Abstract

Children with neurodevelopmental disabilities experience many unmet healthcare needs. Care coordination is one critical solution to addressing the substantial strain on families, local communities, and the larger healthcare system. The purpose of this study was to implement a care coordination program in an interdisciplinary pediatric neurodevelopmental evaluation clinic and examine care coordinator and caregiver outcomes. Following neurodevelopmental diagnosis, children were provided with either care coordination (CC) or care as usual (CAU). For those receiving CC, the care coordinator documented family goals and care coordination activities, outcomes, and time spent. Caregivers in both groups completed a survey measuring access to needed services and caregiver stress and empowerment following their child's evaluation (T1) and 4–6 months post-evaluation (T2). Care coordinator findings demonstrated that over 85% of family goals focused on understanding the child's diagnosis, getting needed interventions and educational support, and accessing healthcare financing programs. More than half of care coordination activities were spent on engaging and educating the family; similarly, the most time-consuming care coordination efforts were in helping families understand their child's diagnosis and meeting family's basic needs. For those children referred to needed services, 54% were enrolled in one or more service at T2. Caregivers in both the CC and CAU groups reported an increase in stress related to interactions with their child as well as increased empowerment from T1 to T2. Contrary to our hypotheses, there were no significant group-by-time interactions across caregiver-report measures. While these findings further our understanding of care coordination delivery, they diverge from previous evidence demonstrating care coordination efficacy. This study paves the way for future opportunities to evaluate what kinds of care coordination supports family need at varying times in their child's healthcare journey and how the outcomes important to all stakeholders are measured to reflect true evaluation of efficacy.

Highlights

  • Children with neurodevelopmental disabilities, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), developmental delay (DD), and intellectual disability (ID), experience a high level of unmet healthcare needs [1,2,3,4]

  • Getting Needed Interventions (27.87%), Accessing Needed Healthcare (21.31%), Understanding the Diagnosis (21.31%), and Getting a Needed Education Plan (15.57%) accounted for over 85% of family goals

  • Improving Family Quality of Life accounted for 6.56% of goals, while Complex Care Access/Communication accounted for 4.10% and Meeting Basic Needs accounted for 3.28% of goals

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Summary

Introduction

Children with neurodevelopmental disabilities, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), developmental delay (DD), and intellectual disability (ID), experience a high level of unmet healthcare needs [1,2,3,4]. Unmet needs are associated with significant family economic [3, 8] and time burden [3], and these challenges are exacerbated for children with greater medical complexity [9] Factors such as increasing access to health insurance that covers needed services, decreasing out-of-pocket spending, reducing exposure to adverse childhood events, improving family employment and financial well-being [2], and creating access to family-centered and coordinated care in a medical home [10, 11] have been identified as critical to developing systems of care that address unmet needs and health disparities for children with a variety of special healthcare needs. Care coordination programs must cohesively integrate communication and planning among and between children and their families, care coordinators, service providers, community and state agencies, and healthcare payers

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