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AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS |
| ABSTRACT |
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Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus CWLA, Child Welfare League of America AAP, American Academy of Pediatrics
| BACKGROUND |
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Recent brain research has shown that infancy and early childhood are critical periods during which the foundations for trust, self-esteem, conscience, empathy, problem solving, focused learning, and impulse control are laid down.715 Because multiple factors (eg, an adverse prenatal environment, parental depression or stress, drug exposure, malnutrition, neglect, abuse, or physical or emotional trauma) can negatively impact a childs subsequent development, it is essential that all children, but especially young children, are able to live in a nurturing, supportive, and stimulating environment.16
It is not surprising that children entering foster care are often in poor health. Compared with children from the same socioeconomic background, they have much higher rates of serious emotional and behavioral problems, chronic physical disabilities, birth defects, developmental delays, and poor school achievement.6,1729 Moreover, the health care these children receive while in placement is often compromised by insufficient funding, poor planning, lack of access, prolonged waits for community-based medical and mental health services, and lack of coordination of services as well as poor communication among health and child welfare professionals.3,3033
Despite the existence of recognized standards developed by the Child Welfare League of America (CWLA) in consultation with the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP),34 many child welfare agencies lack specific policies for childrens physical and mental health services.35 Recently, the AAP District II Committee on Early Childhood, Adoption, and Dependent Care Task Force on Health Care for Children completed a comprehensive resource manual that outlines areas of health concerns and sets forth guidelines for evaluating foster childrens physical, developmental, mental health, and educational needs.36 Although a broad range of supportive and therapeutic services is needed, most children do not undergo a comprehensive developmental or psychological assessment at any time during their placement. State Medicaid systems, which provide funding for the health care of nearly all children in foster care, rarely cover all of the services these children require.3638
It has been suggested that a variety of factors act as true barriers to care for these children. Information about health care services children have received and their health status before placement is often hard to obtain. In part, this is because children have had erratic contact with a number of health care providers before placement. In addition, social workers are not always able to review a childs health history in detail with birth parents at the time of placement. Foster care parents often have been given limited training in health care issues or in accessing the health care system. Social workers often lack information about the type of health care services that children in foster care receive and are, therefore, unable to effectively oversee the amount or quality of care delivered.33 Increasingly complicated physical and mental health conditions in children in foster care make taking care of these children difficult, even for the committed physician.
A number of states are mandating that foster children shift from fee-for-service Medicaid to Medicaid managed care. Agencies must now consider arranging or purchasing comprehensive services within the 1996 managed health care model.39 Concerns exist about rationing of services, especially within the mental health area. General principles exist for developing and implementing a statewide health care system for children in foster care, irrespective of the model.40 When children are placed in foster homes outside the original jurisdiction or in another state, coordination of health care by the foster care agency becomes even more difficult.
Pediatricians can play a critically important role in helping child welfare agencies, foster families, and birth families minimize the trauma of placement separation and improve the childs health and development during the period of foster care. Providing health care to these children requires considerably more time than it does for the average pediatric patient. Physicians must be prepared to provide necessary care even when little or no specific information about the child is available at the time of the visit. The pediatrician should attempt to identify physical, psychosocial, and developmental problems and assist social workers and foster parents in determining the types of additional evaluation, care, and community services the child requires.3,41
This statement provides specific suggestions for delivery of health services to young children in foster care. More detailed recommendations regarding developmental issues for young children in foster care have recently been published by the AAP.42
| STANDARDS FOR HEALTH CARE SERVICES |
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Because children in foster care have a high prevalence of chronic and complex illnesses, assessing each childs unique needs is critical. Establishing continuity of care and ensuring a comprehensive and coordinated treatment approach by all professionals involved in their care should be one of the highest priorities for child welfare agencies. Diverse characteristics of child welfare agencies, wide geographic distribution of foster homes in some states, lack of comprehensive funding for childrens physical and mental health care services, and inadequate physician compensation for these services contribute to the difficulty of providing an organized approach to the care of these children. To avoid fragmentation of care, a variety of health care delivery models can be developed for this population, including: a) agency-based care, in which children are brought into the agency for health care; b) specialized foster care clinics, in which a medical home is established for the child; and c) community-based care, in which a practitioner provides health care through a private office, health maintenance organization, neighborhood health center, or general academic pediatric clinic. In all models, health care coordination remains the responsibility of the foster care agency.
Regardless of the model developed in a locale, it should adhere to certain principles. Whether services are delivered by a single team of professionals under one roof43 or as part of a planned program of care using many community resources,21 all professionals involved in the care of each child should communicate effectively with one another. Furthermore, compassionate assistance, education, and training for foster and birth parents should be included as an integral part of the overall program of services provided to children and their families during and after placement.
Pediatricians should be involved in the planning and development of systems of care for children in foster care. In addition to their role as primary health care providers, pediatricians may be contracted by child welfare agencies to serve as regional and statewide medical consultants and to develop and implement policies and programs that will improve the effectiveness and comprehensiveness of services for children in foster care.44 Pediatrician participation in the Committee on Early Childhood, Adoption, and Dependent Care of the local AAP chapter is also important.
| THE COMPONENTS OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES |
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Initial Health Screening
Every child entering foster care should have a health screening evaluation before or shortly after placement. The purpose of this examination is to identify any immediate medical, urgent mental health, or dental needs the child may have and any additional health conditions of which the foster parents and caseworker should be aware. Careful measurement of height, weight, and head circumference may reveal growth delays or reflect poor nutritional or general health status. Because many children entering foster care have been victims of physical or sexual abuse, all body surfaces should be unclothed at some point during the physical examination, and any signs of recent or old trauma, bruises, scars, deformities, or limitations in the function of body parts or organ systems should be noted and documented photographically. If there is a history of physical abuse before placement or if signs of recent physical trauma are present, appropriate imaging studies to screen for recent or healing fractures should be considered. Genital and anal examination of both sexes should be conducted, and laboratory tests should be performed for HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases when indicated clinically or by history.45 Other infections and communicable diseases should be noted and treated promptly. The status of any known chronic illnesses should be determined to ensure that appropriate medications and treatments are available. The physician should discuss specific care instructions directly with the foster parents and caseworker and should not rely on an intermediary.
