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Initiative aims to improve transition from pediatric to adult care


 

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Gregg Michael Talente, MD, remembers well a young patient who nearly fell through the gap between pediatric an adult health care.

The woman was treated for lupus by her pediatrician until age 19 when the doctor moved out of town. When she landed in front of Dr. Talente, it was clear the patient lacked the knowledge and skills to self-manage her condition, he recalled. Dr. Talente and his team, including pharmacists, helped the young woman understand how to administer her medications, provided refill reminders, and counseled her about reproductive health and how other medications could interact with lupus treatment.

From left, Dr. Gregg Talente, Dr. Patience White, Dr. Carol Greenlee, and (not pictured) Dr. Wayne J. Riley announce the launch of the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative. Courtesy American College of Physicians

From left, Dr. Gregg Talente, Dr. Patience White, Dr. Carol Greenlee, and (not pictured) Dr. Wayne J. Riley announce the launch of the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative.

“I look at her as a near-miss case,” said Dr. Talente, director of the internal medicine resident clinic at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, who specializes in pediatric-adolescent medicine. “A lot of bad things could have happened to her because her transition was delayed, and she wasn’t prepared. Fortunately, she landed in a place with more resources than a typical adult clinic so we were able to catch up.”

A new national initiative is designed to aid patients such as this during the move from pediatric to adult health care. The Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative is a collaborative effort by various specialty groups to facilitate more effective transition and transfer of young adults, while providing a framework for pediatricians and adult care providers. The project is under the direction of the American College of Physicians’ (ACP) Council of Subspecialty Societies in conjunction with the Got Transition (GT)/Center for Health Care Transition Improvement, the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM), and the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Got Transition is a cooperative project by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau and The National Alliance to Advance Adolescent Health to improve pediatric-to-adult-care transitions through innovative strategies.

Since the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative launched in spring 2015, project leaders have designed a series of disease-specific tools to enable smoother transition of patients. The downloadable tools include a transition readiness assessment, a medical summary/transfer record tool, and a self-care assessment. The guides were adapted from Got Transition’s six core elements of health care transition, developed from joint clinical recommendations by the ACP, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Dr. Carol Greenlee

Dr. Carol Greenlee

The disease-specific tools are just the beginning, said Carol Greenlee, MD, chair of the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative and chair of the ACP’s Council of Subspecialty Societies.

“We don’t want to just have tools on a website, we want to improve the whole process,” she said. “One of our goals is education and implementation. Part of implementation has to include collaboration because you don’t care-coordinate in isolation. You have to care-coordinate not just with the patient and family, but the pediatric and adult care providers need to collaborate.”

A need for better transition

Data show that knowledge and resources are lacking on both the pediatric and adult care side when it comes to transitioning patients from one realm to the other. A 2009 survey by the AAP found that most pediatric practices neither initiate transition planning early in adolescence nor offer transition-support service (AAP News 2009 Nov. Vol. 30). Another study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine found that many adult providers feel unprepared to care for young adults with complex chronic conditions and that in some cases, there is no identified adult primary care or specialty provider to whom care can be transitioned (J Gen Intern Med. 2008 Oct;23[10]:1621-7). Lack of time, inadequate payment, and poor training also have been cited as barriers to successful transition (Pediatrics. 2001 Jul 1. doi: 10.1542/peds.2011-0969).

Dr. Patience White is codirector of Got Transition and professor of medicine and of pediatrics at George Washington University, Washington. She has helped lead the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative. Courtesy Dr. Patience White

Dr. Patience White is codirector of Got Transition and professor of medicine and of pediatrics at George Washington University, Washington. She has helped lead the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative.

Poor transitions often lead to negative health outcomes for young adults, said Dr. Patience White, codirector of Got Transition and professor of medicine and pediatrics at George Washington University, Washington. She has co-led the Pediatric to Adult Care Transitions Initiative.

“The quality of care goes down; many [patients] are lost from their care, and they don’t get the kind of care they need,” Dr. White said. “Therefore, they have poor outcomes, and then of course, the cost goes up because they are utilizing emergency rooms or tests are repeated. You’re looking at poor patient experience, poor quality, and increased cost.”

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