Title: Strategies for a Healthy Future
1Strategies for a Healthy Future
- Thurston County Community Health Task Force
- 1994 - 1998
2Mission
- Identify health issues
- Assess current conditions and risk factors
- Prioritize action strategies
3Principles Expressed
- Build on programs that work
- Start small and build success
- Maximize existing resources
- Strengthen existing relationships
- Expand local capacity
4Priorities May 1994
- Access to Care
- Injury/Violence
- Drug Abuse
- Prenatal Care/Teen Pregnancy
- Mental Health
- Nutrition
- Environment
- Infectious Diseases
- Health Education
- Dental
5Priorities July 1994
- Substance Abuse
- Chronic Disease
- Violence
- Access
- Infectious Disease
- Prenatal Care
- Education
- Environment
- Mental Health
- Nutrition
- Dental
6Priorities September 1994
- Substance Dependence
- Infectious Disease
- Chronic Disease
- Violence
- Mental Health
- Teen Pregnancy
- Prenatal Care
- Lack of Family Strengths
- Dental
- Nutrition
- Water Contamination
- Health Education
- Unintentional Injury
- Food Safety
- Air Quality
7Final Priorities June 1995
- Dental decay in children
- Immunization of preschool children
- Over nutrition, Obesity in school age children
- Air quality
- Water quality drinking and recreational
- Food safety
- Unintentional injury
- Child abuse and Domestic Violence
- Alcohol and Other Drug misuse and dependence
8Implementation Strategies
- Action or objective to be met
- Convener community leader
- Collaborators others necessary to meet objective
9Community Coalitions 1998
- Fitness Nutrition
- Drinking Water Education Monitoring
- Tobacco Free Thurston County
- Immunization Coalition
- Multi-Service Teen Center
10Community Coalitions 1998 (cont.)
- Neighborhood Centers
- Home Food Safety
- Playground Safety
- Child Safety
- Dental Coalition
11Thurston County Community Health Task Force
continues
- Access to Primary
- Medical and Dental Care
- 1999 - 2002
12Four Subcommittees
- Childrens Dental Access
- Clinic Expansion
- Increase Insurance Access
- Advocacy
13Recommendations
- Support establishment of Access to Baby and Child
Dentistry (ABCD) program in Thurston County - Actively pursue a Federally Qualified Health
Clinic satellite (FQHC) with both medical and
dental services - Increase enrollment in publicly funded insurance
products Medicaid, Childrens Health Insurance
Program, Basic Health Plan
14Advocacy Subcommittee
- Part of each recommendation
- Childrens Dental
- Insurance Access
- Expand Clinic Capacity
15Where are we now?
- Clinic Expansion
- Sea Mar Community Health Centers took over
operation of the Community Care Clinics (both
medical dental) January 1, 2001 - The Clinic is currently at full capacity for
medical and dental primary care - Sea Mar is seeking to co-locate medical and
dental services
16Where are we now?
- Childrens Dental Access
- 30 dentists in Thurston Mason Counties are
accepting Medicaid children for screening and
treatment - Over 3,100 children have been enrolled in ABCD
since October 1, 2000 over half of all eligible
for this program
17Where are we now?
- Insurance Access
- Continuing to enroll in publicly funded
insurance Medicaid, Basic Health Plan through
CHOICE Regional Access Program - Advocacy
- Some members of Task Force working to improve
reimbursement, reform malpractice insurance,
stable funding of public health, etc.
