|
 |
Family Re-Union 7:
Families and Health |
FAMILY
RE-UNION 7:
FAMILIES AND HEALTH
June
22-23, 1998
This conference convened leaders
in family centered care, mental health, public health, managed care as
well as family members and physicians involved in the care of chronically
ill children. Sessions reviewed the research and practice showing that
family involvement in health-care decision making, including prevention,
reduces mortality, reduces health costs and improves patient outcomes.
Roundtable topics included: strategies to improve the training of health
care professionals; hospital and protocol design; dissemination of information;
the impact of managed care and public health policy; and the support needed
for whole families of chronically ill dependents. The predominant theme
was the importance of treating family members as full partners in health
care. Results so far include:
- A Presidential Memorandum
directing the Departments of the Treasury, Agriculture, Interior, Labor,
Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Education
and the Social Security Administration to implement over 150 initiatives
designed to enroll eligible but uninsured children in the Children's
Health Insurance Program and Medicaid.
- Building on this effort to
insure eligible but uninsured children, the administration launched
"Insure Kids Now" with the toll free number 1-877-KIDS-NOW
and a public/private educational campaign.
- Vice President Gore announced
new Medicare
coverage of tests and education for diabetes and osteoporosis.
- Vice President Gore announced
the creation of a nation-wide public/private Medicare alliance
of over 80 national organizations to help families understand the new
options, preventive benefits, and consumer protections
- The Health Care Financing
Administration announced a new Internet site www.medicare.gov
including an interactive database on health plan options.
- Major foundations including
Robert Wood Johnson, Annie E. Casey, and Nathan Cummings are discussing
the need to address the intersection of family, health and community
programming and philanthropy.
- The federal Center for Mental
Health Services and the National Cancer Institute co-sponsored a historic
meeting to formally
acknowledge the mental health impact of a parent's physical or mental
illness on a child.
- President Clinton proposed
new measures to help Americans care for family members with long term
care needs, including long-term care tax credits, a family caregiver
support program, a new national network to help states create one-stop
shops so caregivers can better access community resources, and a proposal
that the federal government use its market leverage to set an example
by offering private long-term care insurance to federal employees.
- As they committed at Family
Re-Union 7, the Department of Defense has established Healthcare Consumer
Consortia at its 588military treatment facilities, posted quality report
cards in the lobbies of its hospitals and is expanding its Put Prevention
into Practice Program into the Military Health System.
- Vice President Gore announced
an effort, now called "BOOST
4 Kids", with
the National
Partnership for Reinventing Government
and pilot communities to build on San Diego County's flexible, interagency,
results-focused health care strategies and "outcome measures"
of success.
- The design and planning process
for Vanderbilt University's new Children's Hospital was strongly influenced
by the conference and planned to be one of the nation's most family-centered
facilities. Vanderbilt hosted the first national conference on Family
Resource Centers
in pediatric health care settings in March 1999.
- The
Institute for Family Centered Care
helped the federal Office of Personnel Management redesign a 1999 survey
for 9 million federal employees, so dozens of health plans can assess
how the federal employees' and retirees' health benefits program is
family-centered.
|