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North Carolina HealthNet Networks: Wake Up and Smell the Collaboration. Anne Braswell HealthNet Program Director NC Office of Rural Health and Community Care. 2000: HEALTH RESOURCES AND SERVICES ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCED COMMUNITY ACCESS PROGRAM (CAP).
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North Carolina HealthNet Networks: Wake Up and Smell the Collaboration Anne Braswell HealthNet Program Director NC Office of Rural Health and Community Care
2000: HEALTH RESOURCES AND SERVICES ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCEDCOMMUNITY ACCESS PROGRAM (CAP) • New federal grants program supporting community indigent care initiatives to increase access and quality of care for the uninsured and underserved • Expanded access for the uninsured by increasing effectiveness and capacity of the nation’s health care safety net at the community level
COMMUNITIES RECEIVING CAP FUNDS EXPECTED TO: • Build integrated health care delivery systems and a seamless continuum of care for uninsured and underinsured populations • Eliminate unnecessary, duplicative functions in service delivery and administration • Increase access to health care for low-income uninsured and underinsured persons
FIRST COMMUNITY ACCESS PROGRAM IN NORTH CAROLINA • June 2000: Office of Rural Health and Community Care applied for CAP funding on behalf of Community Care Plan of Eastern Carolina for Pitt, Greene, Edgecombe & Bertie Counties • September 2000: ORHCC awarded one of only 23 CAP grants in U.S. -- $897,000 for Pitt et al
2000: COMMUNITY CARE PLAN OF EASTERN CAROLINA AND ORHCC CREATED “HEALTHASSIST” • Built upon administrative infrastructure of Community Care of North Carolina (CCNC) • Established 4 Community Resource Centers • Co-located services with other community non-profits (e.g. JOY Soup Kitchen; Pactolus Fire/Rescue) • Provided health care services, care coordination, wellness and prevention services, adult continuing education, and job skills training for low-income and uninsured residents
BEGINNING 2001: HRSA REPLACED CAP WITH HEALTHY COMMUNITIES ACCESS PROGRAM (HCAP) • Additional indigent care networks were initiated throughout NC with HCAP funding: Cabarrus, Guilford, Buncombe, Moore, Beaufort, Durham, Henderson, Orange/Chatham • Several communities initiated programs, but were not awarded federal funding: Mecklenburg, Wake, Vance/Warren, Wilkes, Wilson, Mitchell/ Yancey, Watauga, New Hanover, and others
IMPACT OF HCAP PROGRAM IN NC Between 2000 and 2005, HCAP helped: • Induce physicians and hospitals to provide more free care and services for the uninsured • Encourage local governments and philanthropic organizations to provide matching investments of funds and resources • Bring about both perceived and measurable improvements in the health and wellness of participants • Reduce inappropriate use of hospital EDs and other costly services by participants
2005: HCAP NO LONGER FUNDED BY HRSA • After 2005, former HCAP sites and other programs in NC struggled to maintain the same level of programs and services with limited resources • Early in 2007, the last HCAP “carryover” funding ran out • In the summer of 2007, The Duke Endowment provided 4 months of emergency funds
A KEY LESSON LEARNED FROM HCAP: There must be sustaining funds to support the administrative infrastructure needed to effectively operate these indigent care programs and develop an integrated health care delivery system for the uninsured.
2007: “NC HEALTHNET” INITIATIVE In SFY 2007-08, NC General Assembly made a one-time appropriation to ORHCC of $2.88 million to implement HealthNet to support North Carolina’s safety net primary care provider networks and develop community-based systems of care serving the uninsured.
NC HEALTHNET: Links local safety net organizations and indigent care programs providing free and low-cost health care services with the infrastructure of Community Care of North Carolina and CCNC’s networks of physicians and services.
HEALTHNET NETWORKS INCLUDE: • Physicians • Hospitals • Public Health • Free Clinics • Rural Health Centers • Community Health Centers • School Based Health Centers • Departments of Social Services • Behavioral Health • Law Enforcement • Other Community-Based Safety Net Organizations
HEALTHNET TARGET POPULATION: Uninsured adults, 18-64 years old, whose family income is at or below 200% of FPL
HEALTHNET ENROLLEES: Provided a Primary Care Medical Home and access to: • Specialty Care • Wellness Education • Prevention Services • Prescriptions Medications • Care Coordination for Chronic Medical Conditions • Other Needed Services
HEALTHNET NETWORKS: Receive technical assistance and grant funding from ORHCC to support the community’s ongoing efforts to: • Increase access and quality of care through a coordinated delivery system • Share and conserve limited resources through collaborative partnerships
SFY2007-08: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 1 • Funded 16 HealthNet Networks providing services for the uninsured in 27 counties • 40,000+ individuals were provided a medical home • 25,000+ individuals had access to needed prescription medications
SFY 2008-09: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 2 In SFY 2008-09, ORHCC received $2.8 million in recurring appropriations to sustain existing HealthNet Networks plus $950,000 in non-recurring funds to develop new collaborative networks.
SFY 2008-09: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 2 • Funded 21 HealthNet Networks that provide services for the uninsured in 39 counties • 50,000+ individuals were provided a medical home • 38,000+ individuals had access to needed prescription medications
SFY 2009-10: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 3 In SFY 2009-10, ORHCC received $4.8 million in recurring appropriations to sustain existing HealthNet Networks and develop new collaborative networks.
