At a Glance

Each phase of the implementation process includes 4 components: activities, tools, outcomes and self-reflection. Select one below to jump directly to that component.


The goal of the initial implementation phase is to begin putting the system-change effort into practice while continuing to build capacity and refine your approach. During this stage, your team will focus on starting the initial roll out, monitor early impacts or outcomes, and identify barriers or challenges as they arise. 

As you work through this phase, you may feel the need to revisit previous phases before moving forward with implementation. That is okay and may be necessary for the system-change effort you are implementing.

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Initial Implementation phase Activities

Examples of initial implementation phase activities recently carried out by Title V CYSHCN programs include:

Use the list below to consider which activities might be relevant for your system-change effort at this phase, keeping in mind that the change process is not always linear, and you will likely return to this phase over time. Teams may do these activities in a different order, and/or omit activities as needed. Teams may do these activities in a different order, and/or omit activities as needed:

In Case Study #4 - Developmental Screening and Referral, the team piloted with one health system, developed a standardized referral template, and addressed technical application programming interface challenges while collecting continuous feedback to refine the model prior to scaling. 

Initial Implementation Phase Outcomes

  • Data and community feedback are regularly used to inform decision-making and improve implementation.
  • Adaptations have been identified and implemented.
  • There is sufficient initial evidence that the system of services for CYSHCN is experiencing improvements, warranting a scale up of the system-change effort. Improvements may include:
    • Improvements in coordinated, continuous, and comprehensive care delivered through a centralized medical home
    • Active youth, family, and caregiver engagement in decision-making at all levels of the system
    • Increased access to public and/or private health insurance for CYSHCN and their families
    • Early and ongoing screening to identify special health care needs early
    • More high-quality, well-organized services that are responsive to the needs of CYSHCN and their families
    • Evidence of support for successful pediatric to adult health care transition

Initial Implementation Phase Self-Reflection

Use the self-reflection questions below to prompt your thinking about the change you want to make at this phase. The reflection table can be used at any point in the system change, to process your learning and identify next steps. Begin by having each team member do individual self-reflection, then share the responses with other team members as part of a larger group discussion. The group discussion can be used during ongoing team meetings or progress check-ins. Core components are the essential parts of an intervention or innovation. You can think of them like the “active ingredients” that allow your intervention to work. Core components can be developed and refined over time but are the “what” to the system change you are hoping to make. Start by naming your core components below.

Phases of Implementation

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Last Updated

02/27/2026

Source

American Academy of Pediatrics