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Surviving to Thriving: Improving Sickle Cell Care across the Lifespan Patricia Kavanagh, MD, MS Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical Center New England Genetics Collaborative November 15, 2011
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Sickle Cell Disease In US, ~100,000 people with SCD 2,000 babies born each year Universal newborn screening & prophylactic antibiotics has led to improved survival ~95% children live to 18 years Recent advances have decreased morbidity and mortality Hydroxyurea associated with improved survival TCD screening detects children at risk of stroke
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~1,100 people with SCD in the Boston area; half are children. BMC serves two-thirds of patients with SCD Immigrants comprise 28% of Boston’s population and 10% of Boston’s children Two of the largest populations are from Haiti (8.5%) and Dominican Republic (7.9%) – SCD common in both populations SCD in Greater Boston
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Challenges in SCD Care SCD care is complicated, requiring care from multiple providers, multiple settings Clinical settings (Hospital, ED, PCP, Hematology) Home Daycare/School Work Lack of funding from federal programs and private foundations $9:$1 funding ratio for cystic fibrosis to SCD SCD population 3 times larger than CF
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Identified Barriers in Boston area No systematic coordination of SCD care between PCPs and specialists Lack of primary care, especially adults, with SCD Need for high quality transition to adult SCD care Limited information & support provided at the time of newborn screening SCD and sickle cell trait
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Parents’ Voices Lack of PCP: “You know, [child] hasn’t been to his primary care doctor…because…[pediatric hematology] just give him everything over here.” Transition Difficulties: “How can kids grasp the whole idea that they have to take this [medication] for the rest of their lives? And so, they’ll skip a day or two.’” SCD diagnosis: “The worst experience for me… was when I found out. She was like, ‘You’re sure you want to go through with this? It’s going to be hard…’ I didn’t like…that they told me the results over the phone.”
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HRSA SCD and Newborn Screening Program Six sites: IL, MA, NY, OH, PA, TN Patients: Children and adults Focus: Sickle cell disease and trait Genetic counseling, especially for trait Education on SCD and trait (CBOs) Care coordination Mental health services Transition to adult services
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Network Created for SCDNSP BMC – Comprehensive sickle cell care and primary care FQHC – Primary care (6 centers) Greater Boston Sickle Cell Disease Association New England Newborn Screening Program
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Strengths of BMC + Network Strong center for SCD research Basic science – Center of Excellence for SCD Health services research – Quality of SCD care Long-standing relationships with FQHCs Advanced HIT systems Data warehouse Medical-Legal Partnership
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Goals of SCDNBS Program Comprehensive Medical and Psychosocial Care and Community Support across the Lifespan Birth School Age Adolescence Transition Adulthood Community Outreach and Education Co-Managed Pediatric and Adult Primary and Specialty Care Evidence-Based Primary Care by Trained PCPs IT Decision Support and Patient Tracking Peer Navigators and Volunteers Community-Based Enabling and Support Services Continuous Quality Improvement Age-Appropriate Basic and Formal Genetic Counseling
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Goal 1: Care Coordination for SCD Improve coordination between: PCPs Specialists School nurses How? Delineate responsibilities between specialty and primary care Delivery of evidence-based care by trained PCPs (Sickle Cell Champions) Improved IT decision support
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Goal 2: Transition to Adult Care Begin transition in early adolescence Utilize or develop materials appropriate for preteens and teens Track progress in transition process Educational Vocational Social Psychological
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Goal 3: HIT and Care Coordination Optimize electronic health record BMC and FQHC use same EHR Massachusetts Health Disparities Repository Identify patients in need of care/services Electronic referrals from PCPs in Network to specialists
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Goal 4: Increase community services Education and outreach Peer Navigators Genetic counseling for sickle cell trait Peer-to-Peer Network Annual conferences/gatherings for SCD community
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Goal 5: NBS follow-up Create a system in which PCPs: Provide initial information on SCD Counsel on sickle cell trait Parents of newborns Adolescents Adults
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Goal 6: Collaborate and Disseminate New England Pediatric Sickle Cell Consortium Hemoglobinopathy Learning Collaborative QI project on ED pain management for SCD Newborn Screening Coordination and Evaluation Center (HRSA-funded) Conferences Publications
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Wrap-up Questions?
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