SFY 2009-10: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 3 • Funded 31 HealthNet Networks that provide services for the uninsured in 63 counties • 61,000+ individuals had access to a medical home • 42,000+ individuals had access to needed prescription medications 23
SFY 2010-11: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 4 In SFY 2010-11, ORHCC again received $4.8 million in recurring appropriations to sustain existing HealthNet Networks and develop new collaborative networks.
SFY 2010-11: HEALTHNET IN YEAR 4 • Funding 35 HealthNet Networks that provide services for the uninsured in 70 counties • 86,000+ individuals have a medical home • 49,000+ individuals have access to needed prescription medications 25
ORHCC TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE North Carolina Office of Rural Health and Community Care staff provides: • Community Needs & Gap Analysis • Strategic & Business Planning • Network Development • Medical, Dental, and Psychiatric Provider Recruitment for Underserved Areas & Educational Loan Repayment • Architectural Design Support for Capital Projects
ORHCC TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE (CONTINUED) • Coordination with: • Community Care of North Carolina (CCNC) and Medicaid • Critical Access Hospital Program • Farm Worker Health Program • Medical Access Plan • Medication Assistance Program • Community Health Grants Program • Regional trainings and webinars • Bimonthly statewide HealthNet Networks Meetings
ORHCC TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE (CONTINUED) • Free software applications for • determining eligibility, enrollment, resource commitments, referrals, care and disease management, tracking encounter claims data (CMIS) and • accessing 150+ pharmaceutical manufacturers’ free prescription drug programs and 4000+ drugs (MARP- Medication Access & Review Program) More information at: http://www.ncdhhs.gov/orhcc/
HEALTHNET AND CCNC-UP ORHCC AND HEALTHNET PARTNERING WITH: • the OFFICE of GOVERNOR BEVERLY PERDUE • the NC DIVISION OF MEDICAL ASSISTANCE (MEDICAID) • NORTH CAROLINA COMMUNITY CARE, INC. (N3CN) • the NORTH CAROLINA FOUNDATION FOR ADVANCED HEALTH PROGRAMS • the NC INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE • the UNC CECIL G. SHEPS CENTER FOR HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH • ACCESSEAST and • FOUR COUNTY COMMUNITY CARE PARTNERS to develop Community Care of North Carolina for Uninsured Parents (CCNC-UP), a limited benefit plan that is being piloted in Warren, Pitt and Greene Counties and providing low-income, uninsured parents with access to basic health care coverage.
HEALTHNET AND CCNC-UP • ORHCC administering North Carolina’s State Health Access Program (SHAP) grant, $4.5 million over 3 years, from the US DHHS Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) to develop CCNC-UP. • Like HealthNet: • CCNC-UP built upon CCNC’s primary care medical home model and administrative infrastructure. • CCNC-UP provides enrollees (low-income, uninsured parents) with a primary care medical home and emphasizes prevention and chronic disease management.
HEALTHNET AND CCNC-UP • In August 2011, ORHCC authorized to reallocate $2.8 million in SHAP funds to undertake 10 new projects providing health care for thousands of uninsured North Carolinians and help prepare the state for implementing the Affordable Care Act: • $400K to maintain “Healthy & Ready to Learn” CHIPRA Outreach and Enrollment Program for pre-school and elementary school children. • $375K emergency fund to cover co-pays for 5000 uninsured patients. • $700K to support NC’s “Medical Access Plan” and provide an additional 10,000 office visits for uninsured patients at rural health centers.
HEALTHNET AND CCNC-UP • $100K to create “Dental Access Plan” Pilot for the uninsured in partnership with ECU School of Dental Medicine. • $180K to create “Behavioral Health Access Plan” Pilot for the uninsured. • $25K for “Health Matters in the Community,” a new OPEN/net television series to inform the public about community health issues, health reform, and the concerns of uninsured / underserved individuals and safety net organizations. More information at: http://www.ncdhhs.gov/orhcc/services/ccnc_up.htm
HEALTHNET PARTNERING WITH NC FARM BUREAU:“Healthy Living For A Lifetime” Initiative Mission: To provide Rural North Carolinians with the benefits of living a healthier lifestyle by providing free professional health screenings, educational materials and resources designed to encourage a commitment to healthy living.
HEALTHNET PARTNERING WITH NC FARM BUREAU:“Healthy Living For A Lifetime” Initiative Mobile Health Screening Unit • 25 screening events per year will be conducted using a 50-foot custom built mobile health screening unit • Self-contained, eco-friendly screening facility provides four screening stations, a specialty room for vascular ultrasound and a 1,000 sq. ft. fully enclosable awning • Health screenings offered at each event customized for local needs: Blood Pressure, Total Cholesterol, Glucose, Bone Density, Body Mass Index, Vascular Ultrasound More information at: http://www.healthylivingforalifetime.com/
“Rural Hope” Initiative ORHCC AND HEALTHNET PARTNERING WITH: • NC RURAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CENTER • THE GOLDEN LEAF FOUNDATION • KATE B REYNOLDS CHARITABLE TRUST • APPALACHIAN REGIONAL COMMISSION • USDA RURAL DEVELOPMENT More information at: http://www.ncruralcenter.org/community-programs/rural-hope.html
HEALTHNET PARTNERING WITH CARE SHARE HEALTH ALLIANCE • ORHCC participates as a board member of the Care Share Health Alliance, a statewide organization whose mission is to improve the health of low-income, uninsured North Carolinians by supporting local collaborative networks of care.
Questions About HealthNet?Anne Braswell HealthNet Program Director NC Office of Rural Health & Community Care 919-733-2040 Anne.Braswell@dhhs.nc.gov