Health care services for children with developmental disabilities
Do our schools make the grade?
Jill Houbé, MD, MPhil, PhD[cand], FAAP, FRCP(C)Assistant Professor, Division of Developmental Paediatrics
UBC Department of PaediatricsClinical Scientist, Centre for Healthcare Innovation and Improvement
Acknowledgements• BC Research Institute for Children’s and
Women’s Health
• Children’s Hospital Foundation
• Centre for Healthcare Innovation and Improvement
• Centre for Community Child Health
• Department of Paediatrics, Division of Developmental Paediatrics
Health care services for children with developmental disabilities
1. Statement of the problem
2. Background • Definitions of disability• Incidence and target populations• Organization of special needs school
services and law
3. Research issues: outcome measures
4. Proposal for research program
1. Statement of ProblemHYPOTHESIS
Children with developmental disabilities often do not receive school-based interventions needed to maximize their health and developmental outcomes.
• Health care professionals diagnose and make treatment recommendations for school-age children with developmental disabilities
• Local school administrators assign special education services based on predefined categories of need and available resources
• Medical diagnostic language is different than the special education categorical funding language
• Budget constraints determine education and health policy, service delivery, and health outcomes
Health care services for children with developmental disabilities
1. Statement of the problem
2. Background • Definitions of disability• Incidence and target populations
Domains of DevelopmentFine Motor
1. MotorGross Motor
2. Speech and Language
3. Cognitive
4. Adaptive/Personal-Social
2. BACKGROUND
Developmental Differences:Delay, Dissociation, Deviance
• Delay: – Not necessarily abnormal – Implies child may catch up
• Dissociation: – A difference between rates of change ≥ two domains of development – e.g. Mental retardation
• Motor development may be ahead of language or cognitive abilities
• Deviance: – Always abnormal– e.g. Autistic 3 year old child with no interest in social or imaginative play
Developmental Trajectories
HIV
Normal
Illness
Delay
TIME
M I LESTONES
High Risk Children• Established Risk
– Chromosomal abnormalities, e.g. Down Syndrome
• Environmental Risk– Poverty– Maternal mental health issues
• Biological Risk– Prenatal exposure to drugs and alcohol– Low birth weight and/or prematurity
Diagnosis Incidence
Mental retardation 3%
Cerebral Palsy .3 - .5%
Communication disorders common
Autism Spectrum Disorder .67%
Learning Disabilities 5 - 7%
ADHD
Epilepsy
10 - 14%
.08%
Blindness .01 - .05%
Deafness .1 - .2 %
FAS .01 - .1%
Incidence of Developmental Disabilities
Target Populations:School-age children with educational disadvantage seen at C&W• Neurology Clinics: e.g. epilepsy, Tourette’s, Rett’s
• Psychiatry Clinics: e.g. autism, ADHD
• Newborn Follow-up Clinic: e.g. VLBW premies, CDH, MCA stroke
• Sunny Hill SERT Clinic: e.g. FAS, neglect, poverty
• Sunny Hill Autism Clinic
• Sunny Hill Pre-Kindergarten Clinic
Why Does Intervention Matter?
Prevention of secondary disabilities:• Maladaptive behaviour
• School failure
• Low self-esteem
• Family dysfunction
Prevention of long-term negative outcomes:• Individual Societal Economic
Health care services for children with developmental disabilities
1. Statement of the problem
2. Background • Definitions of disability• Incidence and target populations• Special education service organization and
law
BC Columbia Schools• 59 School districts and
elected boards• 1,800 schools• 38,000 educators• 600,000 students• 11% Special Ed enrolment
– 100% increase/10 years
• 12% ESL enrolment:– 330% increase/10 years– 90% in Greater Vancouver
BC School SystemMinistry of Education
• Control of funding
• Develop policy guidance
• Develop curriculum and approve resources
• Coordinate in-service training
• Track public concerns and expectations
• Develop performance indicators
• Evaluation of results
School Boards• Allocate funding
• Develop district policies
• Monitoring of district needs
• Monitoring and report of results
School Districts• Administer spending
• Administer district policies
• Coordinate curriculum, resource, and in-service
• Contract school staff
• Review education, student and parent concerns
• Asses school efforts and results
Schools• Develop school policies in line with district policies
• Access curriculum resources and deliver curriculum
• Mentor students
• Monitor student activities
• Assess student achievement
• Monitor and assess safe learning
Organizational Structure Ministry of Education
Accountability, Monitoring and Reporting
• Function: goal development, planning and implementation of strategies for improved student achievement.
