HITEQ Health Center Childhood Obesity Preventer Badge

Supporting young patients in achieving and maintaining a healthy BMI and living healthy, active lives is critical to their ability to live full, healthy, and happy lives. Health centers improve the health of their patients and community by addressing child and adolescent weight.

The resources below are the product of a HRSA-MCHB collaboration, highlighting important evidence-based tools from Bright Futures as well as tools from HITEQ to improve the use of your EHR and health IT systems to support implementation of promising practice.

Visit the 4 part webinar series and their related resources linked below on this page and then fill out the submission form on the right and you will be rewarded with a Childhood Obesity Preventer badge!​ 

This is an official badge that is submitted by the HITEQ Center as a proof of completion to the blockchain. Your badge can be added to profiles such as LinkedIn and verified through accreditation services such as Accredible and Open Badge.

 

 

Event date: 4/12/2022 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM Export event
Lessons Learned: Implementing and Expanding Social Needs Screening Programs in Health Centers - Session 2:Level 2: Implementing a Social Needs Screening Tool
Jodie Albert
/ Categories: Population Health, Archived

Lessons Learned: Implementing and Expanding Social Needs Screening Programs in Health Centers - Session 2:Level 2: Implementing a Social Needs Screening Tool

HITEQ Learning Collaborative Series

The HITEQ Center put on this learning collaborative to learn about health center promising practices and key considerations to support the successful collection, monitoring, and addressing of social needs data. During the series participants explored the levels of maturity in the social needs screening implementation process. Participants gained information on concrete strategies and IT solutions that helped to improve internal systems, such as EHR utilization and care team workflows, and increase their capacity to advance individual and population-level health. Health center exemplars were showcased.

The levels of maturity include: 

  • Level 1: Coming to Consensus

  • Level 2: Implementing a Social Needs Screening Tool

  • Level 3: Responding to Positive Screens

  • Level 4: Monitoring and Using Data

Session 2: Level 2: Implementing a Social Needs Screening Tool

During this session, participants uncovered ways to evaluate and refine their EHRs and workflows to establish a solid foundation to support consistent and standardized social needs data collection. 

Topics included: Iterative development process, leveraging the EHR (configuration), data intake (screening methods), primary considerations for screening (literacy, accessibility, automation, real time data reflection), systematizing data collection (electronic reminders, clinical care guidelines, population health management tools, huddle sheets), screening frequency (using subset of questions, using length of visit).

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Health Center Childhood Obesity Preventer Badge