US-Mexico Binational TB Referral and Case Management Project: Preliminary Evaluation Findings Kayla Laserson, ScD Elizabeth Ferreira, MD July 19, 2005.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Tools for Change Plan, Do, Study, Act The PDSA Cycle Explained
Advertisements

Planning M&E to Tell Our ACSM Story. Objectives Discuss how ACSM activities can address barriers to help reach national TB control targets. Describe how.
Module 11: Community TB Care Image source: Pierre Virot, World Lung Foundation.
Restructuring the Cancer Programs and Task Force Workgroups.
Group Processing and Client Centered Approach Joy Baldwin Manager Interim Federal Health Medical Services Branch Citizenship and Immigration Canada Vancouver,
The Long and Winding Road to PCMH Presenters Laurel Domanski Diaz, MNO, Director of Business Operations Dan Gauntner, CNP, Director of Clinical Operations.
Influenza Vaccine Surveillance System Pilot Project Pandemic Influenza Vaccine: Doses Administered and Safety Training Conference Atlanta, GA—Aug. 22,
Sustainability Planning Pat Simmons Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services.
Development of the Public Participation Manual for Border Communities and Project Sponsors RESULTS OF THE DIAGNOSTIC Rozelle Group February 8, 2002.
NBSTRN Update NCC/RC PI/PD Meeting November 19, 2010 Michael Watson.
University of Hawai’i Integrated Pediatric Residency Program Continuity Care Program Medical Home Module Case 1.
ISSC Quarterly Supplier Meetings
Identifying the Prevalence of Perinatal Substance Abuse in Santa Clara County September 2004 Karen Miyamoto, PHN Maternal, Child & Adolescent Health Program.
CHINESE CENTER FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION Epidemiology Investigation for Ebola Virus Disease Lei Zhou, MD, Epidemiologist Public Health Emergency.
2.11 Conduct Medication Management University Medical Center Health System Lubbock, TX Jason Mills, PharmD, RPh Assistant Director of Pharmacy.
Unit 4: Monitoring Data Quality For HIV Case Surveillance Systems #6-0-1.
Promoting Increased School Stability & Permanence
1 Open Door Family Medical Centers Care Coordination and Information Exchange Presentation October 2010.
Preliminary Assessment Tribal Emergency Response Preparedness Dean S. Seneca, MPH, MCURP Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Centers for Disease.
VIII Border Legislative Conference Health Work Table U.S. – Mexico Border Governors’ Conference July 9, 2004 Santa Fe, New Mexico Dan Reyna, MSS, MPA New.
U.S./Mexico Border Contingency Planning and Emergency Response NRT/RRT Co-Chairs Meeting Albuquerque, New Mexico March 2003 Dan Meer, Chief Response, Planning.
1-2 Training of Process FacilitatorsTraining of Coordinators 5-1.
Patient Centered Medical Home What it means for Duffy Health Center Board Presentation September 10 th 2012.
Meredith Carr, JD J. Stan Lehman, MPH David W. Purcell, JD, PhD Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention July 25, 2012.
US-Mexico Binational Tuberculosis Referral and Case Management Project: An Update.
Solution Overview for NIPDEC- CDAP July 15, 2005.
Use of OCAN in Crisis Intervention Webinar October, 2014.
Community Feedback and Involvement in [Health Department’s] Proposed Data to Care Program [Name of Provider Session Date of Provider Session]
TBNet Part of the Health Network Transborder Migration Care of the Mobile TB Patient Deliana Garcia, Director International, Research, and Development.
US-MEXICO BORDER HEALTH COMMISSION ROSEMARIE MARSHALL JOHNSON MD CHAIR, EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, US SECTION.
Program Collaboration and Service Integration: An NCHHSTP Green paper Kevin Fenton, M.D., Ph.D., F.F.P.H. Director National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral.
INFLUENCE OF MEANINGFUL USE AMONG HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS Neely Duffey, Olivia Mire, Mallory Murphy, and Dana Sizemore.
Community-wide Coordinated Care. © 2011 Clarity Health Services The typical primary care physician has 229 other physicians working in 117 practices with.
Evaluating Tuberculosis Surveillance and Action in an Urban and Rural Setting Kristine Lykens, Ph.D. In collaboration with Anita Kurian, MPH, MBBS Patrick.
Big Strides for Small Patients: Developmental Screening in Pediatric Primary Care Department of Pediatrics Jerold Stirling, MD Rebecca Turk, MD Melanie.
The Audit Process Tahera Chaudry March Clinical audit A quality improvement process that seeks to improve patient care and outcomes through systematic.
TB Control Program County of San Diego Challenges: Cross border Continuity of TB Care Response:CureTBUS/Mexico Tuberculosis Referral and Information Program.
Unit 10. Monitoring and evaluation
Implementing universal Lynch Syndrome screening in a large healthcare system.
Prevention and Early Intervention Program East Region.
US Procedures for TB Patients Originating in the U.S. and Traveling to Mexico YES NO  Educate the patient about the Card.  Ask about patient’s travel.
Joint Venture Conference Performance Measures Elizabeth Ruschmeier/Mike Bouchard October 28, 2010.
A Model for Translating Research into Practice in the United States - Mexico Border Region Howard J. Eng, MS, DrPH Director, Southwest Border Rural Health.
Surveillance Data in Action: Tuberculosis Indicators Melissa Ehman, MPH Tuberculosis Control Branch (TBCB) Division of Communicable Disease Control Center.
1-2 Training of Process Facilitators 3-1. Training of Process Facilitators 1- Provide an overview of the role and skills of a Communities That Care Process.
Washington D.C., USA, July 2012www.aids2012.org Treatment Monitoring & Advocacy Project: “Missing the Target Report Series” Othoman Mellouk ITPC-NA/ALCS.
Medication Therapy Management Programs in Community Pharmacy Community Pharmacy October 17, 2006 Kurt A. Proctor, Ph.D., RPh Chief Operating Officer Community.
On-Time Prevention Program for Long Term Care: Clinical Decision Support On-Time Prevention Program for Long Term Care: Clinical Decision Support William.
Welcome 2011 California Statewide Medical and Health Exercise.
Smallpox Vaccine Safety and Reporting Adverse Events Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention December 2002.
Surveillance Evaluation Assist Prof Dr. Kwankate Kanistanon, DVM, MS, PhD.
11 Mayview Regional Service Area Plan (MRSAP) Tracking: Supporting Individuals in the Community June 18, 2008.
Module 5: Monitoring Retention and Adherence to PMTCT and Planning the Way Forward.
Measuring Performance Why Measures:- What can not be measures - it cannot be managed.
CureTB and other border initiatives Kathleen Moser, MD TB and Refugee Health Branch San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency.
Public health impacts of donor screening for T. cruzi infection Susan P. Montgomery, DVM MPH Division of Parasitic Diseases Centers for Disease Control.
Healthy Border 2010 Program Sam Notzon, Ph.D. National Center for Health Statistics, CDC.
Presented at the Leadership Symposium on Evidence-Based Practice in Child Welfare Services June 28, 2007 Davis, CA It Can Work! Lessons Learned from a.
Unit 9: Evaluating a Public Health Surveillance System #1-9-1.
Acute Health Care Perspectives on Homelessness Research Making Data Meaningful April 23, 2015 Ginetta Salvalaggio, MSc, MD, CCFP Assistant Professor, University.
Training for organisations participating in Peer Review of Paediatric Diabetes.
 Pharmaceutical Care is a patient-centered, outcomes oriented pharmacy practice that requires the pharmacist to work in concert with the patient and.
Karen Cheung, MPH, Pamela Luna, DrPH, MST, Sarah Merkle, MPH American Evaluation Association Annual Meeting November 11, 2009 The findings and conclusions.
Hepatitis Vaccination: Closing the Gaps in New York State Debra Blog, MD, MPH Immunization Program New York State Department of Health National Immunization.
Clinical Decision Support Implementation Victoria Ferguson, COO - Program Manager Christopher Taylor, CIO – Business Owner Monica Kaileh, CMIO – Steering.
TB- HIV Collaborative activities in Romania- may 2006 status
The role of the community in TB control
monitoring & evaluation THD Unit, Stop TB department WHO Geneva
Migration Health - Canada and the RCM
Review of Recommendations for Partner Services
Presentation transcript:

