Posts Tagged ‘medical home’

Beacon Communities to Lead the Way

May 13th, 2010

Beacon Communities Demonstrating Meaningful Use of Health IT

Beacon Community AwardeeFunding AmountBeacon Community Goals for Population Health in Service Area
Community Services Council of Tulsa, Tulsa, Okla.$12,043,948
  • Leverage broad community partnerships with hospitals, providers, payers, and government agencies  to expand a community-wide care coordination system, which will increase appropriate referrals for cancer screenings, decrease unnecessary specialist visits and (with telemedicine) increase access to care for patients with diabetes
Delta Health Alliance, Inc., Stoneville, Miss.$14,666,156
  • Focus on achieving improvements for diabetic patients by electronically linking isolated systems and practices for care management, medication therapy management and patient education
Eastern Maine Healthcare Systems, Brewer Maine$12,749,740
  • Expand community connectivity, including long-term care, primary care and specialist providers, to existing Health Information Exchange and promote the use of telemedicine and patient self-management in order to improve care for elderly patients and individuals needing long-term or home care
Geisinger Clinic, Danville, PA$16,069,110
  • Enhance care for patients with pulmonary disease and congestive heart failure by creating a community-wide medical home, promoting Health Information Exchange and extending Geisinger’s proven model for practice redesign  to independent healthcare organizations throughout region
HealthInsight, Salt Lake City, Utah$15,790,181
  • Improve Diabetes management performance measures by increasing availability, accuracy and transparency of quality reporting, leverage Intermountain Healthcare’s strategies to reduce health systems costs throughout the region, and improve public health reporting
Indiana Health Information Exchange, INC., Indianapolis, Ind.$16,008,431
  • Expand the country’s largest Health Information Exchange to new community providers in order to improve cholesterol and blood sugar control for diabetic patients and reduce preventable re-admissions through telemonitoring of high risk chronic disease patients after hospital discharge
Inland Northwest Health Services, Spokane, Wash.$15,702,479
  • Focus on increasing preventive services for diabetic patients in rural areas by extending Health Information Exchange and establishing anchor institutions in close proximity to remote clinics that will promulgate successes in health IT supported care coordination
Louisiana Public Health Institute, New Orleans, La.$13,525,434
  • Reduce racial health disparities and improve control of diabetes and smoking cessation rates by linking technically isolated health systems, providers, and hospitals; and empower patients by increasing their access to Personal Health Records
Mayo Clinic Rochester, d/b/a Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minn.$12,284,770
  • Enhance patient management and, reduce costs costs associated with hospitalization and emergency services for patients with diabetes and childhood asthma and address reduce health disparities for underserved populations and rural communities
Rhode Island Quality Institute, Providence, R.I.$15,914,787
  • Improve the management of patients with diabetes through several health IT initiatives to support Rhode Island’s transition to the Patient Centered Medical Home model and adapt infrastructure proven to improve childhood immunizations in order to achieve improvements in adult immunization rates
Rocky Mountain Health Maintenance Organization, Grand Junction, Colo.$11,878,279
  • Enable robust collection of clinical data from health systems, providers, and hospitals in order to inform practice redesign to improve blood pressure control in patients with diabetes and hypertension, increase smoking cessation counseling, and reduce unnecessary emergency department utilization and hospital re-admissions
Southern Piedmont Community Care Plan, Inc., Concord, N.C.$15,907,622
  • Improve care coordination for patients with diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, and asthma by engaging patients and providers in bidirectional data sharing through a Health Record Bank, empowering patients and family members to participate in self-management through patient portals, and expanding access to care managers to facilitate post-discharge planning
The Regents of the University of California, San Diego, San Diego, Calif.$15,275,115
  • Expand pre-hospital emergency field care and electronic information transmission to improve outcomes for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease, empower patients to engage in their own health management through web portal and cellular telephone technology, and improve continuity of care for veterans and military personnel through the Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense Virtual Lifetime Electronic Record initiative
University of Hawaii at Hilo, Hilo, Hawaii$16,091,390
  • Implement a region-wide Health Information Exchange and Patient Health Record solution and utilize secure, internet-based care coordination and tele-monitoring tools to increase access to specialty care for patients with chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, and obesity in this rural, health-professional shortage area
Western New York Clinical Information Exchange, Inc., Buffalo, N.Y.$16,092,485
  • Utilize clinical decision support tools such as registries and point-of-care alerts and reminders and innovative telemedicine solutions to improve primary and specialty care for diabetic patients, decrease preventable emergency room visits, hospitalizations and re-admissions for patients with diabetes and congestive heart failure or pneumonia, and improve immunization rates among diabetic patients

