Merging systems: integrating home visitation and the family-centered medical home

To improve the health of children and bend the health care cost curve we must integrate the individual and population approaches to health and health care delivery. The 2012 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report Primary Care and Public Health: Exploring Integration to Improve Population Health laid out...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Pediatrics (Evanston) Vol. 132 Suppl 2; no. Supplement_2; pp. S74 - S81
Main Authors: Tschudy, Megan M, Toomey, Sara L, Cheng, Tina L
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Academy of Pediatrics 01-11-2013
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Summary:To improve the health of children and bend the health care cost curve we must integrate the individual and population approaches to health and health care delivery. The 2012 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report Primary Care and Public Health: Exploring Integration to Improve Population Health laid out the continuum for integration of primary care and public health stretching from isolation to merging systems. Integration of the family-centered medical home (FCMH) and home visitation (HV) would promote overall efficiency and effectiveness and help achieve gains in population health through improving the quality of health care delivered, decreasing duplication, reinforcing similar health priorities, decreasing costs, and decreasing health disparities. This paper aims to (1) provide a brief description of the goals and scope of care of the FCMH and HV, (2) outline the need for integration of the FCMH and HV and synergies of integration, (3) apply the IOM's continuum of integration framework to the FCMH and HV and describe barriers to integration, and (4) use child developmental surveillance and screening as an example of the potential impact of HV-FCMH integration.
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ISSN:0031-4005
1098-4275
DOI:10.1542/peds.2013-1021E