Abstract

BackgroundDevelopmental-behavioral issues are among the most frequent and disabling conditions of children and adolescents seen in ambulatory settings. Guidelines of the Israeli Pediatric Association and the Israeli Society for Developmental Pediatrics specify the role of the primary-care pediatrician in screening and early identification of mild developmental behavioral conditions and define the criteria for referral to child development institutes. The aims of this study were to examine and describe how directors of these institutes perceive the role and involvement of community pediatricians in child development.MethodsQualitative interviews of the directors of 22 child development institutes from the ministry of health and the four health plans.ResultsAccording to the interviewees, there is little involvement of community pediatricians in detecting developmental delays, and it is mainly nurses and preschool teachers who detect such delays. They report that the key barriers that deter community pediatricians from greater involvement in child development diagnosis and treatment are lack of time, lack of compensation, and insufficient clinical knowledge. The interviewees would like to see community pediatricians conducting the primary medical evaluation, providing parental guidance, referring to therapists in mild cases, exercising discretion before referring children to child development institutes and providing relevant information to the institutes in the referral process. The mechanisms that they proposed for increasing the involvement of community pediatricians were expansion of pediatricians’ training, increased pediatricians’ use of teleconsultation with child development specialists and incentives for thorough performance of developmental assessments.ConclusionsDue to the importance of the Issue, we strongly recommend that policymakers require child development principles, evaluation, and providing appropriate parental guidance in the curriculum of the Israeli pediatric residency program. In addition, health plans should compensate pediatricians who need to conduct longer visits for children with developmental delays. The health plans should also develop teleconsultation channels for pediatricians with child development specialists to reduce unnecessary referrals to child development institutes.

Highlights

  • There is growing epidemiological evidence that developmental-behavioral (DB) issues are among the most frequent and disabling conditions of children and Nissanholtz‐Gannot et al Isr J Health Policy Res (2021) 10:56 adolescents seen in ambulatory settings [1]

  • The Israel Society of Pediatric Neurology and Development (ISPND) has issued guidelines specifying the role of the primary-care pediatrician in screening and early identification of mild DB conditions [5]

  • The aims of this study were to examine and describe how directors of child-development (CD) institutes in Israel perceive the role and involvement of community pediatricians in the area of CD Among other things, we examined their perception of the desirable involvement of community pediatricians in the area of CD and the extent to which children are needlessly referred to CD institutes

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Summary

Introduction

There is growing epidemiological evidence that developmental-behavioral (DB) issues are among the most frequent and disabling conditions of children and Nissanholtz‐Gannot et al Isr J Health Policy Res (2021) 10:56 adolescents seen in ambulatory settings [1]. The Israel Society of Pediatric Neurology and Development (ISPND) has issued guidelines specifying the role of the primary-care pediatrician in screening and early identification of mild DB conditions [5]. In this and other studies among US pediatricians, barriers of time, training, and reimbursement for early identification of DBP conditions were frequently noted [6,7,8]. Guidelines of the Israeli Pediatric Association and the Israeli Society for Developmental Pediatrics specify the role of the primary-care pediatrician in screening and early identification of mild developmental behavioral conditions and define the criteria for referral to child development institutes. The aims of this study were to examine and describe how directors of these institutes perceive the role and involvement of com‐ munity pediatricians in child development

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