Certificate in Integrated Behavioral Health and Primary Care | Pediatric Track
Summary
Introduction to Integrated Behavioral Health and Primary Care - In this module, participants will learn about the nature and implications of integrated care, and will become fluent in the key terms that have come to describe it. Topics will include key public policies affecting the integrated care movement, including the Affordable Care Act; successful models of integrated care; population health management and health disparities; and ethical challenges and opportunities in integrated care. The transition to integrated care will be framed as a paradigm shift from disease-oriented to recovery-oriented service delivery, resulting in new opportunities and challenges, and direct implications for consumers and their families.
Integrated Health Systems and Implementation - In this module, participants will obtain knowledge and skills related to the implementation of integrated care services. Implementation of integrated team-based collaborative care presents challenges and opportunities for providers and managers, with significant implications for access to care and patient satisfaction. Topics include basics of integrated health implementation; telepsychiatric consultation; culturally responsive practice; Patient Centered Medical Home recognition; oral health for collaborative care; and provider mindfulness and self-care.
Foundations of Pediatric Integrated Health Care - Although "pediatrics" describes the age range from birth through 18 years of age, children develop through a number of distinct developmental, psychological, and social stages. The Pediatric track explores how to address the most common issues of these stages using a pediatric integrated health model of care. Topics include an introduction to the model, the role of the pediatric behavioral health consultant, pediatric social determinants of health, and interventions in the medical setting.
Pediatric Interventions - As the health care system is transformed from non-integrated to integrated, many services and interventions can be provided directly to the pediatric population as well as their parents in the medical clinic. Although many clinicians know typical child and adolescent diagnoses from a clinical perspective, this module helps participants develop an integrated understanding of typical topics that may present in the medical setting. Topics include ADHD, pediatric asthma, DD-autism, anxiety, depression, trauma, and adverse childhood experiences.
Adolescence - Many adolescents are required to attend at least one physician appointment a year, presenting an annual opportunity to engage them in management of their own health care and in the detection and early intervention of risky behaviors which can have lifelong consequences. Adolescents can be best engaged in self-management when their unique social, developmental, physical and psychological needs are considered. Topics include adolescent-centered medical homes, adolescent sexual health, substance abuse, suicide, eating disorders, and school-based health centers.
Explain the difference between colocation and integration.
Compare and contrast interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary teams.
Identify at least three social determinants of health for adult populations.
Identify at least two ethical challenges to integrated health practice.
Address/resolve common ethical challenges in integrated health practice.
Develop skills to hire and train staff in integrated health practice.
Implement an organizational self-assessment for cultural responsiveness.
Explain how provider mindfulness and self-care relate to workforce challenges such as burnout prevention.
List three features of primary prevention of oral diseases such as dental caries.
Identify two financing strategies that can facilitate integrated care.
Engage in self-assessment in clinical practice.
List the 3 most common psychiatric medications prescribed in primary care and their uses, contraindications, and potential side-effects.
Describe the components of the Infant Mental Health model.
Develop resources for psycho-education of pediatric patients.
Identify and describe an example of the Pediatric Integrated Health Care model.
Identify at least five social determinants of health for the pediatric population.
Identify recommended evidence-based treatment options for ADHD in pediatric primary care.
Identify two primary causes of pediatric asthma.
Identify 1-3 impacts of trauma on pediatric brain and social/emotional development.
Identify symptoms of depression that could present in pediatric primary care.
Identify appropriate depression medications for the pediatric population.
List three common anxieties in children and adolescents.
Identify symptoms of autism that are likely to present in pediatric primary care.
Identify a need for further assessment for developmental disabilities.
Educate parents/caregivers on issues of pediatric obesity causes and interventions.
Identify and normalize developmental considerations in adolescent sexual health.
Modify a physical environment to become a developmentally-appropriate and engaging adolescent medical home.
Apply two prevention and/or intervention strategies for pediatric substance abuse.
Identify three risk factors for teen suicide.
Identify three symptoms of an eating disorder that likely present in healthcare settings.
Describe 3 considerations for providing care to the LGBTQ population.
Identify evidence-based interventions utilized in pediatric integrated health care.
Identify 1-3 strategies to engage adolescents in health care.
Describe how trauma may present in integrated health care settings.
Describe strategies for anti-racist practice in integrated health care settings.
Describe two organizational challenges in implementation.
Identify symptoms of autism that are likely to present in school settings.