18Next Steps
- Re-examine health priorities set in 1995
- Examine Menu of Critical Health Services from
Public Health Standards - Continue work to improve access to care, as
defined by the Thurston County community
19SeaMar Community Health Center
- Susan Amberson
- Clinic Director
20Who we are and what we do
- Federally-funded community health center
- Serve low-income, uninsured, Medicaid, Medicare,
Healthy Options, Basic Health Plan, and privately
insured patients - Bilingual/bicultural care in English and Spanish
- Reduced barriers to accessing healthcare through
a one-stop shopping modality of care - Provided over 25,000 service encounters in two
years - One of the first community health centers
nationally to be accredited through the Joint
Commission
21Community Health Centers- Benefits
- Federally Qualified Health Center status-
- Receives 330 funding from Bureau of Primary
Health Care - Simple majority (51) of the Board of Directors
are users of services - Required to provide care to all who seek it
regardless of income or insurance status - Benefits-
- Cost-based reimbursement similar to hospitals for
Medicaid FFS - Providers insured through Federal Tort Claims Act
- NHSC scholars and loan repayment
- charitable organization eligible for grants
22Community Health Centers- Obligations
- Obligations-
- Must provide supplemental services (dental and
mental health) - Must meet productivity measures
- Must operate as non-profit
- Must provide at least as much uncompensated care
as the amount of federal 330 funding
23Thurston County Programs
- Medical
- Dental
- Mental Health
- Substance Abuse
24Thurston County- Challenges
- Need among uninsured and publicly insured
patients has grown beyond points of access - Dependent upon increased funding for service
expansion - Multiple funding losses due to budgetary
shortfalls - No clear direction from consumers about
healthcare needs - Low-income populations have multiple needs beyond
primary medical care - Safety net providers referral circles
25Thurston County Opportunities
- Commitment among many different practitioners to
addressing problems - Possibilities for collaborative efforts among
private providers and safety net providers
through volunteer clinics, disease specific
collaborations - Ask consumers what they need for better health
- Continue to advocate for increased reimbursement
rates for publicly insured patients
26Sea Mars Future Plans in Thurston County
- New clinic site
- Increase in supplemental programs
- Advanced access clinic redesign
- Implement chronic disease program
27Capital Medical Center Primary Care Clinics
- Ann Neeld
- Chief Operating Officer
28About Capital Medical Center
- Owned by HCA, the largest hospital company in the
United States. - Corporate mission of commitment to the care and
improvement of human life by locally managed
facilities in the communities served. - Until late 1990s operated a group of primary
care clinics in southwest Washington. - History of successful integration of nurse
practitioner role in clinics.
29 Background
- 2000 bankruptcy of physician-hospital
organization. - 2001 break-up of 52 year-old clinic composed of
primary care and specialists. - Loss of 30 plus primary care physicians from
Thurston County. - Increasing reliance on Thurston County for
medical care by people in all southwest
Washington counties.
30Why a new clinic??
- Increased use of Emergency Department for
non-urgent care. - Loss of physicians in the community.
- New residents unable to find primary care
physicians (or pediatricians). - Physicians less accepting of covering patients
from Emergency Rooms for follow-up care.
31 Why Nurse Practitioners?
- Educated and available supply of primary medical
care providers. - Well documented successes in providing medical
care for population requiring primary and chronic
care services. - Washington State practice rules allow for wide
scope of service. - History of success with nurse practitioner role
at Elma Clinic.
32 Nurse Practitioner Regulations in Washington
State
- Examine patients and establish medical diagnoses.
- Admit patients to health care facilities and
refer to other practitioners or facilities. - Order, collect, perform and interpret laboratory
tests and initiate requests for radiographic and
other testing measures. - Prescribe medications according to WACs
- Identify, develop, implement and evaluate a plan
of care and treatment for patients to promote,
maintain and restore health.
Partnership for access to medical care
33 Clinic Demographics
- 25 of patients under 18 years of age
- 5 of patients are actually newborns
- 55-65 aged 21-55
- 5-15 aged 65 and older
34West Olympia Payor Mix For 600 plus patients a
month
- Medicaid 30
- Healthy Options 30 (Medicaid HMO)
- Medicare 5
- HMO/PPO 25
- Self-pay-Charity-Other 10
35 Elma Clinic Payor Mix For 825 plus patients
per month
- Medicaid 15
- Healthy Options 30 (Medicaid HMO)
- Medicare 15
- HMO/PPO 30
- Self-pay-Charity-Other 10
36 Successful Outcomes
- More options for ER follow-up.
- Newborns have access to follow-up primary and
preventative care. - Medicaid/Healthy Options members have increased
access to primary care in Olympia. - Support from CMC medical staff.
