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Montana Healthcare Workforce Advisory Committee April 7, 2014. Community Health Workers Policy Update: Highlights of opportunities and strategies. Carl H. Rush , MRP Project on CHW Policy & Practice University of Texas – Houston School of Public Health.
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Montana Healthcare Workforce Advisory Committee April 7, 2014 Community Health WorkersPolicy Update:Highlights of opportunities and strategies Carl H. Rush, MRP Project on CHW Policy & Practice University of Texas – Houston School of Public Health
Unity 2014 Registration and Sponsorship • www.populationhealthcenter.org/chwln • www.usm.edu/csho
Community Health Worker Definition American Public Health Association (1) • The CHW is a frontline public health worker who is a trusted member of and/or has an unusually close understanding of the community served. • This trusting relationship enables the CHW to serve as a liaison/link/intermediary between health/social services and the community to facilitate access to services and improve the quality and cultural competence of service delivery.
Community Health Worker Definition - APHA (2) • The CHW also builds individual and community capacity by increasing health knowledge and self-sufficiency through a range of activities such as • outreach, community education, informal counseling, social support and advocacy. • APHA Policy Statement 2009-1, November 2009
What Is Distinctive About CHWs? (1) • Do not provide clinical care • Generally do not hold another professional license • Expertise is based on shared life experience (and often culture)with people served
What Is Distinctive About CHWs? (2) • Rely on relationships and trust more than on clinical expertise • Relate to community members as peers rather than purely as clients • Can achieve certain results thatother professionals can’t
Link to CDC E-learning Series http://www.cdc.gov/dhdsp/pubs/chw_elearning.htm
Structural/System Challenges • CHWs are neither clinical nor administrative • Hierarchy and power based on clinical knowledge • System is used to narrowly defined interventions • System requires reporting of concrete results • System has its own culture… AND may be culturally diverse
Important National Trends • Integration of CHWs into patient care teams • Potential special roles in behavioral health • Credentialing – not an easy path • Standardization of skill development
The Pitfalls of CHW Integration: Example of the Mass. Case Management / CHW (Patient Navigator) Survey Case Managers • Unclear about PN role • Unclear about PN skills • Uncertain of how to incorporate PN into team CHWs • Unclear about PN role and role boundaries • Skills were not always used to their full potential • Did not feel respected • Part of the team • Culture
Integrating CHWs Into Healthcare Organizations and Patient Care Teams (1) • Relevance: healthcare reform, PCMHs, ACOs • How much of a change will this be? Weighing benefits against the cost of change • Assessing readiness to change • Assessing current organization and personnel – what intervention is needed by supervisor
Integrating CHWs into Healthcare Organizations and Patient Care Teams • Relevance: healthcare reform, PCMHs, ACOs • More complex than working in “outreach department” • Creates new challenges in scope of practice boundaries • Change is always hard!
Integrating CHWs into Teams – Organizational Assessment • How much of a change will this be? Weighing benefits against the cost of change • Assessing readiness to change • Assessing current organization and personnel – what intervention is needed by supervisor? • How well are CHW’s responsibilities defined/understood?
Integrating CHWs Into Teams - Planning • How will Patient spend time? relative to each team member (Pt flow); billable clinical hours? Systems issues to be addressed? • Creating clear guidelines for the CHW on when to refer and/or communicate with team members from other disciplines • Creating a safe environment (preventing/dealing with intimidating behavior) • Role of ethnicity, discrimination within teamProducing an action plan: familiarization, communication (how does CHW introduce herself? what to put on a nametag?)
Integrating CHWs Into Teams – Working With Other Team Members • Overlap with others’ roles; encouraging open discussion of perceived threats to their roles/job security • Advocacy by Supervisor with Organizational Leadership • Role of the Team Meeting - incrementally assessing the level of readiness and coaching • Using supervisor shadowing experience for coaching other team members • Team building exercises
Integrating CHWs Into Teams – Working With CHWs • Familiarization, communication (how does CHW introduce herself? what to put on a nametag?) • What level of clinical info will CHWs handle? What additional skill development is need for this responsibility? • Case presentation skills and focus on the “Essential Facts” - capturing the attention of the provider
Current national CHW initiatives (1) • HHS interagency working group on CHWs • OWH CHW leadership training • Amending DOL occupational definition • DOL “apprenticeable trade” • OMH Promotora/CHW initiative
Current national CHW initiatives (2) • NAO-APHA-UT curriculum guidelines project • HUD CHW Initiatives • CMS Center for Innovation • Grantee learning collaborative on CHWs • Rockefeller Foundation/Urban Institute study
Medicaid Breakthru: Preventive Services • 78 FR 135 p. 42306: 7/15/13–(effective Jan. 2014)§ 440.130 Diagnostic, screening, preventive, and rehabilitative service • “Preventive services means services recommended by a physician or other licensed practitioner…” (previously read “provided by”) • Brings rules into conformance with ACA • Commentary clearly reflects interest in funding services by CHWs and other “non-licensed” providers • Payment for CHW services will no longer need to be treated as admin costs
Requirements to Take Advantage of Medicaid Rule Change • Requires State Plan Amendment (in a few states this requires legislative authorization) • Must specify what non-licensed occupations are covered and qualifications (skill requirements) – not necessarily certification • Must specify what services will be paid for (CPT codes) and which Medicaid recipients are eligible • Must specify rates of payment and payment mechanism (FFS, MCO, bundled payment etc.)
Surge in state-level interest in CHWs In addition to established initiatives in AK, FL, IN, MA, MN, NJ, NY, OH, TX: • New movements in AZ, CO, IL, MD, MS, NE, NM, OR, RI, SC, VA, WI • 2014 legislation introduced in FL, IL, MD, NM, UT • Recent State investigations in AR, CA, DE, GA, IA, LA, MO, ND, PA, UT, WA, WV
Common Elements In State Initiatives • Gathering CHW workforce data • Convening leadership and “champions” • General education/awareness • CHW professional association/network • Agreement on standards and credentialing • Strategies for sustainable CHW roles
Recent state/local innovations with CHWs • Seattle-King County CHW study • Medicaid 1115 waiver in Texas • Oregon “CCO” legislation • South Carolina Medicaid pilot • Akron OH “Accountable Care Community” • Nevada pooled funds pilot
Contact Info Carl H. Rush, MRP Project on CHW Policy and Practice U. of Texas Institute for Health Policy PO Box 5533 San Antonio, TX 78201-0533 (210) 775-2709 (210) 241-3983 mobile carl.h.rush@uth.tmc.edu