The Value of Certified Child Life Specialists: Direct and Downstream Optimization of Pediatric Patient and Family Outcomes
The Value of Certified Child Life Specialists: Direct and Downstream Optimization of Pediatric Patient and Family Outcomes Full Report | January 2020 Jessika Boles, PhD, CCLS Camille Fraser, MS, CCLS, CIMI Katherine Bennett, MEd., CCLS Maile Jones, MEd.(c), CIMI Jenna Dunbar, MEd.(c), CIMI Ashlie Woodburn, MEd., CCLS, CIMI Mary Ann Gill, MEd.(c) Anne Duplechain, MEd.(c) Erin K. Munn, MS, CCLS, CIMI Katy Hoskins, CCLS Abstract ____________________________________________________________________________ Today’s value-based healthcare market demands that hospitals, clinics, and medical professionals provide high quality care at sustainable costs for patients and payers alike. Top- decile performers systematically target each dimension of the Quadruple Aim, registering incremental yet cumulative gains (and savings) in safety, timeliness, effectiveness, efficiency and equity in patient-and-family-centered care. These ambitious objectives require a multidisciplinary approach, particularly when serving infants, children, adolescents and emerging adults, and their families. Certified Child Life Specialists, as psychosocial healthcare professionals with focused training in child development, family systems, and evidence-based supportive interventions, are indispensable members of high-caliber healthcare teams. In collaboration with medical and allied health professionals, Certified Child Life Specialists bring a multifocal lens, individualized to the needs of pediatric patients and their families, grounded in developmental theory, attuned to the influence of past and present trauma, and aimed at building resilient family systems. Capitalizing on the power of therapeutic relationships and the expansive benefits of play-based interventions, Certified Child Life Specialists help children, youth, and families lay the foundation for lifelong health and wellness. In these ways, child life professionals significantly reduce the financial, developmental, and psychological costs associated with the discomfort and distress that persist far beyond each episode of care.
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