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Care Coordination for Children With Disabilities

University of North Carolina (UNC) logo

University of North Carolina (UNC)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Experiences With Health Care Coordination

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02304380
14-2045

Details and patient eligibility

About

The proposed study uses a recent policy change in Ohio as a natural experiment to assess outcomes and experiences of children who qualify for Medicaid under the Aged, Blind, Disabled category and their caregivers in an ACO model of care compared to their previous outcomes and experiences in a traditional fee-for-service model.

Full description

Children with disabilities have complex healthcare needs requiring multiple providers in multiple locations. The lack of coordinated care for this vulnerable population leads to poorer outcomes, higher costs, and increased stress and time demands for patients and their caregivers. Traditionally, under arrangements known as fee-for-service, there have been no financial incentives for providers to coordinate care; however, the Affordable Care Act is changing that. Accountable care organizations (ACOs) are groups of healthcare providers that organize in new ways to take responsibility for the care of a defined population. ACOs share in any savings associated with improved quality and efficiency of the care they provide. Although most ACOs currently do not cover children with disabilities, many are considering adding these to the populations they serve. Yet little is known about effectiveness of the care coordination strategies they employ on children with disabilities.

The goal of this research is to assess care coordination for and patient-centered outcomes of children with disabilities (who qualify for Medicaid under the Aged, Blind, Disabled category (ABD) under an ACO as compared with traditional fee-for-service plans. The investigators will use a recent policy change in Ohio that mandates children with disabilities move from traditional fee-for-service Medicaid plans into managed care arrangements such as ACOs. This mandate resulted in 8,000 disabled children automatically becoming part of the nation's largest pediatric ACO.

The investigators will use multiple methods, including focus groups, interviews, a survey, medical record data, and Medicaid claims, to compare patient experiences and care under the ACO with experiences and care under the previous fee-for-service model. What impact will this research have? Our research will inform ACOs about the relative benefits and challenges of coordinating care and improving the health outcomes of children with disabilities and will help those organizations determine whether or not they can adequately serve the needs of this population. In addition, the findings will provide patients and caregivers with valuable information that can help them make decisions when faced with an increasingly common scenario, for example: "The parents of a child with cerebral palsy receive a letter from their state Medicaid program that children are being enrolled in an 'accountable care organization.' How certain can they be that their child's care will be improved? What are the problems that might occur?" The investigators will engage patients, their caregivers, and health system stakeholders throughout the research process. Patient advocates have been involved in the design of our study. A patient advisory panel comprised of caregivers and advocates of disabled children will guide our project by providing advice at quarterly meetings. In addition, the investigators plan to collect data from more than 2,800 patient voices through direct study participation.

Enrollment

2,188 patients

Sex

All

Ages

3+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Stakeholder Interviews

  • Be associated with the ACO as ACO leadership, a care coordinator, a payor or policy-maker.

Caregiver Interviews

  • Currently live in south-central Ohio
  • Have lived in south-central Ohio since July 2012
  • Be a caregiver of a child ages 3-18 who qualifies for Medicaid under the Aged, Blind, and Disabled category

Focus Groups, Caregivers and Youth

  • Currently live in south-central Ohio
  • Have lived in south-central Ohio since July 2012
  • Be a caregiver of a child ages 3-18 who qualifies for Medicaid under the Aged, Blind, and Disabled (ABD) category, who receives care at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Partners for Kids
  • For youth focus groups, be a child ages 14-18 who qualifies for Medicaid under the Aged, Blind, and Disabled category, who is intellectually capable of participating in focus groups, and who receives care at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Partners for Kids

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-English-speaking
  • For youth focus groups, intellectual disabilities that preclude being able to participate in a focus group

Trial design

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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