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Children with Special Health Care Needs:
Findings
from the National Survey on Children with Special Health Care Needs
May 22, 2003
Overview | Presenter
Information | Agenda | Resources | Archive
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Michael Kogan, PhD
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Title:
Director, Office of Data and Information Management
Maternal and Child Health Bureau
Health Resources and Services Administration
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Contact Information:
5600 Fishers Lane
Room 18-41
Rockville, MD 20857
Phone: (301) 443-3145
Fax: (301) 443-3145
Email: mkogan@hrsa.gov
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Michael
Kogan holds a Ph.D. in Epidemiology from Yale University. He is currently
the Director, Office of Data and information Management for the Maternal
and Child Health Bureau. In this position he is responsible for directing
activities of the office with an emphasis on 1) maternal and child
health research; 2) building the data capacity of federal, state and
local areas in maternal and child health; and 3) building the maternal
and child health epidemiology capacity in the United States.
Prior
to this position, he worked as a Senior Epidemiologist at the National
Center
for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
He serves on the editorial boards of Maternal and Child Health Journal
and the American Journal of Public Health. His research interests
include: the effect of prenatal and pediatric care services on maternal
and child health, the effect of lack of health care coverage on access
and continuity of care, multiple births and determinants of preterm
birth.
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Peter van Dyck, MD, MPH
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Title:
Associate Administrator, Maternal and Child Health Bureau
Health Resources and Services Administration
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Contact Information:
5600 Fishers Lane
Room 18-05
Rockville, MD 20857
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PowerPoint Presentation:
"The National Survey of Children
with Special Health Care Needs: Presentation for DataSpeak"
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Dr.
van Dyck was appointed associate administrator for Maternal and Child
Health, Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Department
of Health and Human Services on August 17, 1999, after serving as acting
associate administrator from August 3, 1998. He is responsible for
an $1.2 billion program, which when combined with state partnership
funds is over $4 billion, charged with promoting and improving the
health of mothers, children, and families, particularly those who are
poor or lack access to care. HRSA’s Maternal and Child Health
Bureau administers the Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grants
to the States, the Healthy Start Initiative, the Traumatic Brain Injury
and the Emergency Medical Services for Children Program, the Abstinence
Education Program, and the bioterrorism hospital preparedness program.
Before this
appointment Dr. van Dyck served as the first permanent director of
MCHB’s Office of the State and Community Health, which was
created in 1995 to be more responsive to state issues related to
the MCHB block grant. In this position, he provided guidance to states,
established reporting requirements, coordinated technical assistance
and developed national information and data systems. Prior to that,
he was senior medical advisor to the MCHB and HRSA directors for
four years.
Before coming
to the federal government in 1992, Dr. van Dyck was the Director
of the Family Health Services Division of the Utah Department of
Health and a Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Utah Medical
Center. He has consulted widely both nationally and internationally,
chaired numerous national committees, and been President of the Association
of Maternal and Child Health Directors and Chair of the Maternal
and Child Health Section of the American Public Health Association.
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Merle McPherson, MD, MPH
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Title:
Director, Division of Services for Children with Special Health Needs
Maternal and Child Health Bureau
Health Resources and Services Administration
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Contact Information:
5600 Fishers Lane
Room 18A-27
Rockville, MD 20857
Phone: (301) 443-2350
Email: mmcpherson@hrsa.gov
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PowerPoint Presentation:
"Using the National Survey on
Children with Special Health Care Needs to Monitor Progress on Community-Based
Systems of Services"
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Dr. Merle
G. McPherson is currently Director of the Division of Services for
Children with Special Health Needs in the Maternal and Child Health
Bureau (MCHB), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA),
Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). Dr. Mcpherson received
her medical degree from the University of Saskatchewan in Canada and
a Masters in Public Health from Johns Hopkins. She is a Fellow of the
American Academy of Preventive Medicine and an Honorary Fellow of the
American Academy oif Pediatrics. She has also worked with the Departments
of Health and of Human Resources in the District of Columbia, with
the Hawaii Department of Health, and with the Maryland Department of
Health.
During a long
and distinguished Federal career, Dr. McPherson has created a new
model of health care delivery for children with special health care
needs. In 1982, Dr. McPherson provided the leadership for the "Surgeon
General's Workshop on Children with Handicaps and their Families" and
over the past two decades, has successfully used the workshop as
a catalyst to transform the Maternal and Child Health Bureau's legislative
mandate and mission. Her leadership has been instrumental in replacing
a deficit-based, categorical, medical model of care with a consumer-driven,
family-centered and strength-based comprehensive model, which has
become the standard of care for all children. This model is being
increasingly utilized in adult health care settings as well. Dr.
McPherson has also led the way to expand the family-centered care
model for children with special health care needs internationally.
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Paul Newacheck, DrPH
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Title:
Co-Director, Maternal and Child Health Policy Research Center, UCSF
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Contact Information:
University of California, San Francisco
3333 California St., Suite 265
San Francisco, CA 94118
Phone: (415) 476-3896
Email: pauln@itsa.ucsf.edu
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PowerPoint Presentation:
"Monitoring MCHB’s Six Core
Outcomes for CSHCN"
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Paul
W. Newacheck, is Professor of Health Policy at the University of California-San
Francisco’s Institute for Health Policy Studies and at the University
of California-Berkeley’s School of Public Health where he also
teaches. With an interdisciplinary background in economics, public
policy, and public health, Dr. Newacheck’s work has focused primarily
on children with special health care needs. His research also addresses
the relationships between race, class, health insurance and access
to care. Dr. Newacheck serves as a member of several advisory committees
and expert review panels, including the National Committee on Vital
and Health Statistics (DHHS). He currently chairs the Technical Advisory
Panel for the National Children with Special Health Care Needs Survey
as well as the Technical Expert Panel for the new National Children’s
Health Survey. He serves on the Editorial Board’s of The Future
of Children, Health Services Research, and Ambulatory Pediatrics. Dr.
Newacheck received his AB in Economics, a Masters of Public Policy,
and Doctor of Public Health degrees at the University of California
at Berkeley.
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