US-Mexico Binational TB Referral and Case Management Project: Preliminary Evaluation Findings Kayla Laserson, ScD Elizabeth Ferreira, MD July 19, 2005

Goals of the US-Mexico Binational TB Referral and Case Management Project Ensure continuity of care and completion of therapy Reduce TB incidence and prevent drug resistance Coordinate referral of patients between health systems Provide model for other diseases

Pilot Sites US-Mexico border sister cities/states –San Diego, CA – Tijuana, BC –El Paso, TX/Las Cruces, NM - Ciudad Juarez, CHIH –Webb/Cameron Counties, TX – Matamoros, TAMPS –Arizona – Nogales - Caborca, SON –Anáhuac, NL –Piedras Negras – Cd. Acuña, COAH INS / ICE Detention Centers –Texas, California, Arizona, Washington US States –Tennessee, Washington, Illinois

Evaluation Design Joint US/Mexico endeavor Two phases Evaluation Design Workgroup Assistance of an external evaluation firm –Objectivity/neutrality –Additional evaluation expertise Time frame: March December 2004

Evaluation Data Sources 2 Project databases and 2 national surveillance systems CureTB and Mexican NTP referral records Site visits Focus groups –6 with health center staff –4 with patients Interviews –36 with TB program and referral agency staff –13 with key stakeholders –7 by telephone with patients who moved to locations other than pilot sites