Comprehensive Health Assessment
Within 1 month of the childs placement, a comprehensive health assessment should be performed by a pediatrician who is knowledgeable about, and interested in, the treatment of children in foster care and who can provide a medical home and arrange for the provision of regular, ongoing primary care services. Time permitting, it may be possible to do the screening and comprehensive assessments simultaneously. Child welfare agencies should make all pertinent past medical, social, and family information available to assist the physician performing the evaluation. The childs caseworker and foster parents should be present for the initial visit. Whenever possible for this and subsequent visits, information should be obtained from the birth parents, and they should be kept informed about the health status of their child. When appropriate and as a part of the care plan of the child welfare agency, birth parents should be encouraged to be present at health care visits and to participate in health care decisions. The historical review should include the circumstances that led to placement, the childs adjustment to separation from the birth family, adaptation to the foster home, developmental or school progress, and the agencys plans for permanency (ie, most commonly, return to parent or relative, adoption, or independent living). The physical examination should focus on the presence of any acute or chronic medical problems that may require additional evaluation or referral. Screening tests should be performed according to the AAP Recommendations for Preventive Pediatric Health Care.46 Because many young children entering foster care come from settings in which substance abuse and sexual promiscuity are common, they should be considered to be at high risk for HIV infection, hepatitis, and other sexually transmitted infections. Laboratory tests for these conditions should be performed when appropriate.45,4749
Children entering foster care are likely to be incompletely immunized,18 and determining the types and number of immunizations that a particular child has received in the past may be difficult. By communicating directly with previous medical providers or reviewing previous medical records (eg, from schools or immunization registries), it is often possible to reconstruct the childs immunization history. For some children, despite a thorough effort, little or no immunization information will be available. These children should be considered susceptible and immunized according to AAP guidelines.50
Developmental and Mental Health Evaluation
At each health visit, the pediatrician should attempt to assess the childs developmental, educational, and emotional status. These assessments may be based on structured interviews with the foster parents and caseworker, the results of standardized tests of development, or a review of the childs school progress. All children with identified problems should be promptly evaluated and treated as clinically indicated. When available, local consultants and community-based intervention programs should be called on to assist in diagnosing and treating children with developmental and educational problems. Pediatricians may also assist social workers and foster parents by referring eligible children to various federal and state entitlement programs in their community (eg, Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children [WIC] and Head Start, Birth-to-Three,51 special education,52 early intervention,51,53 and Title V programs).
In some communities, child welfare agencies may be able to access or establish multidisciplinary teams to routinely evaluate children entering foster care. By their very nature, multidisciplinary teams provide a comprehensive and coordinated approach to assessment and are often an efficient and cost-effective means of accomplishing this task. Several successful community-based program models using this approach have been described.3,21,25,41,54
Regardless of how the comprehensive assessment is performed, the results and recommendations should be incorporated into the childs court-approved social service case plan.55 To ensure that the multiple needs of children in foster care are addressed by those involved in the court process, 1 state judicial commission has developed an excellent guide for judges, advocates, and child welfare professionals to refer to, with a checklist of 10 basic questions that should be answered to ensure that standards of health care are met.55 The caseworker and pediatrician should then help the foster parents arrange for all of the services recommended for the child.
Providing Primary Care and Monitoring of Childrens Health Status While in Placement
Placement in foster care is a stressful experience for most children. Often, problems arise during the course of placement that were not apparent at the outset. For example, a childs adjustment to separation from his or her family and adaptation to the foster home may be characterized by distinct behavioral changes over time.56 Similarly, significant emotional distress may occur after visits with birth family members or at times of transition, such as a change in placement or return to birth parents.57 Therefore, all children in foster care should have a medical home in which they receive ongoing primary care and periodic reassessments of their health, development, and emotional status to determine any changes in their status or the need for additional services and interventions. Ideally, at a minimum such reassessments should occur monthly for the first 6 months of age, every 2 months for ages 6 to 12 months, every 3 months for ages 1 to 2 years, every 6 months for ages 2 through adolescence, and at times of significant changes in placement (foster home transfers, approaching reunification). These periodicity recommendations, although not backed by evidence-based data, are considered by this committee to be the minimal number of preventive health care encounters required to closely monitor these children. Depending on the stability of the placement and changes in the childs status, additional visits may be indicated. Any child prescribed psychotropic medication must be closely monitored by the prescribing physician for potential adverse effects. The social worker should maintain contact with the provider and receive periodic updates on the childs progress. When changes in foster placement are planned or when decisions regarding permanency planning are anticipated, pediatricians can help child welfare professionals evaluate these decisions in light of the childs age and developmental level. Pediatricians can also work with the child welfare agency and the court to determine what is truly in the childs best interest.
| TRANSFER OF MEDICAL INFORMATION |
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| THE IMPACT OF FOSTER CARE PLACEMENT ON CHILDREN |
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| RECOMMENDATIONS |
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COMMITTEE ON EARLY CHILDHOOD, ADOPTION, AND DEPENDENT CARE, 20012002
LIAISONS
CONSULTANT
STAFF
| FOOTNOTES |
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| REFERENCES |
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