Partnership for access to primary care
37The 100 Access Project
- CHOICE Regional Health Network March 2003
- Kristen West
- Executive Director
38100 Access Where we are today
- Our vision is 100 access to services for people
below 250 of federal poverty in our region - We identified Six Principles based on best
practices in communities across the nation - Were partnering with local, regional, and
national leaders - Were involving communities at all levels
- Weve launched an action campaign to make this
real
39Our Goal
Medical Home, Full Access
Medical Home, Not Full Access
No Medical Home
2007
100 Access
40The Six Principles
Purchase services of greater value to the
community
The Power of Strategic Cross Leverage
41Principles Mesh with State Board of Health
Strategic Policy Directions
- State BOH Strategy - Maintain and improve access
to critical health services - 100 Access will
- Fully fund primary care and prevention
- Stabilize the safety net
- Get small employers participating
- State BOH Strategy - Improve patient safety and
increase value in government-purchased health
services - 100 Access will
- Include moving financing closer to the community
- Provide administrative simplification and
redirect savings to direct care - Include disease case management through health
teams
42Principles Mesh with State Board of Health
Strategic Policy Directions
- State BOH Strategy - Bolster the health system's
capacity to respond to public health emergencies - 100 Access will
- Include a community-owned information system
- Assist in the identification of illness
clusters in the region - State BOH Strategy - Reduce disproportionate
disease burdens among racial and ethnic minority
populations - 100 Access will
- Increase language access and cultural competency
- Improve the health status of the low-income
uninsured
43Principles Mesh with Thurston County BOH
Priorities
- Dental Services
- 100 Access definition of primary care includes
primary dental care - Success of Thurston County dental program through
Olympia Union Gospel Mission - Immunization of preschool children
- 100 Access includes action campaigns to get kids
enrolled in health care - Every month were finding 200 people a medical
home
44Financing Approach
- Use whats already being spent
- State and federal visible assets and leverage
with - Hidden community assets
- Maximize Medicaid
- Community Health Centers and Rural Health Centers
- Get 6,000 uninsured kids enrolled
- Capture savings resulting from decreased
fragmentation and delivering care better - Solicit new revenue from employers and consumers
- This gets us pretty close to 100 Access
45How it all comes together
Principle
Benchmark Leadership Community
Finance Approach
- Stabilize safety net
- CHC and RHC expansion
- Organize underpaid services
- Small employer coverage for low-income employees
- 3. Find and enroll low-income in medical home
- 4. Reduce costs and cover more
- Deliver relationship-based care through health
teams - 6. Purchase services of greater value to the
community
Thurston County Access Task Force, WA
Increase in state and federal Medicaid
reimbursement.
Project Access Buncombe County, NC
Donated care.
Employers pay towards the cost of low-wager
workers coverage.
Medicaid reimbursement.
Project Access, 30 communities
Admin and direct care savings.
SkyCap, KY JesseTree, TX Clinical Redesign
CHCs, WA INPHO, WA
Contributes to 4 above.
Consumer and funder contributions. Plus,
contributes to 4 above.
Scituate, RI
46Whats Happening in Thurston County
- Thurston County
- Dr. Albrecht is the champ for getting 70 of
doctors participating in Project Access (1) - Bill Perkins, small business owner, is organizing
small employers (2,6) - Susan Amberson, SeaMar, has organized a
safety-net Council (1) - Joe Wall, St. Peter Family Practice Residency and
Holly Paul, Capital Medical Center clinic, in
action on clinical redesign(5) - Active consumer council
- Sherri Mc Donald, Public Health and Social
Services, is hosting community roundtables
47Whats Next
- Series of local and regional events to find and
encourage champions - Intensified community involvement
- Continued development of administration and
financing options - Encourage people who are interested to get
involved - Passage of legislation authorizing pilot projects
48 49Project Access
- A system of health care for low income uninsured
patients that better organizes physician
volunteer services to leverage a closer alignment
of existing healthcare and related resources in
the community.
50MANAGING COST OF CARE FOR THE UNINSURED THROUGH
COORDINATION
COST OF AD-HOC UNCOORDINATED HEALTH CARE
SERVICES FOR UNINSURED PATIENTS
COST OF COORDINATED HEALTH CARE SERVICES
FOR UNINSURED PATIENTS
51??????
- Where do the uninsured go when they need
healthcare?
52Physician Charity Care
Nearly two-thirds of the uninsured report that a
physician is their usual source of care, and
approximately half receive care in a physician's
office.
http//www.hschange.org/CONTENT/356/ HSC's
Community Tracking Study Physician Survey Center
for Studying Health System Change Issue Brief No.
42 August 2001 Marie C. Reed, Peter J.
Cunningham, Jeffrey Stoddard).
53Primary Care Visits For Patients with Medicaid or
No Insurance
77.9 Physicians offices 11.5 Hospital
outpatient departments 10.6 Community health
centers Note Locally funded health
departments included in physicians offices
Forrest CB. JAMA. 20002842079
54Physicians Cant Do This Alone . . .
Hospitals (acute care and rehab) City/County
Elected Officials Neighborhood/County
clinics United Way organizations Faith
Community Local, State and National
Foundations Pharmacies Managed Care Organization
(Claim Forms) Area Health Education Center
(Evaluations) Department of Social Services
(Medicaid) Patients Health Partners (health
coalition)
55Project Access Across the Nation
- Project Access has been successfully replicated
in over 30 communities across the nation. These
communities have established and are sustaining
coordinated systems of charity care based on the
Buncombe County Project Access (BCMS) model.