• Activities: Liaison with individual partner associations and with cooperative groups of partners working on educational initiatives.
• Goals:– Student achievement through continuous improvement.– Evidence-based school improvement.– Accurate reporting on provincial trends, successes, challenges,
and student, community and parent satisfaction.
Accountability, Monitoring and Reporting
• Special Topics – Special Education– ESL– Diversity
• Three main areas:– Student Achievement– System Performance– Aboriginal Education
Ministry of Education: Special Education
• Goal: To support the intellectual development of all students, including those with special needs. Enabling all students to achieve the goals of human, social and career development is a responsibility shared by schools, families and the community.
• Inclusion: The School Act requires that school boards make available educational programs to all school age persons resident in the district. All students are to be included. A Ministerial Order requires the integration of students with special needs with those who do not have special needs in most instances.
• Definition: Students with special needs have disabilities of an intellectual, physical, sensory, emotional, or behavioural nature, or have a learning disability or have exceptional gifts or talents.
• Policy guidelines: Special Education Services: A Manual of Policies, Procedures and Guidelines (includes a summary of the publication, Special Education Policy Framework for BC, 1995)
Other Government Agencies
• Ministry of Children & Family Development– Behavioural support for children with autism– Occupational and physical therapy services
• Government advocacy– BC’s Office of the Ombudsman– Office for Children and Youth
Federal and Provincial Legislation
• Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1985)– Section 7 Legal rights– Section 15 Equality Rights
• BC Human Rights Code (1996)
• BC School Act (revised 1989)
The BC School ActRight 1: Right to attend school
Right 2: Right of students to individualized program based on an identified need
Right 3 Right to early identification and education intervention
Right 4: Right to a written education plan
Right 5: Right to placement in the least restrictive environment
Right 6: Right to ongoing review and re-assessment
Right 7: Right to have interests represented through guaranteed due process
Right 8: Right of access to records and confidentiality
Right 9: Funding for special needs
Funding for special needs
Section 129.1 (1) provides that special education programs are determined by the Minister
Section 129.1 (2) states that even though a budget is adopted by a board, it cannot reduce or eliminate the amounts budgeted by the Minister for special education programs below the amounts budgeted in the previous fiscal year without the approval of the Minister
Section 129.1 (2) (b) assures that funds designated for students in special education program are spent on those programs
Ministry Funding Categories for Developmental Disabilities
• Multiple needs (dependent) “A”• Moderate to profound intellectual disabilities “C”• Physical disabilities or chronic health impairments “D”• Visual impairment “E”• Deaf or hard of hearing “F” • Autism “G”• Mild Intellectual Disabilities “K”• Learning Disabilities “Q”• Behaviour/Mental Illness “R” & “H”• Mild/moderate learning disabilities and behavioural
disorders are non-categorical
Funding Mechanisms• All students generate funding for the school district
• Special needs students generate supplemental funding (but targeted funding no longer exists for some categories of disability)
• Amount of supplemental funding depends on category: now organized into 3 levels
• To be eligible for special education programs and services, a child must meet certain diagnostic AND funding criteria
Funding Mechanisms
• 1995-2001: Funding Allocation System (FAS)– $3.74 billion to districts based on FAS formulas– Total funds = No. pupils x per pupil amount– 50 factors contributed to the FAS calculation
Ungerleider, 2003
Severe Behaviour Level III
$38,742,188
Severe Handicapped
Level II
$130,382,168
Dependent handicap Level I
$26,095,905
Learning Assistance
$90,904,374
Core Services
$24,371,868
Special Health
$22,988,605
Hospital/
Homebound
$6,672,550
Gifted
$3,929,013
Dependent Handicap
$87,109,162
ID/Planning
$12,533,459
Special Education Funding 01/2
Funding Mechanisms• 2002-2003:
– 3.79 billion to districts– Funding frozen for 2003/4 and 2004/5
• Basic Allocation: 1 FTE = $5,308
• Funding for special needs students– 3 Levels Special Education– Aboriginal Education– ESL– Adults
• Supplemental $$$– FTE Level 1 = $30,000– FTE Level 2 = $15,000– FTE Level 3 = $6,000– FTE Aboriginal = $950– FTE ESL = $1,100
Ungerleider, 2003
Special Education Funding 02/03
Recent Policy Changes
• Increased class size
• No limits on class composition
• Removal of high-incidence targeted funding
• Fewer specialist support/resource teachers
