policy makers, community members, and and other child advocates
who care for children with special needs.
Course
Objectives
General pediatricians, family physicians, pediatric subspecialists, and other
pediatric health care professionals, nurses, pediatric office staff, community
resources, and parents of children with special needs are invited to participate
in the course. Upon completion of this course, participants will be able to:
- Explain the elements of the medical home concept
as applied to their practice environment or child's
care;
- Discuss practical strategies for helping parents,
providers, and young people transition to adult
independence, health care with funding, and work;
- Describe practical strategies to translate the
concept of Medical Home for CSHCN into office or
clinic practices sensitive to the needs of CSHCN
and their families;
- Identify resources available to CSHCN and their
families and strategies for coordinating care and
promoting interagency collaboration;
- Discuss current issues in managed care coverage
and reimbursement as they relate to the Medical
Home for CSHCN and transition to adult health care.
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State
Resource Information
Click
here to find out about State Initiatives and Medical Home
activities in Massachusettes.
Boston,
MA Training Program Schedule
November 17, 2001 - Shriners Hospital
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Time
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Sessions
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7:00-8:00
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Registration/Resource Tables/Breakfast
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8:00-8:15
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Welcome
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8:15-9:15
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Overview/Common Elements
This plenary session provides an overview of the medical home efforts
in Massachusetts and the common elements of the medical home concept.
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9:15-9:30
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Break/Change of Rooms
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9:30-10:45
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Breakout sessions A, B, and C
A. Transitioning Children with Special Needs
Information on transitioning children with special needs from childhood
into adulthood will be discussed.
B. Practices, Policies, and Procedures
Practical strategies to implement medical homes into practice will be
discussed.
C. Comprehensive, Coordinated, Collaborative Care
Strategies for coordinating care, working with community based resources,
and collaborating with specialists and allied health care professionals
will be discussed.
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10:45-11:00
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Break/Change of Rooms
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11:00-12:15
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Breakout sessions A, B, and C
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12:15-1:30
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Lunch Break/Resource Tables/Tours of Shriners Hospital
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Breakout sessions A, B, and C
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2:45-3:15
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Break/Resource Tables
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3:15-4:15
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Closing Panel: Future Steps for Medical Home
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4:15-4:30
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Closing and Evaluations
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Boston,
MA Faculty
- Overview of Medical Home in Massachusetts Panel:
Deborah Allen, ScD Director, Division for Special Health Needs,
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Richard Antonelli, MD, FAAP Moderator, Chair, Committee on Disabilities,
Massachusetts Chapter American Academy Pediatrics; Community Pediatrician,
Nashaway Pediatrics, Sterling
Eugenia Marcus MD, FAAP President , Massachusetts Chapter of
the American Academy of Pediatrics; Community Pediatrician Pediatric
Health Care at Newton Wellesley
Polly Sherman - Family TIES Network, Massachusetts Department of Public
Health
- Common Elements:
Kathleen Cleary, MD Community Pediatrician, Nashaway Pediatrics,
Sterling
Mary Gile Parent, Lunenburg
- Transitioning Children and Youth to Adulthood:
Carolyn Barrett Parent, Regional Quality Management Director,
Massachusetts, Department of Mental Retardation
Mary Cerreto, PhD Director of disABILITY Studies and Support,
Department of Family Medicine, Boston University Medical Center
James R. Cooley, MD Chief of Pediatrics, Wellesley, MA; Harvard-Vanguard
Medical Associates; Clinical Instructor, Pediatrics, Harvard Medical
School
Linda Freeman, MS, MBA Family Coordinator, Childrens Hospital
Boston
Brian Jack, MD Vice-Chair for Academic Affairs, Department of
Family Medicine, Boston University Medical Center
Stephanie Porter, MSN, RN Director Clinical Services, Institute
for Community Inclusion, Childrens Hospital Boston
Judi Rodger Self-advocate, Massachusetts Advocates Standing
Strong
- Practices, Policies, and Procedures:
David Ansel, MD, FAAP General and Developmental Pediatrics,
Childrens Medical Office of North Andover, Developmental Medicine
Center Childrens Hospital, Boston
Christina Connelly MSN, CPNP Childrens Medical Office
of North Andover
Kim Kelly Parent, Methuen
Tom Silva, MD, FAAP Community Pediatrician, East Boston Community
Health Center, East Boston
Joann Snider Parent, Lawrence
- Comprehensive, Coordinated, Collaborative Care:
Ed Bailey MD, FAAP Director of North Shore Childrens Hospital,
Salem
Serena Dee, MD, FAAP Community Health Center Pediatrician, Greater
Lawrence Family Health Center
David Keller, MD, FAAP Medical Director, South County Pediatrics;
Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, University of Massachusetts
Medical School
Steven Parker, MD, FAAP - Comprehensive Care Program, Boston Medical
Center
Tricia Passerello, BA Care Coordinator, Massachusetts Department
of Public Health
- Panel Discussion: Future Steps for Medical Home
in Massachusetts:
Deborah Allen, ScD Director, Division for Special Health Needs,
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Louise Bannister Director, Primary Care Clinician Plan, Division
of Medical Assistance
Mary Lou Buyse, MD President, Massachusetts Association of Health
Plans
Judith Palfrey, MD, FAAP Moderator, Chief, Division of General
Pediatrics, Childrens Hospital Boston; Principal Investigator,
Pediatric Alliance for Coordinated Care Project
Sean Palfrey, MD, FAAP Professor of Pediatrics and Public Health,
Boston University; President-elect, Massachusetts Chapter of the American
Academy of Pediatrics
Rich Robison Executive Director, Federation for Children with
Special Needs
- Focus Group on Foster Care and Medical Home:
Robert Abrams MD, FAAP Community Pediatrician, Holyoke Pediatrics
Associates, Holyoke
- Focus Group on Subspeciality Care and Providing
Medical Homes:
Ellis Neufeld, MD, PhD Division of Hematology, Childrens
Hospital Boston
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Funding for this event has been provided
by an education grant from Shriners Hospitals for Children
with additional support from the Maternal and Child Health
Bureau.
The CME Office at the American
Academy of Pediatrics
reserves the right to cancel this activity for any reason whatsoever.
In the event of such cancellation, the full enrollment fee will be returned
to the registrant.
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