From the Journals

Ask about family military service, says new AAP guidance


 

FROM PEDIATRICS

Military programs can help

Military families, their children, and care providers and educators can turn to the military for help in many areas, whether families are receiving mental and physical health care through the military or from civilian facilities.

A key resource for neglect and abuse prevention is the military’s Family Advocacy Program (FAP), which engages families by means of workshops and other support programs. When child maltreatment is alleged, FAP also conducts its own investigation, so health care professionals should include the local FAP office in the reporting process when there are concerns.

For new parents, home visits and other support programs are available through the New Parent Support program, which will connect families to resources within the community and the Department of Defense (DOD).

Families living near or on military facilities may access DOD-sponsored infant and preschool child development programs, as well as school-aged care programs; subsidies for civilian childcare are also available. Although these programs constitute the country’s largest employer-sponsored childcare program, they serve just a small minority of military families, noted Dr. Huebner, citing a 2008 study by RAND.

DOD schools are attended by 72,000 students, but DOD resources stretch into civilian schools: School liaison offices assist civilian schools and military families located near military installations, and grant funding helps the DOD partner with civilian schools serving military-connected children.

Turning to health care, the military health system provides care globally to service members, retirees, and their families. Tricare is a single-payer, government-managed insurance program that is managed through regional contracts; some care is also delivered through the centralized Military Health System.

Whether Tricare participants receive care at military facilities or from civilian network providers, they generally do not have out-of-pocket costs unless they enroll in the Tricare Select program, a fee-for-service plan that involved cost sharing with deductibles. A link to information about how to connect patients to a Tricare provider or how to become on is available in the full report in Pediatrics.

About 20% of military-connected children have special health care needs and may receive specialty care through civilian providers. To help these families navigate multiple systems of care, the DOD provides a publication called Special Needs Tool Kit: Birth to 18. This toolkit guides families through early intervention and special education, and also provides military-specific information about relocation, Tricare benefits, and military support services.

A program available to all family members with special education or chronic medical needs is the Exceptional Family Members Program (EFMP). Children with autism spectrum disorders and ADHD, for example, are eligible for EFMP enrollment.

Additional supplemental benefits, with rank-adjusted sliding fees, are available for children with serious developmental and physical problems; children with autism spectrum disorders are eligible for additional therapy through an autism care demonstration program.

Forms to document chronic medical conditions (DD Form 2792) and special educational needs, if needed (DD Form 2791-1), are required for EFMP enrollment, which is mandatory for children of active duty personnel. Guidance for completing the forms can be found at www.militaryonesource.mil.

When overseas posts are imminent, clinicians should know that certain medical conditions may disqualify children from accompanying their service member parent. Overseas screening coordinators within the military medical system serve as the point of contact for the family and pediatrician in such circumstances, and clinicians can help families by providing appropriate documentation early in the process.

In addition to attaining military cultural competence, being aware of resources available to military families, and working closely with school personnel to support military-connected children, local and national advocacy efforts can make a difference, noted Dr. Huebner. And in all cases, “health care professional, schools, and communities should proactively reach out to military families.”

Dr. Huebner reported no conflicts of interest and no outside sources of funding. The full report contains hyperlinks to all resources named.

SOURCE: Huebner CR. Pediatrics. 2019;143(1):e20183258.

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