More information about Beacon Communities can be found at: http://Healthit.hhs.gov/Programs/Beacon.

For information about other HHS Recovery Act programs, see http://www.hhs.gov/recovery

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President Obama Announces Recovery Act Awards to Community Health Centers in More Than 30 States

December 10th, 2009

President Obama Announces Recovery Act Awards to Build, Renovate Community Health Centers in More Than 30 States

Program to Create Jobs in Low-Income Communities, Help CHCs Serve More Than 500,000 Additional Patients

WASHINGTON – Today President Obama announced nearly $600 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) awards to support major construction and renovation projects at 85 community health centers nationwide and help networks of health centers adopt Electronic Health Records (EHR) and other Health Information Technology (HIT) systems.  The awards are expected to not only create new job opportunities in construction and health care, but also help provide care for more than half a million additional patients in underserved communities.  The President also announced a new demonstration initiative to support the delivery of advanced primary care to Medicare beneficiaries through community health centers.

“Together, these three initiatives – funding for construction, technology and a medical home demonstration project – won’t just save more money, and create more jobs, they’ll give more people the peace of mind of knowing that health care will be there for them and their families when they need it,” said President Obama.  “Ultimately, that’s what health reform is really about.”

“One of the first investments we made through the Recovery Act was in supporting our nation’s community health centers – and today we build on that progress by funding new construction and improvement projects at more than 80 facilities nationwide,” said Vice President Biden.  “This is what the Recovery Act is all about – providing immediate assistance for hard-hit families, improving our nation’s infrastructure and creating new opportunities for stable, well-paid work.”

To qualify for funding, a health facility must be a Federally Qualified “Community” Health Center.  Grants of $508.5 million will be provided through the Facility Investment Program (FIP) program to address pressing health center facility needs. Also, as much as $88 million will be available to help Health Center Controlled Networks improve operational effectiveness and clinical quality in health centers by providing management, financial, technology and clinical support services.

The new Recovery Act funds are the latest in a series of grants awarded to community health centers, which deliver preventive and primary care services at more than 7,500 service delivery sites around the country to patients regardless of their ability to pay.  Health centers serve more than 17 million patients, about 40 percent of whom have no health insurance.

Both programs will be administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

President Obama directed the Department of Health and Human Services to implement a demonstration initiative designed to evaluate the impact of the advanced primary care practice model on access, quality and cost of care provided to Medicare beneficiaries served by community health centers.

This model, known as the “medical home,” promotes accessible, continuous, and coordinated family-centered care.  Developed and administered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the demonstration will last three years.  CMS anticipates that up to 500 health centers will participate.

“Because community health centers already provide comprehensive health care to people who face the greatest barriers to accessing care, these demonstration projects have the potential to support and improve the care delivered not only to Medicare beneficiaries, but also to others who rely on community health centers for primary care,” said HHS Secretary Kathleen G. Sebelius.

HRSA has received a total of $2 billion through the Recovery Act to expand health care services to low-income and uninsured individuals through its health center program. To date, nearly $1.9 billion of these funds have been awarded to community-based organizations across the country.

