5 results on '"Herendeen NE"'
Search Results
2. Telehealth: Opportunities to Improve Access, Quality, and Cost in Pediatric Care.
- Author
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Curfman A, Hackell JM, Herendeen NE, Alexander J, Marcin JP, Moskowitz WB, Bodnar CEF, Simon HK, and McSwain SD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Patient-Centered Care economics, Patient-Centered Care organization & administration, Pediatrics economics, Pediatrics standards, Telemedicine economics, Telemedicine standards, United States, Health Care Costs, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Pediatrics methods, Pediatrics organization & administration, Quality of Health Care organization & administration, Telemedicine methods, Telemedicine organization & administration
- Abstract
The use of telehealth technology to connect with patients has expanded significantly over the past several years, particularly in response to the global coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. This technical report describes the present state of telehealth and its current and potential applications. Telehealth has the potential to transform the way care is delivered to pediatric patients, expanding access to pediatric care across geographic distances, leveraging the pediatric workforce for care delivery, and improving disparities in access to care. However, implementation will require significant efforts to address the digital divide to ensure that telehealth does not inadvertently exacerbate inequities in care. The medical home model will continue to evolve to use telehealth to provide high-quality care for children, particularly for children and youth with special health care needs, in accordance with current and evolving quality standards. Research and metric development are critical for the development of evidence-based best practices and policies in these new models of care. Finally, as pediatric care transitions from traditional fee-for-service payment to alternative payment methods, telehealth offers unique opportunities to establish value-based population health models that are financed in a sustainable manner., Competing Interests: CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURES: Dr Hackell is an expert reviewer and provides testimony to various law firms; the other authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Telehealth: Improving Access to and Quality of Pediatric Health Care.
- Author
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Curfman AL, Hackell JM, Herendeen NE, Alexander JJ, Marcin JP, Moskowitz WB, Bodnar CEF, Simon HK, and McSwain SD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Health Services, Ethnicity, Humans, Pediatricians, Race Factors, Specialization, United States, Health Services Accessibility, Quality of Health Care, Telemedicine
- Abstract
All children and adolescents deserve access to quality health care regardless of their race/ethnicity, health conditions, financial resources, or geographic location. Despite improvements over the past decades, severe disparities in the availability and access to high-quality health care for children and adolescents continue to exist throughout the United States. Economic and racial factors, geographic maldistribution of primary care pediatricians, and limited availability of pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists all contribute to inequitable access to pediatric care. Robust, comprehensive telehealth coverage is critical to improving pediatric access and quality of care and services, particularly for under-resourced populations., Competing Interests: POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: Dr Hackell is an expert reviewer and provides testimony to various law firms; the other authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2021 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Let Telemedicine Enhance Your Medical Home.
- Author
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Herendeen NE
- Subjects
- Humans, Patient-Centered Care, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Competing Interests: POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The author has indicated he has no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Telemedicine reduces absence resulting from illness in urban child care: evaluation of an innovation.
- Author
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McConnochie KM, Wood NE, Kitzman HJ, Herendeen NE, Roy J, and Roghmann KJ
- Subjects
- Child Care, Child, Preschool, Consumer Behavior, Cost of Illness, Early Intervention, Educational, Humans, Multivariate Analysis, New York, Poisson Distribution, Poverty Areas, Urban Health Services, Absenteeism, Child Day Care Centers, Child Health Services, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Background: Common acute illness challenges everyone involved in child care. Impoverished inner-city families, whose children are most burdened by morbidity and whose reliance on child care is most important, are those least equipped to deal with this challenge., Objective: To assess the impact of telemedicine on absence from child care due to illness (ADI)., Design/methods: A before-and-after design with historical and concurrent controls was used to study ADI in 5 inner-city child care centers in Rochester, New York, between January 1, 2001, and June 30, 2003. Enrollment averaged 138 children per center, of whom Medicaid covered 66%. Center 5 provided only concurrent controls. Telemedicine service began in the first 4 centers in a staggered fashion starting in May 2001. Baseline data on ADI before availability of telemedicine were collected in each center for a minimum of 18 weeks. The telemedicine model for diagnosis and treatment of common acute problems involved both real-time and store-and-forward information exchange between a child and telemedicine assistant in child care and an office-based telemedicine clinician. Devices used were an all-purpose digital camera (with attachments designed to facilitate capture of ear, nose, throat, skin, and eye images) and an electronic stethoscope. ADI indexed illness that had interrupted care and education for children and burdened both parents and the community with work loss and health care-related costs. Detailed attendance records and staff and parent interviews provided data. The total number of days of attendance expected from all registered children over the course of a week (total child-days) served as the denominator in calculating rates for ADI. The center-week served as the primary unit of analysis. This study is descriptive in character; statistics are not inferential but instead serve to summarize observations., Results: For the 400 weeks of valid observations contributed by the 5 centers, the mean ADI was 6.41 absences per 100 child-days per week. In bivariate analysis, predictors of ADI were children's mean age, child care center, proportion of children covered by Medicaid, season of the year, and availability of telemedicine. ADI during weeks with telemedicine (4.07 absences per 100 child-days) was less than half that during weeks without telemedicine (8.78 absences per 100 child-days). After adjusting for potentially confounding variables using the generalized estimating equations method, telemedicine remained the strongest predictor of ADI. A 63% reduction in ADI was attributable to telemedicine, an effect similar to the 59% variation in ADI with season of the year. During the 201 total weeks that telemedicine services were available, 940 telemedicine encounters occurred. Telemedicine clinicians for these 940 encounters recommended exclusion from child care for 7.0% and in-person visits for 2.8% of the children. In surveys, parents indicated that 91.2% of telemedicine contacts allowed them to stay at work and that 93.8% of problems managed by telemedicine would otherwise have led to an office or emergency department visit., Conclusions: Telemedicine holds substantial potential to reduce the impact of illness on health and education of children, on time lost from work in parents, and on absenteeism in the economy.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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