A Quality Improvement Initiative to Improve Health Care Transition Planning at Adolescent Well Visits

Acad Pediatr. 2024 Mar 20:S1876-2859(24)00112-8. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2024.03.013. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Health care transition (HCT) planning supports adolescents as they move from pediatric to adult health care and is recommended for all youth. HCT planning uptake remains low, with little known about HCT in the adolescent well child check (WCC) setting. We sought to increase rates of HCT planning at WCCs by adapting best practices for HCT from specialty and chronic care.

Methods: This quality improvement initiative at 12 to 17-year-old WCCs at four Internal Medicine-Pediatrics primary care clinics, was based on the first three of the "Six Core Elements" of HCT framework and integrated into the electronic health record. Two uptake measures were assessed via chart review after three plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles, with two provider surveys and an implementation science analysis further informing interpretation.

Results: By the final PDSA cycle, the percentage of 14 to 17-year-old WCCs at which HCT planning was discussed and a screening tool completed increased from 5% to 31%, and the percentage of 12 to 13-year-old WCCs at which the HCT policy was discussed increased from 6% to 47%. Provider survey results revealed endorsement of HCT goals, but time and technological barriers, which were further elucidated in the implementation science analysis.

Conclusions: This quality improvement initiative increased rates of HCT planning during adolescent WCCs. While limited to three Core Elements and Internal Medicine-Pediatrics clinics, strengths include measures capturing all WCCs, contextualized by provider surveys and an implementation science framework. Lessons from this effort can inform future tailored HCT initiatives at adolescent WCCs.

Keywords: adolescent health; electronic health record; health care transition; primary care.