Burrell, MikaylaCiccarelli, Mary2024-02-092024-02-092023-07Burrell, M., & Ciccarelli, M. (2023). Identifying Children With Medical Complexity for Care Coordination in Primary Care Settings. Clinical Pediatrics, 62(7), 781–785. https://doi.org/10.1177/00099228221144803https://hdl.handle.net/1805/38386Characteristics of a cohort of 98 children with medical complexity (CMC) insured by Medicaid were identified within an urban/rural pediatric practice for embedded nurse care coordination. Ninety percent of enrolled children fit the predefined requirements of requiring 3 or more subspecialists for their care. Neurology, orthopedic surgery, endocrinology, and gastroenterology were the most frequent subspecialists engaged in longitudinal care. The expected neurodevelopmental disabilities (cerebral palsy, spina bifida, Down syndrome, and other complex syndromes) were found in 64% of the patients. By applying a secondary definition to include children with complex neurodevelopmental or genetic syndromes, 98% of the patients were considered to be medically complex. The use of reliable and adequate criteria to identify medical complexity is important to determine which patients would most benefit from care coordination services, and our method was deemed successful.en-USPublisher Policymedical complexity (CMC)Medicaidnurse care coordinationneurodevelopmentIdentifying Children With Medical Complexity for Care Coordination in Primary Care SettingsArticle