Rationale for periodic reporting on the use of selected clinical preventive services to improve the health of infants, children, and adolescents--United States.

Q1 Medicine MMWR supplements Pub Date : 2014-09-12
Lorraine F Yeung, Stuart K Shapira, Ralph J Coates, Frederic E Shaw, Cynthia A Moore, Coleen A Boyle, Stephen B Thacker
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Abstract

This supplement is the second of a series of periodic reports from a CDC initiative to monitor and report on the use of a set of selected clinical preventive services in the U.S. population in the context of recent national initiatives to improve access to and use of such services. Increasing the use of these services can result in substantial reductions in the burden of illness, death, and disability and lower treatment costs. This supplement focuses on services to improve the health of U.S. infants, children, and adolescents. The majority of clinical preventive services for infants, children, and adolescents are provided by the health-care sector. Public health agencies play important roles in increasing the use of these services by identifying and implementing policies that are effective in increasing use of the services and by collaborating with stakeholders to conduct programs to improve use. Recent health-reform initiatives, including efforts to increase the accessibility and affordability of preventive services, fund community prevention programs, and improve the use of health information technologies, offer opportunities to improve use of preventive services. This supplement, which follows a previous report on adult services, provides baseline information on the use of a set of selected clinical preventive services to improve the health of infants, children, and adolescents before implementation of these recent initiatives and discusses opportunities to increase the use of such services. This information can help public health practitioners, in collaboration with other stakeholders that have key roles in improving infant, child, and adolescent health (e.g., parents or guardians and their employers, health plans, health professionals, schools, child care facilities, community groups, and voluntary associations), understand the potential benefits of the recommended services, address the problem of underuse, and identify opportunities to apply effective strategies to improve use and foster accountability among stakeholders.

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定期报告为改善婴儿、儿童和青少年健康而使用某些临床预防服务的理由————美国。
本增刊是美国疾病控制与预防中心倡议的一系列定期报告中的第二份,该倡议旨在监测和报告美国人口中一系列选定的临床预防服务的使用情况,并在最近国家倡议的背景下改善这些服务的获取和使用。增加这些服务的使用可大大减少疾病、死亡和残疾负担,并降低治疗费用。该补充侧重于改善美国婴儿、儿童和青少年健康的服务。婴儿、儿童和青少年的大多数临床预防服务是由保健部门提供的。公共卫生机构在增加这些服务的使用方面发挥着重要作用,它们确定并实施了有效增加这些服务使用的政策,并与利益攸关方合作开展了改善使用的方案。最近的卫生改革举措,包括努力提高预防服务的可及性和可负担性、资助社区预防规划和改进卫生信息技术的使用,为改进预防服务的使用提供了机会。这份补编是在上一份关于成人服务的报告之后编写的,提供了在实施这些最近的举措之前,为改善婴儿、儿童和青少年的健康而使用一套选定的临床预防服务的基线信息,并讨论了增加使用这些服务的机会。这些信息可以帮助公共卫生从业人员与在改善婴儿、儿童和青少年健康方面发挥关键作用的其他利益攸关方(例如,父母或监护人及其雇主、健康计划、卫生专业人员、学校、托儿设施、社区团体和志愿协会)合作,了解所推荐服务的潜在益处,解决利用不足的问题,并确定机会,应用有效的战略来改善利益相关者的使用和促进问责制。
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来源期刊
MMWR supplements
MMWR supplements Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
48.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR ) series is prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Often called “the voice of CDC,” the MMWR series is the agency’s primary vehicle for scientific publication of timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and useful public health information and recommendations. MMWR readership predominantly consists of physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists and other scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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