Card Distribution and Movement 793 TB patients received a Card in Mexico –2% (n=17) moved to the US –Destination 33% (5/15) TX 53% (8/15) CA 7% (1/15) Minnesota 1 US destination not specified 488 TB patients received a Card in the US –30% (n=147) moved to Mexico –61% (90/147) of movers in ICE custody at move –Destination Patients went to 19 Mexican states Top 3: BC, CHIH, SON 71% (100/141) went to Mexican Pilot site states

Added Value of Project to Outcome Determination Comparison with the outcome reported to the US National TB Surveillance System –32% (11/34) of Card patients who were listed as moved or lost in the NTSS had outcomes ascertained from the Pilot that could update national data

Health Care Workers’ Perspective: A Worthy Idea The Project can benefit patients directly (tangible service) “it is like a security blanket, because if these guys are gone, they have all the information to get care.” “The patient has something to show, and a number to call.” Sites (especially away from the border) appreciate having a conduit for referrals Sites are eager to know what happened to referred patients The Project is “one more tool at the Program’s disposal” Some tangible evidence of success –Patients have been successfully referred –Providers made contact because patient showed the Card

Health Care Workers’ Perspective The Project has also had some “side-benefits” –Learning about Mexico and its health care system –Reaching out to Hispanic patients –Reinforcing connection with local providers –Reiterating the importance of case reporting –Redeploying resources –Domestic referral tool

Health Care Workers’ Perspective: An Increased Workload Additional forms to fill out Eligibility criteria too broad Additional responsibilities, but no additional staff or resources Tracking referred patients is difficult, time consuming, and detracts from routine activities –Inaccurate, imprecise contact information –No relationship with patient –Some patients are not confirmed TB cases

Patients’ Perspective Patients accept Card (only 1 refusal reported) Very few patients report having had questions at the time they were given the Card –Too much information to absorb at one time? –Not relevant until needed? Patients generally seem to understand the overall purpose, limitations, and how to use it Some misunderstandings noted: –800# directly reaches the provider in country of origin –Card helpful only to carry medication across the border

Patients’ Perspective: Perceived Benefits Guarantee that they will obtain medications Expression of moral support, concern for well-being Ability of provider at destination to obtain their treatment record from their place of origin Not having to answer so many questions at destination Not having to be retested/to start treatment over Explain why they are carrying medications when crossing the border *Show that they have TB and be released by the Border Patrol

Patient Education Patients able to summarize the key points “A lot to take in” –Needs to be repeated/reinforced periodically Some sites have to rely on translators –Help CureTB/TBNet Reported need for additional educational materials for patients –Brochure patients can take with them, or videos that patients can watch –Must be appropriate for low-literacy levels –“Flipchart” now available –Continuous education

Coordination with Immigration Authorities Project embraced by participating facilities NEW standard procedures and protocols used at all ICE facilities –Now include the Card –“Medical hold” facilitates the process Perceived benefits of the Card –Helps comply with requirements to arrange for follow-up of active cases Coordination with ICE is an important achievement of the Pilot Project

Political Will Officials on both sides committed to the Project –Recognition that TB problem extends into the interior of both countries Effective collaboration across the border is an important outcome for many “The Pilot Project is a model for collaboration. Project staff in Texas and California are more open-minded than previously thought and they are mostly Latinos. There is excellent communication between the two sides... It’s a chance of telling the world US-Mexico collaboration can happen.” “The program is a success and it shows the rest of the world that collaboration can exist and work successfully between the two countries.”

Stakeholders Recommendations April 2005 Progress Meeting Continue the Pilot Project –Find additional resources Expand the Pilot Project to new sites in the interior Utilize evaluation to change the program –Modify eligibility criteria (site-specific) –Improve data systems, data flow, and data management both in-country and across countries

Evaluation Follow-Up Weekly conference calls since Progress meeting –Eligibility criteria narrowed in both US and Mexico –Referrals for TB suspects from ICE facilities held by CureTB until case verified –Referral forms redesigned To limit amount of data collected To avoid duplication To standardize data elements across countries –Data flow streamlined CureTB can send referrals directly to local Mexican site, with copy to the NTP Ways to improve transmission of referrals from the NTP to CureTB are being discussed New system to be implemented by end of July

Next Steps The project is continuing at the current sites It is expanding to other sites –ICE facilities –Other states in Mexico –Other US states beginning implementation (Utah, Ohio) Additional resources are being identified –USAID (Mexico only) –CDC COAGs –Border Health Commission –Others?

Summary The Project has merit and worth –Treatment outcomes –Health care workers –Patients –Key stakeholders Intangible positive results –Communication and collaboration –Truly binational Challenges exist –Evaluation has helped stakeholders identify them to seek solutions The Project can serve as a model for managing migrating patients