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PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes Marni D. Brownell, PhD CPHA Annual Conference Toronto, ON: May 27, 2014
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PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

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PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes. Marni D. Brownell, PhD CPHA Annual Conference Toronto, ON: May 27, 2014. Manitoba Centre for Health Policy (MCHP). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s

outcomes

Marni D. Brownell, PhDCPHA Annual ConferenceToronto, ON: May 27, 2014

Page 2: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Manitoba Centre for Health Policy (MCHP)• University of Manitoba, Faculty of Health Sciences,

College of Medicine, Department of Community Health Sciences

• Use a Repository of datasets to study health services, population and public health

• support the development of evidence-informed policy, programs and services that maintain and improve the health and well-being of Manitobans.

Page 3: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Using data in MCHP Repository to study child health and development

At birth:Birth weightGestational ageApgar scoresBreastfeeding ComplicationsFF screen

Preschool:Child care

School Entry:EDISchool enrolmentSpecial needs

(age 8)Grade 3 assessmentSchool enrolmentGrade retentionSpecial needs

(ages 11-13)Grade 7/8 assessmentsSchool enrolmentGrade retentionSpecial needs

(ages 14-19)Grade 12 assessmentsHigh school marksSpecial needsHigh school completion

Prenatal:FF screenPrenatal careMaternal serum screen

At all stages: health status (hospitalizations, doctor visits, medications prescribed), immunization, residence (area-level measures; region, number of moves), family composition (marital status, number of siblings), family or youth receipt of income assistance, involvement with child welfare, clinical datasets (e.g., FASD)

Birth/Health/Education Linkages

Page 4: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Grade 12 Performance by Socioeconomic Status (SES) Language Arts Standards Test

IA Low Lo-Mid Middle High0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

75%

88% 88% 91%95%

SES

Pass/Fail rates of test writers 17/18 year olds who should have written

IA Low Lo-Mid Middle High0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

16%

52%

64%71%

80%

Withdrawn

In Grade 11 or lower

In Grade 12 but not LA test mark

Drop Course, Absent, Exempt, Incomplete

Fail

Pass

SES

Brownell, Roos, Fransoo, et al., 2006

Page 5: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

PATHS Equity: PAthways To Health and Social Equity

• Multi-disciplinary, cross-sector collaboration• Integrated KT• Use Repository to evaluate programs in childhood

– Did the program work?– Did the program reduce inequities?

• 14 separate sub-projects; integrative projectsThis Programmatic Grant to Reduce Health Inequity was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (www.cihr-irsc.gc.ca) and the Heart & Stroke Foundation of Canada

Page 6: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

PATHS Projects

Project Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5

Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative

Physician Integrated Network

Early Intervention for ADHD

Early Psychosis Prevention & Intervention

In-School Teen Clinics

Healthy Baby Program

Families First Home Visiting

Social Housing

CSI Summer Learning Enrichment

Healthy Buddies

Roots of Empathy

Full-Day Kindergarten

Qualitative Analysis: Understanding the Mechanisms of Inequity

Public Health Sensitive Conditions

Integrative Analysis

Page 7: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Manitoba Healthy Baby Program:• Compared low income women

receiving benefit to those not receiving

• Propensity Scoring used to ensure comparability of groups

Is receipt of the HB prenatal benefit associated with better outcomes?Has there been a change in equity?

Page 8: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Receipt of Healthy Baby Benefit

  RR (95 % CI)

Breastfeeding Initiation 1.06 (1.03 - 1.09)*

Low 5-minutes Apgar Score 0.93 (0.79 - 1.09)

Low Birth Weight (< 2,500 g) 0.71 (0.63 - 0.81)*

Pre-term Birth (GA < 37 weeks) 0.76 (0.69 - 0.84)*

Small for Gestational Age 0.90 (0.81 - 1.00)*

Large for Gestational Age 1.13 (1.05 - 1.23)*

Complete Immunization (one year old) 1.13 (1.10 - 1.16)*

Complete Immunization (two year old) 1.20 (1.15 - 1.25)*

Hospital Readmission (within 28 days of birth) 1.02 (0.84 - 1.25)

Hospital Readmission (within 2 years of birth) 1.01 (0.94 - 1.09)

0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4

Relative Risk (95% CI)

Decrease Increase

Page 9: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Framework for Equities

• From our data we can form three groups:– Group 1: ELIGIBLE to receive Healthy Baby Benefit (Q1 to Q3)

and RECEIVED Benefit

– Group 2: ELIGIBLE to receive Healthy Baby Benefit (Q1 to Q3) and

DID NOT RECEIVE Benefit– Group 3: NOT ELIGIBLE to receive Healthy Baby Benefit (Q4

to Q5) DID NOT RECEIVE Benefit

Page 10: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Framework for EquitiesComparison A

(With Healthy Baby)Comparison B

(Without Healthy Baby)

LBWGROUP1 / LBWGROUP3 LBWGROUP2 / LBWGROUP3

LBW GROUP 1 - LBW GROUP 3 LBW GROUP 2 - LBW GROUP 3

• Test whether inequality in A is different from B

Page 11: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes

Health Baby Impact on Health Equality

Risk Difference

-1.2% -0.8% -0.4% 0.0% 0.4% 0.8% 1.2%

With Healthy Baby Benefit

LBW, High Income – LBW, Low Income

Without Healthy Baby Benefit

LBW, High Income – LBW, Low Income

Higher RiskLow Income vs.

High Income

Lower RiskLow Income vs.

High Income

Page 13: PATHS Equity for Children: a program of research aimed at monitoring equity in children’s outcomes