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Improving Access to Primary Care for the Uninsured in Davidson County. April 2010. Davidson County Access to Care Team. Layton Long – Davidson County Health Department Cyrus Bush – Thomasville Medical Center Sandy Motley – Davidson Medical Ministries Clinic
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Improving Access to Primary Care for the Uninsured in Davidson County April 2010
Davidson County Access to Care Team • Layton Long – Davidson County Health Department • Cyrus Bush – Thomasville Medical Center • Sandy Motley – Davidson Medical Ministries Clinic • Dale Moorefield – Davidson County Social Services • Robert Hyatt – Davidson County Managers Department • Chris White – Lexington Memorial Hospital
Overview • The Problem • Increasing Number of Uninsured Patients • Lack of Access to Preventative Health Care • Davidson Medical Ministries Struggling • Poorer Health Outcomes • Working Toward a Solution • Developing a Leadership Team • The Solution • Transition of Davidson Medical Ministries Clinic (DMMC) to a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC)
Target Market • Davidson County Residents 18-64 (primary) • Uninsured • Underinsured • Others without a medical home
Definition of Plan • The primary safety net provider for the uninsured • Declining Resources with Increasing Demand • Loss volunteers • Reduced Donations and Grants • Reductions in Services • Current Model is Unsustainable • Decision to Transition to FQHC
Benefits • Expanded Clinical hours … increased patient capacity • Expanded Dental Services • A Medical Home for residents with a chronic disease • More cost effective care
Benefits (cont.) • Hours of Operation • From 29 hours at Lexington to 48 hours • Staffing • From 5 hrs/week MD and 2 Mid Levels to 1 Full Time MD and 2 Mid Levels • From volunteer dentist to 1 paid staff dentist • Increased support staff • Finances • Lessened dependency on grants and donations • Secure payor sources through Medicaid, Medicare, Sliding Fees, and private insurances • Stable annual federal grant funding
Operations and Management • Move forward as Satellite with Gaston Family Health Services(GFHS) as sponsoring board. • Corporate Board with 2 members of DMMC advisory board • Fiduciary responsibilities • 51% consumer based • Advisory Board • General Operations oversight • Community outreach and support • Site Administrator • Responsible to Executive Director of GFHS and Board • Operations Model • 5 primary programs with managers: Clerical-Eligibility, Medical, Dental, Pharmacy and Thomasville. • Responsible for staff, volunteers, students, patient services. • 3 coordinators: Hispanic, Social Work, Volunteer • Services provided: • Currently at 4 days per week or 30 hours • Expand to 40 hours immediately and up to 60 hours by end of year 2.
Access to Care - Need Indicators • 19% - overall lack any health care coverage • 23.6% - under age 65 lack health care coverage • 15.4% - under age 65 working for wages lack health care coverage • 17.7% - indicated a time when they needed health care but could not afford it.
Marketing Low Key Approach • Full advertising not advisable • Unwanted attention could bring negative consequences • Retaining paying patients • Accepting referrals
Uninsured Health Care Industry • No direct competition for uninsured • Private providers not competing for uninsured patients • Limited options for care results in costly emergency room visits
Safety Net Clinic Models • Free Clinics • Community Health Centers • Federally Qualified "Look-a-like" Health Centers • Federally Qualified Health Center (Independent or Satellites)
FQHC Satellite Advantages Partnering with an existing FQHC • Established track record of success • Section 330 Federal Funding - $650,000 annually • Expand primary care services in communities • Administrative Support for FQHC operation
Risks • Finding a FQHC partner • Comprehensive health care reform • Revenue generation / Medicaid billing • New patients • Retention of existing staff
Exit Plan • Continue operation as DMMC • Establishing independent FQHC