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: 10/25/2016 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Export event
Ask & Code: Documenting Homelessness Throughout the Health Care System
Alyssa Thomas

Ask & Code: Documenting Homelessness Throughout the Health Care System

A National Health Care for the Homeless Council Webinar

All sectors of the health care system are increasingly focused on the social determinants of health that drive cost, service utilization, and health outcomes. Housing status, as one key element of health, is a risk factor that is of particular interest to hospitals, Medicaid managed care plans, and health care providers. People experiencing homelessness have higher morbidity and mortality coupled with more frequent and more costly hospital stays compared to their housed counterparts, driving the interest in improving care and reducing cost. To help justify funding additional services (e.g., case management, medical respite care, and housing supports) that will improve patient health status, better data is needed to identify individuals who are homeless. This webinar complemented our policy brief and discussed how the ICD-10-CM code for homelessness (Z59.0) was implemented at a Health Care for the Homeless grantee in Colorado, and how a hospital system instituted a housing status screening tool in Pennsylvania. A leading managed care entity shared why Medicaid plans need to have this information, and preliminary results from a pilot project in Texas using the Z59.0 code to identify homelessness among Medicaid beneficiaries were reviewed.

Objectives:

  • Understand why health centers, hospital systems and managed care organizations would want patient housing status information and coded homelessness data
  • Identify at least three strategies for implementing an “ask and code” approach in a health care setting
  • Identify potential uses for this data to gain additional services for people who are homeless and/or benefits to homeless health care providers

Speakers:

  • Tracy Olsten, CPC, CPC-I, CPMA, Senior Coding Specialist, Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, Denver, CO
  • Brett Feldman, MSPAS, PA-C, Director, Street Medicine, Lehigh Valley Health Network, Allentown, PA
  • Jenny Ismert, Vice President Health Policy, UnitedHealthcare Community & State
  • Moderator: Barbara DiPietro, PhD, Senior Director of Policy, National HCH Council

*Please add Council@nhchc.org to your "Safe Senders" list to ensure delivery of registration confirmation.

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Health Center Childhood Obesity Preventer Badge