FIP grants are listed below.  They were awarded through a competitive process:

Name of Health CenterCityStateAward Amount
Health Services Inc.MontgomeryAla.$11,231,000
Seldovia Village TribeSeldoviaAlaska$2,258,091
Alaska Island Community ServicesWrangellAlaska$3,736,490
North Country Healthcare Inc.FlagstaffAriz.$7,433,776
Canyonlands Community Health CarePageAriz.$1,840,695
Clinica Sierra VistaBakersfieldCalif.$4,008,251
Solano County Health & Social Services Dept.FairfieldCalif.$2,194,196
South Central Family Health CenterLos AngelesCalif.$953,743
Contra Costa County Health Services Dept.MartinezCalif.$12,000,000
Golden Valley Health CenterMercedCalif.$9,573,010
Petaluma Health Center Inc.PetalumaCalif.$8,906,986
Clinica De Salud Del Valle De SalinasSalinasCalif.$2,327,857
Santa Clara Valley Health And Hospital SystemSan JoseCalif.$2,643,343
San Mateo County Health Services AgencySan MateoCalif.$1,765,876
Centro De Salud De La Comunidad San YsidroSan YsidroCalif.$9,754,515
Vista Community ClinicVistaCalif.$11,473,212
Charter Oak Health Center Inc.HartfordConn.$10,000,000
Community Health Services Inc.HartfordConn.$6,160,675
Unity Health Care Inc.WashingtonD.C.$12,000,000
Suncoast Community Health Centers Inc.RiverviewFla.$3,767,091
Project Health Inc.SumtervilleFla.$5,222,774
Tampa Family Health Centers Inc.TampaFla.$2,903,145
Palmetto Health Council Inc.AtlantaGa.$6,317,838
Southwest Georgia Health Care Inc.RichlandGa.$1,208,700
Kokua Kalihi Valley Comprehensive Family ServicesHonoluluHawaii$1,500,000
Lawndale Christian Health CenterChicagoIll.$10,000,000
Greater Elgin Family Care CenterElginIll.$2,452,172
PCC Community Wellness CenterOak ParkIll.$4,053,042
Crusaders Central Clinic AssociationRockfordIll.$5,342,337
Healthnet Inc.IndianapolisInd.$10,426,357
Primary Health Care Inc.Des MoinesIowa$2,615,429
Bucksport Regional Health CenterBucksportMaine$2,459,420
Sacopee Valley Health CenterParsonsfieldMaine$802,951
Choptank Community Health System Inc.DentonMd.$1,085,542
Dorchester House Multi-Service CenterDorchesterMass.$7,024,029
East Boston Neighborhood Health CenterEast BostonMass.$12,000,000
Healthfirst Family Care Center Inc.Fall RiverMass.$12,000,000
Community Health Connections Inc.FitchburgMass.$10,732,754
Lowell Community Health CenterLowellMass.$9,351,067
Mattapan Community Health CenterMattapanMass.$11,550,000
Greater New Bedford Community Health CenterNew BedfordMass.$5,331,145
Whittier Street Health Committee Inc.RoxburyMass.$12,000,000
Baldwin Family Health Care IncBaldwinMich.$3,000,000
Intercare Community Health NetworkBangorMich.$8,500,000
Cedar Riverside Peoples CenterMinneapolisMinn.$2,113,595
Central Mississippi Civic ImprovementJacksonMiss.$3,881,043
Nevada Rural Health Centers Inc.Carson CityNev.$11,253,351
Avis Goodwin Community Health CenterDoverN.H.$4,957,300
Ammonoosuc Community Health Services Inc.LittletonN.H.$2,641,157
Lamprey Health CareNewmarketN.H.$2,150,250
Zufall Health Center Inc.DoverN.J.$3,920,442
Ocean Health Initiatives Inc.LakewoodN.J.$4,753,399
Newark City Health and Human ServicesNewarkN.J.$4,996,563
Newark Community Health Centers Inc.NewarkN.J.$6,453,000
La Familia Medical CenterSanta FeN.M.$1,216,338
Montefiore Medical CenterBronxN.Y.$795,000
Urban Health Plan Inc.BronxN.Y.$12,000,000
Family Health Network of Central New York Inc.CortlandN.Y.$1,400,387
Community Healthcare NetworkNew YorkN.Y.$1,365,788
Family Healthcare CenterFargoN.D.$6,666,583
Capital Park Family Health CenterColumbusOhio$4,417,688
Muskingum Valley Health Centers Inc.McConnelsvilleOhio$5,997,980
Butler County Community Health Consortium Inc.MiddletownOhio$4,669,197
Healthsource of Ohio Inc.MilfordOhio$9,764,690
Great Salt Plains Health Center Inc.CherokeeOkla.$2,828,647
Oklahoma Community Health Services Inc.Oklahoma CityOkla.$11,985,000
Central City ConcernPortlandOre.$8,950,000
Cornerstone CareBurgettstownPa.$2,574,643
Keystone Rural Health CenterChambersburgPa.$11,515,000
Southeast Lancaster Health ServicesLancasterPa.$3,250,000
Esperanza Health CenterPhiladelphiaPa.$6,552,799
Greater Philadelphia Health Action Inc.PhiladelphiaPa.$3,937,796
Squirrel Hill Health CenterPittsburghPa.$792,700
Salud Integral En La Montana Inc.NaranjitoP.R.$8,752,140
Rincon Rural Health Initiative Project IncRinconP.R$5,915,227
Little River Medical Center Inc.Little RiverS.C.$5,523,205
Beaufort-Jasper Comprehensive Health Services Inc.RidgelandS.C.$7,912,493
Brownsville Community Health CenterBrownsvilleTexas$7,500,000
Project Vida Health CenterEl PasoTexas$6,000,422
Su Clinica FamiliarHarlingenTexas$7,500,000
El Centro Del Barrio Inc.San AntonioTexas$11,051,134
Heart of Texas Community Health Center Inc.WacoTexas$5,296,239
Blue Ridge Medical Center Inc.ArringtonVa.$5,000,000
Community Health Center of Burlington Inc.BurlingtonVt.$10,964,476
La Clinica/South Columbia Rural HealthPascoWash.$7,425,870
Total:  $508,549,051

