The influence of Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) program on community pediatrics.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The CATCH (Community Access to Child Health) Program, which supports pediatricians who engage with the community to improve child health, increase access to health care, and promote advocacy through small seed grants, was last evaluated in 1998. The objective was to describe the characteristics of CATCH grant recipients and projects and assess the community impact of funded projects. Prospective data was collected from CATCH applications (grantee characteristics, topic area and target population for projects funded from 2006-2012) and post-project 2-year follow-up survey (project outcomes, sustainability, and impact for projects funded from 2008 through 2010). From 2006 through 2012, the CATCH Program awarded 401 projects to grantees working mostly in general pediatrics. Eighty-five percent of projects targeted children covered by Medicaid, 33% targeted uninsured children, and 75% involved a Latino population. Main topic areas addressed were nutrition, access to health care, and medical home. Sixty-nine percent of grantees from 2008 to 2010 responded to the follow-up survey. Ninety percent reported completing their projects, and 86% of those projects continued to exist in some form. Grantees reported the development of community partnerships (77%) and enhanced recognition of child health issues in the community (73%) as the most frequent changes due to the projects. The CATCH Program funds community-based projects led by pediatricians that address the medical home and access to care. A majority of these projects and community partnerships are sustained beyond their original CATCH funding and, in many cases, are leveraged into additional financial or other community support.
منابع مشابه
Evaluation of the Community Access to Child Health Program.
OBJECTIVE Increasing attention is being focused on the need for pediatricians to promote child health in their respective communities. The objective of this study was to evaluate, retrospectively, the American Academy of Pediatrics' Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) Program. STUDY DESIGN Case studies of 12 Community Pediatric projects in existence from 1989 to 1995 with varying degrees...
متن کاملPromoting Community Pediatrics: recommendations from the Community Access to Child Health Evaluation.
The American Academy of Pediatrics’ (AAP) revised policy statement, “The Pediatrician’s Role in Community Pediatrics,” published in this month’s issue of Pediatrics,1 provides a fitting backdrop to presentation of our findings and recommendations from the evaluation of the Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) Program. The evaluation was conducted over a 20-month period by a team of investig...
متن کاملCommunity Access to Child Health (CATCH) in the historical context of Community Pediatrics.
OBJECTIVES As part of the evaluation of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Community Access to Child Health (CATCH), to 1) identify, retrospectively, the actual chronology of activities undertaken through CATCH, and 2) review its antecedents within the AAP, and its predecessor program-Healthy Children. METHODS Key informant telephone interviews with 14 national leaders in CATCH were con...
متن کاملPediatrician-led community child health initiatives: case summaries from the evaluation of the community access to child health program.
OBJECTIVES Case study investigations of projects identified with the Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) Program were conducted to illustrate the range of achievements of CATCH and to identify those elements related to successful or unsuccessful implementation. METHODS We developed a purposive sample of 12 projects, selected based on time of initiation (1989-1995), level of intensity of ...
متن کاملAmerican Academy of Pediatrics Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) Program: a model for supporting community pediatricians.
Advocacy on behalf of children who are medically underserved and the pediatricians who care for them has been a long-standing core commitment of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Although different in etiology, barriers to adequate health care exist in both nations. In the United States, almost 18 million children have either no health ins...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Pediatrics
دوره 133 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014