For Immediate Release
March 26, 2019
Farmington, CT – CHDI and Connecticut Children’s Office for Community Child Health outlined a joint vision for improving child and population health in a new report:Framework for Child Health Services: Promoting optimal health, development, and well-being for all children. The 2019 Framework builds on the 2009 Framework for Child Health Services: Supporting the Healthy Development and School Readiness of Connecticut’s Children, published ten years ago. It highlights progress on implementing recommendations from the original Framework and puts forth five new recommendations for integrating child health services with a fuller range of services from other sectors, such as housing and nutrition, that contribute to optimal health and development.
“We developed the 2019 Framework to inspire a new direction for child health providers, policy makers, insurers, and private funders to guide their efforts as they work to reform health care and improve population health,” said Paul H. Dworkin, MD, co-author of the 2019 and 2009 Framework reports and director of Connecticut Children’s Office for Community Child Health. “Since the publication of our original Framework, we understand more about how social, environmental and behavioral factors affect children’s lifelong outcomes and now know we have to engage many sectors beyond health, family support, and early care and education to change the life trajectory of vulnerable children.”
The new Framework proposes adoption of the following five recommendations:
The explosion of knowledge regarding early brain development in the 1990’s and 2000’s and its implications for child health service delivery provided the impetus for the initial Framework. Successes from the original Framework include the state’s adoption of the medical home model for the delivery of primary care services, widespread adoption of developmental surveillance and screening, and extensive outreach to support pediatric primary care providers across Connecticut.
While children in Connecticut are relatively healthy overall compared to children in other states, there are significant racial and ethnic health disparities, which start early and extend into education, employment, and adult health. Over the past decade, research about the impact of the so-called “Biology of Adversity” on child health, development, and well-being has vastly expanded. This includes the impact that toxic stress, adverse childhood experiences, and adverse social determinants have on child outcomes. Supporting pediatric primary care providers to address families’ needs more broadly and connect them to social services or other supports that improve their well-being could lead to better long-term outcomes, including improved school performance, a healthier workforce, and reduced adult health care costs.
“The time is right to embrace a new way of funding, organizing, and delivering child health services, as states reform payment and delivery systems” said Lisa Honigfeld, PhD, co-author of the 2009 and 2019 Frameworks and vice president for health initiatives at CHDI. “A new payment model can give health providers greater flexibility to match a child’s need with a broad range of services that can support their long-term health and development. ”
Download a copy of the 2019 Framework for Child Health Services.
Read the Advancing Kids blog from the Framework authors.
For additional information, please contact Julie Tacinelli (CHDI) at tacinell@uchc.edu or 860-679-1534; Debra Dudack (Connecticut Children’s Office for Community Child Health) at ddudack@connecticutchildrens.orgor 860-837-6225.
###