Health P.E.I. program for kids with complex needs helps bridge a gap in Island health care

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Health P.E.I. program for kids with complex needs helps bridge a gap in Island health care

PEI·NewMany Island families are taking advantage of Health P.E.I.’s program for children with complex needs, helping Islanders under the age of 18 who have a condition that affects their day-to-day lives.A 2023 survey found 1 in 6 children in this province have complex health needsRyan McKellop · CBC News · Posted: Aug 13, 2025 5:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 31 minutes agoShalyn Pinkham, the provincial co-ordinator for the children with complex needs program, says she knows first-hand how important the service is for families. (Sheehan Desjardains/CBC)Dozens of Prince Edward Island families are taking advantage of a Health P.E.I. program aimed at children with complex needs, helping those under 18 who have a condition that affects their day-to-day lives.In 2023, Health P.E.I. released results of a survey suggesting that 84 per cent of children with complex needs experienced difficulties accessing health services. This program was designed to bridge that gap.Shalyn Pinkham, the program’s provincial co-ordinator, said many families used the survey to report issues.”It determined that… about one in six children have complex needs and that mostly all of those families had difficulty navigating the system,” she said. “So this was created as the first step to better support families with the continuity of care.”Pinkham said a complex need was defined as “a condition that impacts their day-to-day ability, their condition is expected to last or has lasted a year, and they have an ongoing need for prescribed medication or supplements and ongoing need for medical therapies and/or an ongoing need for medical care.”P.E.I. program is helping parents of children with complex needs navigate health-care systemThe Children with Complex Needs Navigation Program started in the winter. It was created in response to a Health P.E.I. survey done a few years ago that suggested most caregivers needed more support. As CBC’s Sheehan Desjardins reports, one group says the program is already making a difference. Children covered by the program, launched in December 2024, may be living with conditions like cerebral palsy, asthma or autism.”We’ve had over 50 referals so far,” said Pinkham. “When we were doing the program design, we wanted to ensure that we were capturing what families were telling us, so we’ve created a program with really good data tracking,” she added. “That impacts how our program is effectively running and also how we’ll expand in the future.”There is already talk of the program expanding, she said. “One area of concern is co-ordination of care [and] travel out of province to see some specialty services,” she said.Bringing lived experiencePinkham said taking on this project is personal for her.”My oldest daughter is medically complex. She is 12 years old and I’ve had to advocate for her and co-ordinate her care,” she said.  “This work is really meaningful to me and I’m really happy to be able to bring a lived-experience lens to the role and I take that with me in every conversation I have, every decision that I have to make in this role.”‘It’s also really helpful for families to have an emotional support through their journey,’ says Andrea Van Wiechen, the navigator for the Health P.E.I. program. (Sheehan Desjardains/CBC)Andrea Van Wiechen, the navigator in the program, said it’s turning out to be very important for the families who use it.”The health system is getting more complex by the day and patients’ health needs are more complicated as well, so having someone to guide them through the medical system is really crucial,” she said.”It’s also really helpful for families to have an emotional support through their journey… I know first-hand, when my family was needing medical care, that having a caring team was really helpful, and I want to be a part of that for other families.”Van Wiechen said this program can speed up the time it takes for families to find the services they need.”I can’t change wait times for services, but I can help families to find the most appropriate services.”Families who want to find out if they are eligible to access these services can go to the Children With Complex Needs page on the Health P.E.I. website. ABOUT THE AUTHORRyan McKellop is a graduate of the Holland College Journalism program and a web writer at CBC P.E.I.With files from Sheehan Desjardains

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