Published online October 27, 2009
PEDIATRICS Vol. 124 Supplement November 2009, pp. S224-S236 (doi:10.1542/peds.2009-1100K)
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SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE



Health Care Quality-Improvement Approaches to Reducing Child Health Disparities

Marshall H. Chin, MD, MPHa,b,c,d, Morgen Alexander-Young, MPHb,d and Deborah L. Burnet, MDa,c,d,e

a Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine
b Center for Health and the Social Sciences
c Diabetes Research and Training Center
d Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Finding Answers: Disparities Research for Change National Program Office
e Department of Pediatrics, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Relatively few quality-improvement efforts have been aimed at reducing differences in children's care and outcomes across race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and insurance status. To inform quality-improvement efforts to reduce child health disparities, we summarize lessons learned from the adult disparities-intervention literature, identify interventions that have reduced disparities in pediatric asthma outcomes and immunization rates, and outline special considerations for child disparity interventions. Key recommendations for providers, health care organizations, and researchers include: (1) examine your performance data stratified according to insurance status, race/ethnicity, language, and socioeconomic status; (2) measure and improve childhood health-related quality of life, development, and condition-specific targets (such as asthma and immunizations); (3) measure and improve anticipatory guidance for early prevention of conditions (such as injuries, violence, substance abuse, and sexually transmitted diseases) and efforts to promote positive growth (such as readership programs to improve low literacy); (4) measure and improve structural aspects of care that affect child health outcomes and can reduce disparities, such as patient-centered medical-home elements; (5) incorporate families into interventions; (6) use multidisciplinary teams with close tracking and follow-up of patients; (7) integrate non–health care partners into quality-improvement interventions; and (8) culturally tailor quality improvement. A key recommendation for payers is to align financial incentives to reduce disparities. The National Institutes of Health and other funders should support (1) disparity-intervention studies on these recommendations that analyze clinical outcomes, intervention-implementation processes, and costs, and (2) creation of new child health services researchers who can find effective quality-improvement approaches for reducing disparities.


Key Words: child • disparities • quality improvement • race • ethnicity


Accepted Jul 20, 2009.


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