• Fewer educational psychologists
• Emphasis on teacher evaluations
Health care services for children with developmental disabilities
1. Statement of the problem
2. Background • Definitions of disability• Incidence and target populations• Special education law and service
organization
3. Research issues: outcome measures of delivery and effectiveness
3. Outcome measures of delivery and effectiveness
• BCTF regional studies: Nanaimo and Coquitlam
• 2001 Special Education Report
• BC Ministry of Education– Budget and service reports– Data collection
• HELP group efforts to link to BC Health Linked Database
BC Ministry of Education Data by Dataset
• Annual Student Level Data Collection (SLDC Annual): Data about students’ demographics, school and special program/course registration information for each year since 1995.
• Longitudinal: Longitudinal data about students and their school registrations as they move through the K-12 system.
• Transcript and Examination (TRAX): Individual student exam records on provincial and non-provincial examinable courses in Grade 11 and 12 to provide performance standards at provincial level.
• Foundation Skills Assessment (FSA): Reading, writing and numeracy assessment measuring critical skills that are embedded in the provincial curriculum;grades 4,7,10
• School Information: Annual data collection on every public and independent school in the province, such as school name and contact information; facility/organization type; information about school educators.
• Context of Education: Data on school and school district profiles as well as community profiles.
• School District Expenditures: Data about school district expenditures over the years.
• Satisfaction Survey::data from Grade 4, 7, 10 and 12 students, Elementary and Secondary parents, and School Staff regarding their opinions on themes such as achievement, human and social development and safety. Beginning in 2002, this data is collected by the BC Ministry of Education on an annual basis.
HELP Education Data
• Early Development Instrument (EDI): school readiness data at kindergarten entry
• 90% of school districts in BC participating as of Spring 2003
• Neighbourhood mapping
• Linkage planned to other datasets, including BCHLD
Health care services for children with developmental disabilities
1. Statement of the problem2. Background
• Definitions of disability• Incidence and target populations• Special education law and service
organization
3. Research issues: outcome measures of delivery and effectiveness
4. Proposal for research program
4. Proposed Research Program
• RESEARCHERS– Jill Houbé, CHII and UBC Developmental
Paediatrics– Laurie Ford, UBC School of Special Education
• GOAL: Evaluate organization and delivery of school-based intervention services for populations of children with developmental disabilities
Research Design• Select study populations with baseline measures of
educational need and known risk– BC Newborn Follow-Up Clinic <800g premies– Autism Clinic– SERT Clinic– Canadian NICU Network (CNN) database linked to institutional
newborn follow-up clinics
• Focus groups and individual interviews to identify common themes: process and outcomes
• Surveys of health status, development, behaviour, family stress, education performance, service receipt
• Linkage to health utilization datasets: BCHLD
Research Design• Quantitative outcome measures
– Self-reported health status – Health service utilization – Self-reported school achievement
• Qualitative outcome measures– Experiences with health system– Experiences with school system– Strengths and weakness of organizations– Child and family outcomes
Summary• “Treatment” of children with developmental disabilities includes
school-based interventions
• Special education organization and funding is complicated, evolving and not a good fit with the medical diagnostic system
• There are few measures of school service organization and effectiveness and school outcomes for developmentally disabled children
• Studying target populations at C&W may lead to better understanding of issues around school service delivery for high risk populations
• Improved understanding of these issues may lead to improved health outcomes in children with developmental disabilities
George Hahn
Helena Ho
Anton Miller
Elizabeth
Christine Chambers
Child Abuse ProgramJim Carter
Northern Outreach Services
Division Head 1991-1997
Doreen McConnell
Fellowship Program established 1995
Meningomyleocele Program
Bill Arnold
Sunny Hill Staff PhysicianDavid Miller
Community based care
Kojo AsanteBC Fetal Alcohol Society
Northern BC Developmental Services
Tim OberlanderActing Division Head, 1997 to 2000Faculty, Centre for Community Child Health ResearchMember, Complex Pain Service at BCCHInvestigator Award, UBC Human Early Learning Partnership
Clinical work with infants and children exposed to drugs and/or alcohol. On-call service for Sunny Hill Health Centre in-patient ward.
