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Redesigning Health Care Practices to Address Childhood Poverty

Fierman, Arthur H; Beck, Andrew F; Chung, Esther K; Tschudy, Megan M; Coker, Tumaini R; Mistry, Kamila B; Siegel, Benjamin; Chamberlain, Lisa J; Conroy, Kathleen; Federico, Steven G; Flanagan, Patricia J; Garg, Arvin; Gitterman, Benjamin A; Grace, Aimee M; Gross, Rachel S; Hole, Michael K; Klass, Perri; Kraft, Colleen; Kuo, Alice; Lewis, Gena; Lobach, Katherine S; Long, Dayna; Ma, Christine T; Messito, Mary; Navsaria, Dipesh; Northrip, Kimberley R; Osman, Cynthia; Sadof, Matthew D; Schickedanz, Adam B; Cox, Joanne
Child poverty in the United States is widespread and has serious negative effects on the health and well-being of children throughout their life course. Child health providers are considering ways to redesign their practices in order to mitigate the negative effects of poverty on children and support the efforts of families to lift themselves out of poverty. To do so, practices need to adopt effective methods to identify poverty-related social determinants of health and provide effective interventions to address them. Identification of needs can be accomplished with a variety of established screening tools. Interventions may include resource directories, best maintained in collaboration with local/regional public health, community, and/or professional organizations; programs embedded in the practice (eg, Reach Out and Read, Healthy Steps for Young Children, Medical-Legal Partnership, Health Leads); and collaboration with home visiting programs. Changes to health care financing are needed to support the delivery of these enhanced services, and active advocacy by child health providers continues to be important in effecting change. We highlight the ongoing work of the Health Care Delivery Subcommittee of the Academic Pediatric Association Task Force on Child Poverty in defining the ways in which child health care practice can be adapted to improve the approach to addressing child poverty.
PMID: 27044692
ISSN: 1876-2867
CID: 2065512

Determinants of Health and Pediatric Primary Care Practices

Beck, Andrew F; Tschudy, Megan M; Coker, Tumaini R; Mistry, Kamila B; Cox, Joanne E; Gitterman, Benjamin A; Chamberlain, Lisa J; Grace, Aimee M; Hole, Michael K; Klass, Perri E; Lobach, Katherine S; Ma, Christine T; Navsaria, Dipesh; Northrip, Kimberly D; Sadof, Matthew D; Shah, Anita N; Fierman, Arthur H
More than 20% of children nationally live in poverty. Pediatric primary care practices are critical points-of-contact for these patients and their families. Practices must consider risks that are rooted in poverty as they determine how to best deliver family-centered care and move toward action on the social determinants of health. The Practice-Level Care Delivery Subgroup of the Academic Pediatric Association's Task Force on Poverty has developed a roadmap for pediatric providers and practices to use as they adopt clinical practice redesign strategies aimed at mitigating poverty's negative impact on child health and well-being. The present article describes how care structures and processes can be altered in ways that align with the needs of families living in poverty. Attention is paid to both facilitators of and barriers to successful redesign strategies. We also illustrate how such a roadmap can be adapted by practices depending on the degree of patient need and the availability of practice resources devoted to intervening on the social determinants of health. In addition, ways in which practices can advocate for families in their communities and nationally are identified. Finally, given the relative dearth of evidence for many poverty-focused interventions in primary care, areas that would benefit from more in-depth study are considered. Such a focus is especially relevant as practices consider how they can best help families mitigate the impact of poverty-related risks in ways that promote long-term health and well-being for children.
PMID: 26933205
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 2006342

Death takes a weekend

Klass, Perri
PMID: 25629738
ISSN: 1533-4406
CID: 4765122

Illness not as metaphor

Klass, Perri
PMID: 25427111
ISSN: 1533-4406
CID: 4765112

Literacy promotion: an essential component of primary care pediatric practice

High, Pamela C; Klass, Perri
Reading regularly with young children stimulates optimal patterns of brain development and strengthens parent-child relationships at a critical time in child development, which, in turn, builds language, literacy, and social-emotional skills that last a lifetime. Pediatric providers have a unique opportunity to encourage parents to engage in this important and enjoyable activity with their children beginning in infancy. Research has revealed that parents listen and children learn as a result of literacy promotion by pediatricians, which provides a practical and evidence-based opportunity to support early brain development in primary care practice. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that pediatric providers promote early literacy development for children beginning in infancy and continuing at least until the age of kindergarten entry by (1) advising all parents that reading aloud with young children can enhance parent-child relationships and prepare young minds to learn language and early literacy skills; (2) counseling all parents about developmentally appropriate shared-reading activities that are enjoyable for children and their parents and offer language-rich exposure to books, pictures, and the written word; (3) providing developmentally appropriate books given at health supervision visits for all high-risk, low-income young children; (4) using a robust spectrum of options to support and promote these efforts; and (5) partnering with other child advocates to influence national messaging and policies that support and promote these key early shared-reading experiences. The AAP supports federal and state funding for children's books to be provided at pediatric health supervision visits to children at high risk living at or near the poverty threshold and the integration of literacy promotion, an essential component of pediatric primary care, into pediatric resident education. This policy statement is supported by the AAP technical report "School Readiness" and supports the AAP policy statement "Early Childhood Adversity, Toxic Stress, and the Role of the Pediatrician: Translating Developmental Science Into Lifelong Health."
PMID: 24962987
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 4765102

Foreword: Adolescent fatigue, POTS, and recovery: a guide for clinicians

Klass, Perri
PMID: 24819030
ISSN: 1538-3199
CID: 4765092

A Roommate's Influence [Newspaper Article]

Klass, Perri
"The bottom line was we found that when you're matched with a roommate who drinks alcohol, your grades are likely to go down," said Dan Levy, a senior lecturer in public policy at Harvard and co-author of a 2008 study on college students and alcohol. In a study published last year, Daniel Eisenberg, an associate professor of health management and policy at the University of Michigan who directs an annual survey of college student mental health, including roommate issues, and his colleagues found no significant "contagion" effect of mental health from one roommate to another
PROQUEST:1501509756
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 814512

Feasts for the Eyes, and the Palate [Newspaper Article]

Klass, Perri
[...]on a crowded lane packed with stalls selling Islamic-Chinese cuisine -- lamb dumplings, mutton soup, pancakes and mung bean noodles -- tourists can pose with statues of a soup seller and his customers
PROQUEST:1496257596
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 814522

A Taste of My Own Manners [Newspaper Article]

Klass, Perri
What are the ethics of keeping one another waiting? "These issues are hugely important to patient satisfaction, to patient compliance, to patient trust, and to physician peace of mind, or a physician's positive attitude about work and environment," said Arthur L. Caplan, director of the bioethics division at NYU Langone Medical Center
PROQUEST:1490610244
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 814532

Our bodies' battle against modernity [Newspaper Article]

Klass, Perri
"Like it or not, we are slightly fat, furless, bipedal primates who crave sugar, salt, fat, and starch," he writes, "but we are still adapted to eating a diverse diet of fibrous fruits and vegetables, nuts, seeds, tubers, and lean meat.We enjoy rest and relaxation, but our bodies are still those of endurance athletes evolved to walk many miles a day, often run, as well as dig, climb, and carry."
PROQUEST:1476537531
ISSN: 0190-8286
CID: 814542