FACT SHEET

Community Health Centers and the Recovery Act

Health centers deliver preventive and primary care services at more than 7,500 service delivery sites around the country to patients regardless of their ability to pay; charges for services are set according to income.  Health centers serve more than 17 million patients, about 38 percent of whom have no health insurance.

Three sets of health center awards have already been funded through Recovery Act appropriations on the following dates:

  • On March 2, President Obama announced grants worth $155 million to establish 126 new health center sites.  Those grants will provide access to essential preventive and primary health care for more than 750,000 people in 39 states and two territories.
  • On March 27, HHS also awarded $338 Million in Increased Demand for Services grants for health centers. Health centers are using these funds to provide care to more than 2 million additional patients over the next two years, including approximately 1 million uninsured people. In addition, over the next two years, health centers will use the funds to create and retain approximately 6,400 health center jobs.
  • On June 29, First Lady Michelle Obama announced the release of $851 million in Recovery Act grants to upgrade over 1,500 health center sites and open their doors to more patients.  More than 650 centers will use the funds for health information technology (HIT) systems, and nearly 400 health centers will adopt and expand the use of electronic health records.

The Facility Investment Program awards announced today are the fourth set of health center grants provided through the Recovery Act.

Facility Investment Program (FIP) Grants

The Obama Administration announced $508.5 million awarded in Facility Investment Program grants to community health centers nationwide to address the pressing needs of health center facilities and expanded their capacities to serve an additional 500,000 patients.  The funds were made available by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act).  The Facility Investment Program (FIP) grants support major construction and renovation at our nation’s health centers.  These funds will help health centers build new facilities, modernize current sites and create employment opportunities in underserved communities.