Research Areas:Infant pain,Cardiovascular autonomic reactivity,Developmental effects of prenatal drug exposure
Research examining how prolonged early exposure to psychotropic medications (i.e. opioids, antidepressants) during gestation and early infancy alters the developing brain and contributes to developmental and behavioural problems in later childhood. A second area of research focuses on understanding pain in children with developmental disabilities, and investigations of biobehavioural development in children following prenatal exposure to psychotropic medications, and pain in children with cognitive and social impairments.
Clinical work on children with neurodevelopmental disorders and birth defects including Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and craniofacial conditions
Board Member, Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse
Leadership in Undergraduate Teaching, including development of Doctor Patient & Society, CLEO lectures series, Patient Based Learning Tutorials
Maureen O’DonnellDivision Head, Developmental PaediatricsMedical Director, Child Development and Rehabilitation Program
Faculty, Centre for Community Child Health Research
Program Director, Intrathecal Baclofen Program
Clinical work and research relating to growth and nutrition of children with cerebral palsy, spasticity management, and health and well-being of their caregivers of children. On-call service for Sunny Hill Health Centre in-patient ward.
Research on Evidence to Practice methodologies including Systematic Reviews and Knowledge Translation strategies. Founding member of NAGCePP research collaboration, multi-centre study funded by NIH National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research
Fitzgerald
Clinical work with infants and children exposed to drugs and/or alcohol.
Coordinator of outreach developmental program to Vancouver inner city schools
Leadership role in resident teaching in Developmental Paediatrics
Substance Exposure Resource Team (SERT)
Jill Houbé
Associate faculty, Centre for Healthcare Innovation and Improvement
Research in health policy (MPhil and PhD[cand] in Policy Analysis) and health services (Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar) for high risk infants and children with special focus on the effect of health system structure on neonatal population outcomes. Policy research examining developmental service delivery in school settings.
Associate researcher, UBC Consortium for Health, Intervention, Learning and Development Project (CHILD)
Block chair, Growth and Development Block, Patient-Based Learning
Clinical work in Newborn Follow-Up Clinic and on-call service at Sunny Hill Health Centre in-patient ward
Barbara
Carey Matsuba
Visually Impaired ProgramClinical work and research in the diagnosis and treatment of visual impairment in infants and children. On-call service at Sunny Hill Health Centre in-patient ward.
Leadership role in medical student teaching in Developmental Paediatrics
Faculty member, Centre for Community Child Health ResearchFaculty member, Department of Psychology at BCCH
Clinical care of children with chronic medical conditions and their families.
Research examines developmental and social influences on children’s pain, including family influences in pediatric chronic pain and disability and pain measurement in children. Career awards from CIHR and the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research and operating funds from CIHR and the Hospital for Sick Children’s Foundation. Recipient of the 2002 Canadian Psychological Association’s President’s New Researcher Award.
