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- children with chronic conditions1
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- chronic conditions in childhood1
- complex CSHCN1
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Mental Health
2 Results
- Issues for Children with Special Health Care Needs
Taking Stock of the CSHCN Screener: A Review of Common Questions and Current Reflections
Academic PediatricsVol. 15Issue 2p165–176Published online: December 5, 2014- Christina D. Bethell
- Stephen J. Blumberg
- Ruth E.K. Stein
- Bonnie Strickland
- Julie Robertson
- Paul W. Newacheck
Cited in Scopus: 60Since 2000, the Children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN) Screener (CS) has been widely used nationally, by states, and locally as a standardized and brief survey-based method to identify populations of children who experience chronic physical, mental, behavioral, or other conditions and who also require types and amounts of health and related services beyond those routinely used by children. Common questions about the CS include those related to its development and uses; its conceptual framework and potential for under- or overidentification; its ability to stratify CSHCN by complexity of service needs and daily life impacts; and its potential application in clinical settings and comparisons with other identification approaches. - Articles–State Profiles, Duration of Coverage, Availability of Services, Quality Measures, Measuring Family Experiences of Care, State Quality Measure Needs, Reporting QualityOpen Access
A National and State Profile of Leading Health Problems and Health Care Quality for US Children: Key Insurance Disparities and Across-State Variations
Academic PediatricsVol. 11Issue 3SupplementS22–S33Published in issue: May, 2011- Christina D. Bethell
- Michael D. Kogan
- Bonnie B. Strickland
- Edward L. Schor
- Julie Robertson
- Paul W. Newacheck
Cited in Scopus: 130Parent/consumer–reported data is valuable and necessary for population-based assessment of many key child health and health care quality measures relevant to both the Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA) of 2009 and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA).