| |
News Releases Memorial
Hermann Wins Statewide Community Service Award
Houston, Texas, July 8, 2003 -- When the bell rings
at a number of Houston area schools, children are as likely to be
heading for physical exams as final exams, or
social services instead of social studies. The reason? Health care
is a vital part of the curriculum, thanks to an innovative school-based
health care program launched by Memorial Hermann Healthcare System
eight years ago.
For this effort,
Memorial Hermann was honored with the Texas Hospital Association’s
2003 Excellence in Community Service Award. The award for distinguished community
service was presented during THA’s 2003 Conference and Expo last month
in Austin.
“Our primary
focus has been to improve the health of children, many of whom have
no other access to health care,” explains Deborah Ganelin,
director of Memorial Hermann Health Centers for Schools program. “We
understand that to do well in school, children first must be healthy.”
In
the early ’90s, a citywide needs assessment showed children’s
access to health care was reaching crisis proportions in Houston. Based
on those findings, Memorial Hermann galvanized resources and formed
community
partnerships,
making school-based health care a top priority. The major goal: overcome
many of the barriers that affect children’s access to health
care.
School-based clinics
provided the answer. Memorial Hermann’s
Health Centers for Schools Program began in 1995 with two health centers
serving three schools.
Today, the program has grown to encompass four fully owned centers and
one collaborative center serving
18 schools in three different school districts.
“Memorial
Hermann created the school-based health centers as a strategic initiative
to achieve our system’s Purpose Statement of ‘providing
high quality health services in order to improve the health of the
people in southeast Texas,’” says Dan Wolterman, president
and chief executive officer of Memorial Hermann Healthcare System. “The
school-based clinics have had a tremendously positive impact on the
children, many of whom have no
other access to health care services. The clinics have eliminated the
barriers to care and have demonstrated a correlation between good
health and improved
scholastic achievement.”
The largest city
in Texas, Houston is known worldwide for its excellent medical facilities.
Yet, some communities
in the greater Houston area
face a dire
lack of health care, and it often affects children the most. “Despite
the availability of health care services in the area, numerous barriers
exist that make it very
difficult, if not impossible, for disadvantaged children to receive
routine preventive and primary care services,” says Ganelin.
Many families live below poverty level, have transportation issues,
cannot speak English or simply are embarrassed
to ask for help regarding their medical needs.
School-based clinicians
report that parents who bring their children for physicals comment
that either their children have never had a
physical before or they
are not used to providers taking time to listen and explain. Because
of
the clinics,
they now receive the critical guidance and education to begin to
make appropriate health care decisions for their children. Children
now
receive immediate
care for ear infections, and the progression of potential hearing
loss is reduced.
Children now receive ongoing education and management of some chronic
diseases, such as asthma and diabetes, and the impediment of childhood
activities
is reduced. Without intervention, many parents would postpone seeking
evaluation at community
clinics, potentially escalating poor health conditions.
The Jane
Long clinic serves almost 4,000 students enrolled at Jane Long
Middle School, Sutton Elementary and Benavides Elementary
Schools. “The majority
of our visits are routine, but they take on a different meaning
when you realize these children most likely would not get health care if it weren’t for the clinic,” explains LaTrina Hunt,
a physician assistant at the clinic. “We’ve discovered a child with leukemia, a child walking around
with a broken arm, severe dental abscesses, not to mention unresolved
grief, physical abuse
and sexual abuse.”
Schools to host
the clinics were selected by identifying students with the highest
prevalence of unmet medical
and psychosocial needs.
The
staff, which
is composed
of a nurse practitioner or physician assistant, social worker,
LVN and receptionist, provides a wide range of primary health
services, including
immunizations,
general and athletic physicals, minor acute and injury care,
management of some chronic
stable illnesses such as asthma or diabetes, counseling and social
service assistance, and health education. According to Ganelin,
the
clinics are
designed to become
a “medical home” for uninsured children and a secondary
access point for insured children. Measurable results
speak volumes about how the school-based centers
have impacted the children who receive care. Achievement scores
have risen
and overall absentee
rates have decreased at each school served for two or more years.
Significant outcome improvements have been demonstrated for asthma,
dental care,
mental health and ER usage.
The connection
between health care and school performance is clear, says Ganelin. “If
children are in school and if their physical and mental health
care needs are addressed; then their ability to learn and, ultimately,
perform are improved.”
For more information, contact Media Relations.
|