| Tools
for Youth
Every Youth
Deserves a Medical Home
To get started, review the resources and tools located on the
left side bar of this web page.
Do you have a Medical Home?
A medical home is a way you, your family and all your
doctors work together to find a plan for you to reach your
life goals/dreams and stay healthy in the process. It is
also a way of putting all the people who can help you under
one roof. Children/Youth and their families who have a
medical home receive the care that they need from a pediatrician
or physician (health care professional) whom they trust.
Transitions/changes are a part of life, it begins when
you are born and continues through your life. A transition
goal is to increase your functioning throughout life by
providing you with the best health care services to help
you gain independence. A medical home can help you throughout
life’s transition process. You, your family and health
care professionals work together in a medical home to identify
and make contact with all the medical and non-medical services
needed to make your daily life easier for you and your
family.
How do you know if you have a medical
home?
There are seven parts that go into making a medical home.
Each of these seven parts helps you get the care you need
to stay healthy. The questions below can help you better
understand how a medical home can help you and your family
find who, what, where and how you can get what you need
to reach your dreams. You can use these questions to ask
your provider about ways to improve services for you and
your family. This is your opportunity to take charge of
your life and make a
plan
to help
you reach
your
dreams. You deserve a medical home!
Does your provider:
Accept your health insurance?
Let
you know how you can get a hold of someone in the office
at any time, day or night?
Have exam tables low enough
for you to get on? Door openings wide enough for you to
get in the room (i.e. wheelchair access)?
Help
you find other resources/people who can provide care in
your community
(i.e. home health services)?
Access to Care
Does your provider:
Ask you how you are feeling? Ask
you if you know why you are seeing them today before asking
your parents?
Talk about your health with just you and
recognize you as an expert in your own care? Ask you if
you would like your parents to wait outside?
Ask
you, who you consider your family and involve them in your
care
plan?
Sit
down with you and your family to come up with a care plan
for you? Ask you who is around to
help you
with homework, bathing, eating and getting around?
Youth/Family-Centered
Care
Does your provider:
Talk with the hospital physician if
you are admitted to the hospital?
Help you get ready for
changes in school (graduation and college, being a part
of your IEP)?
Help you get ready for changes in your health
(talk to you about how your body is changing)?
Ask when
you think you should or would like to start seeing an adult
provider?
Speak to you about different people, places
or things to help you and your family meet your goals and
plan for your future?
Continuous Care
Does your provider:
Tell
you how to get a hold of them when/if the office is closed
(Office staff are available
24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year)?
Know you
and your family (asks questions about other things other
than your health and your condition)?
Help
you find information or people who can help you apply for
insurance and public
resources (i.e. Medicaid)?
Let you know how important it
is to come see them on a regular basis to help prevent
other conditions (such as: pressure sores, seizures)?
Comprehensive
Care
Does your provider:
Help you find out where you can get
needed services (Transportation, Personal Aide, SSI)?
Talk about your health and needs to you and your (school,
therapists, specialty doctors) or anyone else who works
with you to come up with your care plan?
Help you with
scheduling appointments, finding you a specialist to help
with your other health needs?
Help you learn how to keep
a notebook of all doctor visits, medicines and important
phone numbers so you learn more about your disability?
Help you find out where, who or how to call someone for
a new wheelchair, walker or crutches to help you get around
easier?
Coordinated Care
Does your provider:
Speak to you in a way you understand?
Sit down at an appointment and asks what you do for fun,
how school/work is going, and what your plans are for next
year?
Help you feel comfortable enough so you can talk
to them about such things as relationships, sex, drugs,
and birth control?
Compassionate Care
Does your provider:
Ask
about you and your family beliefs, cultural background,
rituals, and customs
when discussing your plan for the future?
Ask if you understand
your care plan and the medical information included in
your care and makes sure you have interpreters or a translator
if needed?
Culturally-Effective Care
The American Academy of Pediatrics believes that all youth
should have a medical home where care is accessible, youth/family-centered,
continuous, comprehensive, coordinated, compassionate and
culturally-effective.
Last Updated
July 21, 2008
|