Christine Loock
Ron BarrBoth clinical work and research focusing on the needs of infants and young children. Studies on the biological and behavioral determinants of behavior, including pain, behavioral state and crying, cognition and memory, as well as for the outcomes of early clinical manifestations of these behaviors for later development (temperament, reactivity).
Director of the Centre for Community Child Health Research
Member of the Human Development Programme of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, and former Fellow of the Center for the Advanced Study of Behavioral Sciences at Stanford in 2000-2001. Former Associate Editor of the leading journal Child Development and on the editorial boards of more than a dozen pediatric, child development and anthropology journals. Currently President of the Society for Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics. Chair of the “Developmental Committee” of the Canadian Centre of Excellence Network focused on dissemination of understanding of current knowledge on early child development.
Steve
Team leader for the Autism Team for 25 years, active in BC autism council and a board member for Laurel Group Society and Mainstream Association for Proactive Living, organizations in the community serving children and adults with autism and developmental disabilities. Former chair of the Professional Advisory Board of Autism Society of BC and involved with the BC Neurofibromatosis Association, the psychosocial committee and the Developmental Section of Canadian Pediatric Association as well as the North West Society for Developmental and Behavior Pediatrics.
Joined UBC in 1977 first as a research fellow for neurology working on the new born follow-up project under Dr. Henry Dunn focusing on children with Minimal Brain Dysfunction..Later joined the Children Hospital Diagnostic Centre pioneered by Dr. GC Robinson using the multidisciplinary approach to assess children with developmental disabilities. Member of team that organized the first multidisciplinary assessment team for autism in Canada.
Participated in two multicentre drug trials (fenfuramine, secretin),and completed research on three associated conditions (Fragile x, Kabuki syndrome, Rett syndrome). Among the first follow-up studies of children with autism up to 16 years of age. Published the first guideline for screening children with autism in BC.
WellingtonClinical work focusing on infants and children with a variety of neurodevelopmental disorders, as well as on-call service for the Sunny Health Centre in-patient ward.
Director of a new autism initiative funded by the province in the summer 2002 at C&W which involves working with thehealth authorities to develop regional expertise.This work in autism is the model for service development for other areas of developmental behavioural paediatrics in BC
Jonathan DownAssociate member of the Division of Developmental Paediatrics at BCCH, and Clinical Faculty appointment at UBC.Developmental Paediatrician at the Queen Alexandra Centre for Children’s Health, Victoria, and provides services throughout Vancouver Island under the newly formed Health Authority.
Master’s Degree in Health Care and Epidemiology at the University of British Columbia.Clinical Fellowship in Developmental-Behavioral Paediatrics based at Sunny Hill Health Center for BCCH completed in 1995. This was the first Fellowship position in Developmental-Behavioural Paediatrics, and Dr Down could well be described as a "guinea pig". Fortunately he was not sacrificed for his efforts.
Dr. Hahn is a Paediatric Physiatrist. He is a Clinical Associate Professor within the Departments of Medicine and Paediatrics, specifically within the Divisions of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Developmental Paediatrics at UBC. His interests are in the realms of transition of the adolescent with congenital or acquired neuromusculoskeletal impairments towards maximal adult independence and also in the area of the natural history and outcome of childhood acquired brain trauma or disease. He is former Medical Director of the G.F. Strong Rehabilitation Centre.
Clinical work as Preschool assessment team physician leader with clinical interest and research in behavioural phenotypes including unique clinic model of joint assessment with medical genetics.Focus on education including undergrad teaching as 2nd year Growth and Development Patient Based Learning tutorial week captain, CME-GP update course, Pediatric update lectures, residency clinical and half day lectures.Clinical research on behavioural presentation of children with PWS (unfunded project) and member of BC Regional team headed by Dr. Suzanne Lewis for Dr. Jeanette Holden's ASD-CARC (Autism Spectrum Disorders-Canadian American Research Consortium).
