Although care coordination has long been established in the health care system in the United States, too often it may compete or work at cross purposes with care teams serving patients and families. Care coordination is a team sport that requires strong clinician-family partnerships as well as adequate time and resources to be done effectively. We incorporate the latest literature to offer clarity for identifying, coordinating, and funding care for children with medical complexity (CMC), the most medically fragile, high-cost subpopulation of children and youth with special health care needs. Algorithms for identifying CMC exist. Calculation of the cost of care for CMC is confounded by cost shifting to families and the variable course of illness and aging in this heterogeneous population. Multiple studies of different sizes have reported similar care coordination team structure, staffing ratios, and cost ranges. We describe models for funding this work and how they can be tailored to individual practice environments. [Pediatr Ann. 2020;49(11):e457-e466.].
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/19382359-20201018-01 | DOI Listing |
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