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Unlocking the Power of Home-Based Asthma Services: Model Health Benefit Packages 

Sponsoring Program Name: 
Regional Asthma Management & Prevention and National Center for Healthy Housing
Unlocking the Power of Home-Based Asthma Services: Model Health Benefit Packages equips managed care organizations (MCOs) or other healthcare payers with the information they need to improve asthma management among their enrollees by ensuring the provision of asthma home visiting services. This new resource describes the scope, staffing, and services associated with home-based asthma services that identify and address environmental asthma triggers in the home environment. The tool includes tiers of services (e.g., from a very basic set of services to more premium sets of services) to provide a range of options for payers at different levels of readiness to provide home-based asthma services and includes recommendations to support action from a range of critical stakeholders.  

NEW Resource to Support Home-Based Asthma Services Now Available! 

 

Asthma home visiting services are a proven method for improving health outcomes, lowering healthcare utilization costs, improving patient care, and reducing healthcare disparities; yet far too many people with poorly controlled asthma don’t have access to these key interventions. Developed by Regional Asthma Management & Prevention and the National Center for Healthy Housing, Unlocking the Power of Home-Based Asthma Services: Model Health Benefit Packagesequips managed care organizations (MCOs) or other healthcare payers with the information they need to improve asthma management among their enrollees by ensuring the provision of asthma home visiting services. It also addresses the key roles that other community, state, and federal stakeholders play in motivating and supporting healthcare payers in this effort. 

 

Unlocking the Power of Home-Based Asthma Services: Model Health Benefit Packagesdescribes the scope, staffing, and services associated with home-based asthma services that identify and address environmental asthma triggers in the home environment. The tool includes tiers of services (e.g., from a very basic set of services to more premium sets of services) to provide a range of options for payers at different levels of readiness to provide home-based asthma services and includes recommendations to support action from a range of critical stakeholders. 

 

Learn more about thistool and the technical assistance opportunities here 

Contact Name: 
Anne Kelsey Lamb
Contact Email: 
anne@rampasthma.org
Contact Phone: 
4152058768
Resource Category: 
Target Audience: 

Leading the Way to Better Breathing: Managed Care Organizations and Asthma Home Visiting Services in California

Sponsoring Program Name: 
Regional Asthma Management and Prevention
Supporting managed care organizations in California – and organizations working with those MCOs – in improving asthma management for MCO members through asthma home visiting services.

RAMP is pleased to release Leading the Way to Better Breathing: Managed Care Organizations and Asthma Home Visiting Services in California.

Asthma home visiting services are a tried and true method for improving health outcomes, lowering health care utilization costs, improving patient care, and reducing health care disparities. Yet, far too many people with poorly controlled asthma don’t have access to these key interventions.

This easy-to-access document aims to change that.

The purpose of this tool is to support managed care organizations in California – and organizations working with those MCOs – in improving asthma management for MCO members by ensuring the provision of asthma home visiting services.

The document highlights the numerous benefits of asthma home visiting services, from their ability to achieve triple aim goals to supporting quality improvement initiatives to addressing more “upstream” health determinants. The tool also explains an abundant number of opportunities MCOs can take advantage of to make support for asthma home visiting services as easy and as efficient as possible, including some best practice examples from the field.

To access the full tool, as well as individual sections, click here.

Contact Name: 
Joel Ervice
Contact Email: 
joel@rampasthma.org
Contact Phone: 
510-285-5711
Resource Category: 
Resource Type: 
Language: 
Literacy Level: 
Target Audience: 

"It's Asthma" Infographic Series

“It’s Asthma” is a tailored health education resource targeted toward adolescents and emerging adults with asthma that provides information about indoor environmental asthma triggers and strategies to reduce exposure to these triggers. “It’s Asthma” consists of six infographics that focus on five common indoor environmental asthma triggers (i.e., secondhand smoke, pets, mold, dust mites, and pests), and can be used to assist adolescents and emerging adults with their asthma management. DeAndra Morris, an ASPPH/EPA Environmental Health Fellow hosted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Indoor Environments Division, has created the “It’s Asthma” Infographic Series as part of her participation and training in the Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH) Public Health Fellowship Program.

 

 

It’s Asthma!

 

Do you provide health education or health care services to adolescents and emerging adults with asthma?

Are you looking for health education materials and resources focused on indoor environmental asthma triggers for adolescents and emerging adults?

If so, DeAndra Morris, an ASPPH/EPA Environmental Health Fellow hosted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Indoor Environments Division, has created the “It’s Asthma” Infographic Series as part of her participation and training in the ASPPH Public Health Fellowship Program.

