A model of paediatrics: Rethinking health care for children and youth Flashcards
1
Q
What is the current role of a pediatrician?
A
- Provide emergency and critical care to acutely ill children and youth
- Work in tertiary care hospitals and clinics
- Provide consulting care in their offices or in regional and community hospitals, treating patients referred from diverse sources e.g. family physicians, nurses, and school authorities
- provide comprehensive care to children and youth living with complex chronic conditions or developmental challenges
- provide primary and preventive care in the community
- work in community organizations such as children’s mental health centres
- work in academic settings providing patient care while teaching medical students and residents, and/or doing research
- work in administrative roles within hospitals and universities
- work in public health departments and other areas of government
- work in child protective services, assessing and treating children and youth who have suffered abuse or neglect
2
Q
What accounts for increasing pediatrician workload as per pediatricians?
A
- increasing complexity of patient caseload
- management of patients with chronic diseases or conditions
- increasing patient expectations
3
Q
Why are the health needs of children and youth increasing and/or changing?
A
- Many children now survive extreme prematurity
- The number of children and youth with chronic conditions is steadily rising
- the rate of obesity continues to rise
- more children and youth experience mental health problems
- many children with malignancies, chronic cardiac problems, diabetes and severe behavioral challenges receive their ongoing medical care in the community
- many conditions that once required treatment in a pediatric teaching hospital are now being handled closer to home, coordinated by community pediatricians
4
Q
What care for acute and chronic health problems do children and youth need?
A
- Appropriate hospital care
- Newborn care
- Critical care
- Child/youth protection services
- Palliative care services
5
Q
What specific populations have additional care needs?
A
- First nations, Inuit, and Metis
- Vulnerable populations: low SES, new Canadians
- Developmental problems
- Mental illness
- Serious acute or chronic illness
- Adolescents
6
Q
What are the recommendations for provincial/territorial governments and health care planners?
A
- ensure access to a regular primary health care provider
- the number of pediatricians required to meet the needs of children and youth should be established for each given jurisdiction and should specify those required for special populations
- Consider the broad scope of pediatric expertise and leadership
- meet the unique needs of communities
- establish appropriate on-call services
- facilitate health care teams
7 re-examine models of remuneration - ensure access to appropriate care in a timely manner
7
Q
What recommendations are there for pediatric leadership?
A
- ensure pediatricians play a leadership role in complex care
- facilitate the involvement of pediatricians in undergraduate and postgraduate education
- facilitate the involvement of pediatricians in continuing professional development
- Ensure appropriate standards of care are in place
- Transition of care
8
Q
What recommendations are there to ensure continuity of care?
A
- ensure enough primary care providers in each region to provide services
- a full complement of child and youth health professionals must be properly resources to meet health needs of children and youth
- remuneration models must recognize the time required to provide optimal care to children with chronic or acute health care needs
- remuneration models must recognize the contributions pediatricians make to education, research, public health projects, and continuing education