Recipients of FIP funds are expected to commit grant funds and complete the proposed projects within two years. The grants will cover two types of projects:

1. Alteration/renovation: This project type includes work required to modernize, improve or change the interior arrangements or other physical characteristics of an existing facility, and purchase/install equipment. Alterations and renovations make existing space usable for another purpose. This type of project does not increase square footage.

2. Construction (new site or expansion of existing site): This project type includes—(i) adding a new structure to an existing site that increases the total square footage of the facility; and (ii) permanently affixing structure (e.g., modular units, prefabricated buildings) to real property (i.e., land).

FIP grants, along with the entire health center program, are administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Health Center Controlled Networks (HCCN)

The Obama Administration announced the availability of $88 million in grants to help networks of health centers adopt Electronic Health Records (EHR) and other Health Information Technology (HIT) systems.  The funds are part of the $1.5 billion allotted to the Health Resources and Services Administration, a component of the Department of Health and Human Services, by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) for construction, renovation, equipment, and the acquisition of HIT systems for health center programs.

The Health Center Controlled Networks (HCCN) grant program was developed in 1994 to support the creation, development, and operation of electronic networks, controlled by groups of collaborating health centers, to improve health center operations. The networks are controlled by and operate on behalf of HRSA-supported health centers.  Each network comprises at least three collaborating organizations.

HCCNs integrate core business functions among their individual health center members, who may be anywhere in the country, but are often in the same state or region.  The core business functions these networks share are: administrative, clinical, managed care, fiscal, or health information systems.

Networks provide these functions at or below marketplace cost to their members.  In launching a network, members assess their respective environments and existing infrastructure to determine the most appropriate mix of business functions to share.  The networks seek to:

  • increase access for the low-income, uninsured population they predominantly serve;
  • enhanced the efficiency of their operations; or
  • create a higher level of performance and value.

Networks that receive HCCN funds are given great flexibility in determining their activities.  Each network is unique, depending on its state or regional environment, marketplace, collaborators, needs and interests.

HRSA awarded $36 million in grants to support the operations of 53 Health Center Controlled Networks in fiscal year 2009.

Medicare Federally Qualified Health Center Advanced Primary Care Practice Demonstration Initiative

Today, President Obama directed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to implement a demonstration initiative to support federal qualified health centers in delivering advanced primary care to Medicare beneficiaries.  HHS’ agencies, Health Resources and Services Administration and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, will work together to conduct this 3-year demonstration and anticipate that 500 federally qualified health centers will participate.

Advanced Primary Care Model

The Advanced Primary Care model, also known as the patient-centered medical home, promotes targeted, accessible, continuous, and coordinated family-centered care.  The demonstration is designed to evaluate the impact of the advanced primary care practice model on access, quality and cost of care provided to Medicare beneficiaries served by federal qualified health centers.

Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC)

FQHCs provide comprehensive primary and preventive health care for medically underserved populations who face the greatest economic and geographic barriers to accessing care.  Overseen by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the Health Center program is a national network of more than 1,100 community, migrant, homeless and public housing health center grantees. These organizations provide health care at more than 7,500 clinical sites, ranging from large medical facilities to mobile vans.  In 2008, health centers served more than 17 million medically underserved people.  FQHCs provide an environment to demonstrate the benefits of medical homes can offer to Medicare beneficiaries.

New Medicare Demonstration

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and HRSA will develop the demonstration, which would include a solicitation of applications from FQHC grantees.  To participate, FQHC grantees will need to demonstrate that their clinic sites have the capacity to deliver continuous and coordinated care across providers and settings, including improving access to care by expanding service hours, facilitating and following up on referrals, and managing medications prescribed by different physicians.   FQHC clinic sites selected to participate in the demonstration will receive a monthly care management fee for each Medicare fee-for-service beneficiary they enroll into the demonstration, in addition to payment for any other covered Medicare services they provide.

Research Design

This demonstration will evaluate whether federal qualified health centers that deliver advanced primary care improve access and quality, promote appropriate use of services, and reduce health care costs.  The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will begin soliciting applications in spring 2010, aiming to begin implementation of the 3-year demonstration initiative in January 2011.  CMS will conduct an independent evaluation of this demonstration.