Faculty member, Centre for Community Child Health ResearchAssociate researcher, UBC Human Early Learning ProjectClinical work involves assessment of children who are deaf of hard of hearing as well as school-aged children with problems of learning and behavior. Former director of the Hearing Disorders Program at BCCH (1992 - 1996). Research interests involve the study and improvement of health services to children and youth with developmental and behavioral disorders and disabilities in community settings, and determinants of health and mental health among children from a population health perspective.
Reviewer for a number of granting agencies and journals, and have been consultant to BC and Canadian Coordinating Offices of Health Technology Assessment. Former coordinator of residency training in developmental pediatrics. Member of the Executive Committee of the Developmental Section of the Canadian Pediatric Society, and liaison of the section to the CPS Psychosocial Committee.
Mickelson
Bluma Tischler
First multidisciplinary clinic
Preventorium
David KendallSpeech and Hearing Clinic
Woodlands School for mentally retarded
Hospital School for physically disabled
John Dean
Harry BakerCerebral Palsy Clinic
Neurological Development Clinic
Preschool for the Deaf
Jim JanEpilepsy Program
Cleft Palate Program
Hartman House
Neurology Program
Program for the Visually Impaired
Ted Cooke
Sunny Hill Hospital for Children
Rob HillFirst Cerebral Palsy Clinic, New Westminster
GF Strong Clinic for children with cerebral palsy
Dunella Maclean
Preschool for Non-Verbal Children
Hearing Disorders ClinicMarisa Ferrara
Administrative Assistant, Developmental Paediatrics
Autism Program
multiple congenital disorders, chronic diseases
Cleft palate, myelodysplasia, communication disorders, blindness, developmental delay,
Sunny Hill Seating Centre
Augmentative Communication Technology Program
Designated a Long Term Rehabilitation Hospital 8 bed in-patient unit established
Group home for the severely disabled
Sunny Hill Health Centre for ChildrenExpansion for rehabilitation services, emphasis on outpatient services, respite care
Intrathecal Baclofen Program
Shriner’s Gait Lab
Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Program
The SERT (Substance Exposure Resource Team) program evolved from the pioneering work of Drs Robinson and Segal in the 1980's on FAS and NAS respectively. As research and clinical experience highlighted the magnitude of poly substance use in pregnancy and resultant adverse neurodevelopmental and neuropsyciatric outcomes, the two separate FAS and NAS clinics at Sunny Hill merged in 1992 under the guidance of Drs Chris Loock (CL) and Tim Oberlander (TO).
The work of the SERT team and its members is recognized provincially and nationally for initiating pioneering research, education, and clinical service for several innovative public health ,prevention, education, and early intervention programs (including the BC Pregnancy Outreach Programs (POP's), YWCA Crabtree Corner & Sheway project development (CL), Rotary Kid's Outreach (CL &TO), Vancouver Inner City Developmental Outreach (Dr B. Fitzgerald), and the UBC Addiction Medicine (CL) and PBL Neurodevelopmental (Dr E.Michelson and CL) Curricula). The SERT team currently collaborates with the new Fir Square unit at BCWH for NAS issues and the Asante Centre for providing provincial standardized team assessments for FASD and other drug related concerns and is active with provincial and national clinical practice guideline development.
Division of Developmental Paediatrics established 1989
Crippled Children’s Registry
Princess Margaret's Children's Village
Gordon Matthews
Donald Paterson
Bob Armstrong
Geoff Robinson
Health Centre for ChildrenOne of the first children’s wards with small units, play therapy, and liberal visiting hours for families.
Learning Disabilities ClinicNewborn Follow-Up
Henry Dunn
John Crichton
Sunny Hill Staff Physician
Sudge Budden
Syd Segal
Crippled Children’s Hospital Neurological Centres
Population PaediatricsResearch in health care delivery
Neuromotor Program
Mike Stephenson
Preschool Hearing Program
Child Development ProgramHans Dorgelo
Children’s Hospital Diagnostic Centre
Pediatric TB sanatorium
Don Hill Rob Hill first Division Head
Roger Freeman