This infographic series can assist you in your efforts to provide information about indoor environmental asthma triggers to adolescents and emerging adults with asthma.

In this infographic series, adolescence is defined as the developmental period between childhood and adulthood that roughly occurs from the ages of 10–18 years old (Arnett, 2000; Jaworksa & MacQueen, 2015). According to Arnett’s Emerging Adulthood Theory, emerging adulthood is defined as the developmental period between adolescence and young adulthood that occurs from the ages of 18–29 years old, with a specific focus on the ages of 18–25 (Arnett, 2000; Arnett, 2007). Additionally, adolescence and emerging adulthood are the developmental periods characterized by high school or college attendance, the transition from high school to college, workforce entry, transition from pediatric to adult-centered health care, independence, and increased awareness of and responsibility for asthma management (Arnett, 2000; Arnett, 2007; Blum, Garell, Hodgman, Jorissen, Okinow, Orr, & Slap, 1993; Houtrow & Newacheck, 2008).

The data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 2015 and 2016 National Current Asthma Prevalence Rates include age group categories of 15–19 and 20–24, which represent these adolescence and emerging adulthood developmental periods. The CDC 2015 National Current Asthma Prevalence Rates* data indicated that adolescents and emerging adults had the highest and fourth highest current asthma prevalence rates, respectively, among all other age groups (CDC, 2018a). The recently published CDC 2016 National Current Asthma Prevalence Rates* data also indicates a high current asthma prevalence among these populations, with adolescents and emerging adults having the second and third highest current asthma prevalence rates, respectively, among all other age groups (CDC, 2018b).

The high current asthma prevalence among adolescents and emerging adults suggests that there may be a need for tailored asthma health education materials targeted toward adolescents and emerging adults with asthma, specifically for those between the ages of 15–24. However, a review of literature shows that there are many asthma health education resources and materials for children, but there are limited asthma health education resources and materials tailored and targeted towards adolescents and emerging adults.

The “It’s Asthma” Infographic Series addresses this need.

“It’s Asthma” is a tailored health education resource targeted toward adolescents and emerging adults with asthma that provides information about indoor environmental asthma triggers and strategies to reduce exposure to these triggers. “It’s Asthma” consists of six infographics that focus on five common indoor environmental asthma triggers (i.e., secondhand smoke, pets, mold, dust mites, and pests), and can be used to assist adolescents and emerging adults with their asthma management.

There are two versions of the series, the long form and short form. The long form provides more details about each trigger, and is available in a color format and a black and white format that can be used for black and white printing. Additionally, the short form version of the document can be used for initial engagement through social media posts, brochures, etc.

Consider using the “It’s Asthma” Infographic Series as you work to promote asthma management among adolescents and emerging adults with asthma!

Copy and paste this link to find the “It’s Asthma” Infographic Series:

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1r8y8UFdGfTtFtIe0j67RNDWPtsMTZFhI?usp=sharing

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References

Arnett, J. J. (2000). Emerging adulthood. A theory of development from the late teens through the twenties. American Psychologist, 55(5), 469–480. doi: 10.1037//0003-066X.55.5.469

Arnett, J. J. (2007). Afterword: Aging out of care—Toward realizing the possibilities of emerging adulthood. New Directions for Youth Development, 113, 151–161. doi: 10.1002/yd.207

Blum, R. W., Garell, D., Hodgman, C. H., Jorissen, T. W., Okinow, N. A., Orr, D. P., & Slap, G. B. (1993). Transition from child-centered to adult health-care systems for adolescents with chronic conditions: a position paper of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. Journal of Adolescent Health, 14(7), 570–576.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2018). Retrieved December 15, 2017. 2015 Previous Most Recent Asthma Data. Retrieved from www.cdc.gov/asthma/archivedata/2015/2015_data.html.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2018). Retrieved August 20, 2018. Most Recent Asthma Data. Retrieved from www.cdc.gov/asthma/most_recent_data.html.

Houtrow, A. J., & Newacheck, P. W. (2008). Understanding transition issues: Asthma as an example. The Journal of Pediatrics, 152(4), 453–455.

Note

* The CDC 2015 National Current Asthma Prevalence Rates is based on the 2015 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) Data, and the CDC 2016 National Current Asthma Prevalence Rates data is based on the 2016 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) Data.

Contact Name: 
DeAndra Morris
Contact Email: 
drmasthmainfographicseries@gmail.com
Contact Phone: 
(619) 315-4316
Resource Category: 
Resource Type: 
Language: 
Target Audience: 

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