** This release has been corrected.

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New York HEAL NY Community-Based Health Information Technology

September 30th, 2009

New York Announces $60 Million Funding for HEAL NY

“HEAL NY” Funding Will Support Improvements in Health IT, Hospital Restructuring and Community-Based Services for Older Adults and Individuals with Disabilities

HEAL NY Phase 10:
Nearly $60 million of the funding, through HEAL NY Phase 10, will go to community-based health information technology (IT) projects to build a more streamlined approach to sharing patient information. These projects will lead to significant savings in health care in the coming years. Unnecessary paperwork and redundancies throughout the system will be removed, and doctors and nurses will have better access to information of patients who transfers from one medical center to another.

These reforms are based on the Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) model, which health care professionals believe to be the most effective in treating a patient – by establishing a partnership among doctors, nurses, patients and their families to ensure that patients have the support they need to participate in their own care.

HEAL NY Phase 11:
A second block of funding, HEAL NY Phase 11, consists of more than $174 million in grants to 25 hospitals across the State to enter into collaborative arrangements that promote quality and efficiency in the delivery of care appropriate to the needs of their communities.

These awards will help the recipient hospitals to eliminate duplicative services and achieve greater efficiency in providing services responsive to identified community needs.  For example, the Catholic Health System’s merger of its three acute care hospitals in Western New York into its single governance structure will lead to a more efficient service line model – patients will get better care, and operating costs will go down. In New York City, an award to St. Vincent’s Catholic Medical Center in Manhattan will support that facility’s collaboration with NYU Hospitals Center to consolidate services in pediatrics, physical rehabilitation, psychiatry and cardiovascular care, while eliminating more than 60 beds that are no longer needed.

HEAL NY Phase 12:
Finally, the HEAL NY Phase 12 awards consist more than $172 million in grants to 19 applicants for projects to support long-term care services in community-based settings. The primary goal of these awards is to help communities organize, finance and develop alternatives to traditional nursing home while reducing of nursing homes’ certified inpatient bed capacity.

These awards will result in new community-based, long-term care options, including Assisted Living Programs, Assisted Living Residences, Enriched Housing Programs, and affordable senior housing with coordinated medical services.

A complete list of the HEAL NY awards by institution is available at: http://www.ny.gov/governor/press/pdf/press_0925091-b.pdf.

A complete list of the HEAL NY awards in Queens is available at: http://www.ny.gov/governor/press/pdf/press_0925091-a.pdf.

The following is a region-by-region list of HEAL NY Phase 10, 11 and 12 awards:

Total New York City Region Awards: $140,115,761

  • Phase 10 New York City Awards: $13,741,782
  • Phase 11 New York City Awards: $63,173,261
  • Phase 12 New York City Awards: $63,200,718

Total Northern Region Awards: $23,183,925

  • Phase 10 Northern Awards: $7,000,000
  • Phase 11 Northern Awards: $6,021,752
  • Phase 12 Northern Awards: $10,162,173

Total Western Region Awards: $67,839,658

  • Phase 10 Western Awards: $13,997,972
  • Phase 11 Western Awards: $23,399,321
  • Phase 12 Western Awards: $30,442,365

Total Central Region Awards: $72,320,205

  • Phase 10 Central Awards: $6,676,804
  • Phase 11 Central Awards: $23,856,401
  • Phase 12 Central Awards: $41,787,000

Total Hudson Valley Region Awards: $65,168,126

  • Phase 10 Hudson Valley Awards: $5,902,937
  • Phase 11 Hudson Valley Awards: $35,957,244
  • Phase 12 Hudson Valley Awards: $23,307,945

Total Long Island Region Awards: $37,694,355

  • Phase 10 Long Island Awards: $12,295,218
  • Phase 11 Long Island Awards: $21,935,797
  • Phase 12 Long Island Awards: $3,463,340
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