56BCMS Project Access Outcomes
- Nearly doubled number of patients with regular
source of care. - Reduced per capita charity care costs by 45 from
1996 to 2000 - ER utilization rate dropped from 28 in 1995 to
8 in 1998 - 80 report improved health
- 20 million free care 1996-2000
57Next Steps . . .
- Getting the word out . . .
- One-on-one meetings with specialty providers
- Presentations to community groups, hospitals, and
???? - Establishing a website email
- Seeking more champions
- Pursuing funding
- Developing a planning and implementation team
58We Need Your Help!
- Heres how . . .
- Ask the tough questions
- Get involved
- Who else should we be talking to?
59Contact information
- Dr. Stephen Albrecht
- Olympia Family Medicine
- Phone 360/459-7282
- Email alberndts_at_attbi.com
- Dr. Kevin Haughton
- Providence St Peter Hospital Family Practice
- Phone 360/493-4126
- Email khaugton_at_providence.org
- Holly Detzler
- CHOICE Regional Health Network
- Phone 360493-5762
- Email detzlerh_at_choicenet.org
60Current Efforts to Increase
61Community School Sealants
- History and Development
- Childrens Dental Health Coalition
- Grant award for portable dental equipment
- Smile Survey of 6-8 year olds
62Partnership
- Thurston County Oral Health Coalition
- SeaMar Community Dental Clinic
- Thurston County Public Health
- Thurston County School Districts
63Qualification for participation
- Public school with at least 30 children in Free
and Reduced Lunch - 2nd grade students with fully erupted 6-year
molars
64How the Program works in our community
- Contact with schools and families
- Education
- Screening with volunteer dentists (20)
- Coordination with SeaMar for sealant
- Placement of sealant by hygienist
- Follow up with schools, families and dentist
- Compiling and reporting statistics
- Planning and recruitment for next year
65At the end of the 6th year
- 23 schools served in 7 school districts
- 7952 students educated
- 3128 students screened by dentists
- 2010 students received sealants
- 6829 sealants placed
66Thurston County ABCD Program
67ABCD is...
- Access to Baby and Child Dentistry
- Focused on Prevention and Education
- A Public/Private partnership between the Dental
Society, Health Department, UW Pediatric
Dentistry, Medicaid, and the Washington Dental
Service Foundation
68ABCD is...
- Collaborative approach to increasing access to
dental services - A Best Practice named by the American Academy of
Pediatric Dentistry in 2000 - A Model Program for Washington State
- A community supported solution for a preventable
disease
69ABCD Provides...
- Care for children ages 0-5 years
- Prevention techniques starting early
- Family oral health education
- Training for dentists in caring for young
children - Enhanced reimbursements for dentists
70Program participation...
- 30 Participating dental practices
- 3172 children enrolled, of 6026 eligible (March,
2003) - Outreach and enrollment continues
- Education and training continues
71VISION
- HEALTHY MOUTHS FOR ALL OUR KIDS
72Olympia Union Gospel Mission
- George Wehness
- Linda Barrett
73Why dental care?
- Need is great
- Access, particularly for uninsured and unemployed
adults, is overwhelming - Our mission is to help
- We found willing partners
74What have we done?
- Collaborated with
- Northwest Medical Teams
- CHOICE Regional Health Network
- Thurston County Health Department
- Thurston County Oral Health Coalition
- Recruited volunteer dentists
- Provided staff and space
- Provided restorative and preventive dental care
to about 1,000 people without any other access to
care
75Principles Expressed by Community Health Task
Force in 1994
- Build on programs that work
- Start small and build success
- Maximize existing resources
- Strengthen existing relationships
- Expand local capacity
76Menu of Critical Health Services
- General access to health services
- Health risk behaviors
- Communicable and infectious diseases
- Pregnancy maternal, infant, child health
development
- Behavioral health mental health services
- Cancer services
- Chronic conditions disease management
- Oral health
77Public Health Standards for Helping people get
the services they need
- Information is collected and made available at
both the state and local level to describe the
local health system, including existing resources
for public health protection, health care
providers, facilities and support services. - Available information is used to analyze trends
which, over time, affect access to critical
health services. - Plans to reduce specific gaps in access to
critical health services are developed and
implemented through collaborative efforts. - Quality measures that address the capacity,
process for delivery and outcomes of critical
health care services are established, monitored
and reported.