Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) in the historical context of Community Pediatrics

As part of the evaluation of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Community Access to Child Health (CATCH), to 1) identify, retrospectively, the actual chronology of activities undertaken through CATCH, and 2) review its antecedents within the AAP, and its predecessor program-Healthy Children. K...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatrics (Evanston) 1999-06, Vol.103 (6 Pt 3), p.1373-1373
Hauptverfasser: Hutchins, V L, Grason, H, Aliza, B, Minkovitz, C, Guyer, B
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container_end_page 1373
container_issue 6 Pt 3
container_start_page 1373
container_title Pediatrics (Evanston)
container_volume 103
creator Hutchins, V L
Grason, H
Aliza, B
Minkovitz, C
Guyer, B
description As part of the evaluation of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Community Access to Child Health (CATCH), to 1) identify, retrospectively, the actual chronology of activities undertaken through CATCH, and 2) review its antecedents within the AAP, and its predecessor program-Healthy Children. Key informant telephone interviews with 14 national leaders in CATCH were conducted. Relevant program and administrative files and other documents were reviewed. AAP staff assisted the authors in preparing a detailed chronology of Healthy Children and CATCH activities and events from spring 1988 through summer 1996. A decade of change in the AAP, under the acronym CATCH began in the late 1980s. The formation of the AAP's Partnership for Children and the Access to Care for Children Initiative, combined with the decision by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to transfer the funding of Healthy Children to the AAP, underpinned the changes. The Foundation's decision provided the resources and stimulus for the expansion and increased recognition of Community Pediatrics at the national AAP office, culminating in the establishment of the Department of Community Pediatrics in mid-1994. A national program of pediatrician-led, community-based programs and supportive services was launched, other resources were attracted, and a philosophical shift in defining the role of the pediatrician was put forward. A responsibility toward all children within the community was included in the role of the pediatrician, as well as caring for the individual child within a community context.
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Child
Child health
Child Health Services - history
Child Health Services - organization & administration
Children
Children & youth
Community
Community Health Planning - history
Community Health Planning - organization & administration
Community Medicine - history
Community Medicine - organization & administration
Community Participation - history
Health
Health aspects
Health insurance
Health Policy - history
Health Services Accessibility - history
History
History of medicine
History, 19th Century
History, 20th Century
Humans
Marketing of Health Services - history
Medicine, Preventive
Pediatricians
Pediatrics
Pediatrics - history
Pediatrics - organization & administration
Physicians
Political activity
Preventive health services
Preventive medicine
Societies, Medical - history
Societies, Medical - organization & administration
United States
title Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) in the historical context of Community Pediatrics
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