2017 Community Benefit Report CHAI_160088756_2018-11_2017 Community Benefit Repo | Page 8

2017 COMMUNITY BENEFIT REPORT CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL COLORADO Screening for Whole Health Finding Local Solutions Psychosocial screener connects families to resources Families receive infant safe sleep education and resources to prevent fatalities The Child Health Clinic at Children’s Hospital Colorado is one of the largest providers of pediatric primary care for Medicaid patients in Aurora, with children birth to five years old making up the highest percentage of patients. Here, our First 1,000 Days strategic plan provides a roadmap for the organization to enhance its impact in the early childhood arena through psychosocial screening efforts. In 2016, the Child Health Clinic launched its psychosocial screening initiative, which is available in ten languages. This universal tool assesses all aspects of a family’s needs, environments and experiences, and connects them with appropriate resources to provide a safe, stable and nurturing environment for their child. In 2017: 8,000 Total psychosocial screens conducted in the Child Health Clinic 2,335 Patients under age 2 screened 24% Positive screening rate 19 Languages spoken, including Spanish, Amharic and Arabic 1,000 Families assisted by Community Health Navigators Top needs identified by the screener Financial needs Food insecurity When needs are identified by the psychosocial screener, Community Health Navigators and behavioral health clinicians work with primary care providers to address each specific need by offering onsite services and supports, partnering with community organizations and connecting families with vital resources. For example, when financial needs are identified, Community Health Navigators help families access services like Energy Outreach, which helps families afford heat and assists with bill payments, or Gabriel House, which provides baby supplies for families in need. If a family identifies food insecurity as a top need, Community Health Navigators connect them with Hunger Free Colorado, local food banks or food assistance programs. And for benefits support, Community Health Navigators work closely with local, county and state agencies to provide education and assistance to the family on how to access critical benefits. Similarly, when caregiver mental health, family or community violence, or other factors related to behavioral and mental health are identified, behavioral health clinicians work with primary care providers to offer immediate support, engage in safety planning and when indicated, refer families to community- based mental health resources. When families receive access to resources and supports earlier, children have the best opportunity to benefit from prevention and health promotion. After a spike in infant sleep-related fatalities in Aurora two years ago, Children’s Hospital Colorado took a more active role in providing safe sleep education and resources to members of the surrounding community. The effort began by partnering with the Colfax Community Network to train staff and social workers in infant safe sleep practices. From there, a pilot project focused on serving community members living in motels along the Colfax Avenue corridor in Aurora, whose infants were at risk for suffocation- related deaths due to unsafe sleep environments. Colfax Community Network staff, serving as trusted community liaisons, worked to raise awareness of certain hazards by promoting safe sleep. When needed, staff also distributed portable cribs, linens, pacifiers and infant sleep sacks. In 2017, the initiative moved to Children’s Colorado’s Child Health Clinic, one of the largest providers of pediatric primary care for Medicaid patients in Aurora. As with the pilot effort, Community Health Navigators were trained in best practices for promoting infant safe sleep, and subsequently began providing education on the importance and practices of infant safe sleep. Community Health Navigators were best able to discern which patient families had the greatest need for safe sleep education and resources through their personal relationships with each client. Now, Community Health Navigators distribute Pack ‘n Play cribs at no cost to the families, and work with them to ensure they understand how to set the crib up, regularly practice safe sleep and create a home environment aimed at keeping their infant safe and healthy. An Individualized Look at Child Fatalities Colorado’s Child Fatality Review team conducts systematic, comprehensive, multidisciplinary reviews of all preventable childhood deaths to better understand how and why children die in the state. In 2013, a law was passed that transitioned the child fatality review process from the state level to the local level. These teams brought together local professionals that better understood their individual community to review child fatalities and propose solutions. Children’s Colorado Injury Prevention Strategist Dwayne Smith is a member of the state review team and participates in the local review teams in Adams and Arapahoe Counties. He works with local professionals like school counselors, home visitation nurses, coroners, mental health counselors, pediatricians and many more to evaluate child fatalities in Aurora and identify ways to prevent these heartbreaking losses in the future. • Approximately 700 child fatalities (ages 0-17) occur in the state of Colorado each year. • From 2012-2016, Colorado saw 225 fatalities attributed to Sudden Unexpected Infant Death. This figure represented 22.3% of all child fatalities during that same period. • Each year about 4,000 infants in the U.S. die as a result of Sudden Unexpected Infant Death, including 45 infants in Colorado. • Many sleep-related infant deaths are preventable. “By providing local solutions to local public health challenges, we’re preventing future tragedies in a targeted way that makes sense for each individual community.” DWAY N E S M I T H Help with Medicaid and other benefits 8 9