Islam Nadia, Nadkarni Smiti Kapadia, Zahn Deborah, Skillman Megan, Kwon Simona C, Trinh-Shevrin Chau
Department of Population Health, NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York (Drs Islam, Kwon, and Trinh-Shevrin); NYU Prevention Research Center, New York, New York (Drs Islam, Kwon, and Trinh-Shevrin and Ms Nadkarni); NYU Center for the Study of Asian American Health, New York, New York (Drs Islam, Kwon, and Trinh-Shevrin and Ms Nadkarni); Health Management Associates, New York, New York (Ms Zahn); and NYU Robert F. Wagner School of Public Service, New York, New York (Ms Skillman).
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2015 Jan-Feb;21(1):42-50. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000000084.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's (PPACA) emphasis on community-based initiatives affords a unique opportunity to disseminate and scale up evidence-based community health worker (CHW) models that integrate CHWs within health care delivery teams and programs. Community health workers have unique access and local knowledge that can inform program development and evaluation, improve service delivery and care coordination, and expand health care access. As a member of the PPACA-defined health care workforce, CHWs have the potential to positively impact numerous programs and reduce costs.
This article discusses different strategies for integrating CHW models within PPACA implementation through facilitated enrollment strategies, patient-centered medical homes, coordination and expansion of health information technology (HIT) efforts, and also discusses payment options for such integration.
Title V of the PPACA outlines a plan to improve access to and delivery of health care services for all individuals, particularly low-income, underserved, uninsured, minority, health disparity, and rural populations. Community health workers' role as trusted community leaders can facilitate accurate data collection, program enrollment, and provision of culturally and linguistically appropriate, patient- and family-centered care. Because CHWs already support disease management and care coordination services, they will be critical to delivering and expanding patient-centered medical homes and Health Home services, especially for communities that suffer disproportionately from multiple chronic diseases. Community health workers' unique expertise in conducting outreach make them well positioned to help enroll people in Medicaid or insurance offered by Health Benefit Exchanges. New payment models provide opportunities to fund and sustain CHWs.
Community health workers can support the effective implementation of PPACA if the capacity and potential of CHWs to serve as cultural brokers and bridges among medically underserved communities and health care delivery systems is fully tapped. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and current payment structures provide an unprecedented and important vehicle for integrating and sustaining CHWs as part of these new delivery and enrollment models.
《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(PPACA)对基于社区的倡议的重视提供了一个独特的机会,来传播和扩大将社区卫生工作者(CHW)纳入医疗服务提供团队和项目的循证社区卫生工作者模式。社区卫生工作者拥有独特的渠道和当地知识,可用于指导项目开发与评估、改善服务提供和护理协调,并扩大医疗服务可及性。作为PPACA定义的医疗劳动力的一员,社区卫生工作者有潜力对众多项目产生积极影响并降低成本。
本文讨论了通过便利注册策略、以患者为中心的医疗之家、协调和扩展健康信息技术(HIT)工作,将社区卫生工作者模式纳入PPACA实施的不同策略,并讨论了这种整合的支付选项。
PPACA第五章概述了一项计划,旨在改善所有个人,特别是低收入、服务不足、未参保、少数族裔、存在健康差距的人群以及农村人口获得和接受医疗服务的情况。社区卫生工作者作为受信任的社区领导者的角色,有助于准确的数据收集、项目注册以及提供文化和语言适宜的、以患者和家庭为中心的护理。由于社区卫生工作者已经在支持疾病管理和护理协调服务,他们对于提供和扩大以患者为中心的医疗之家和健康之家服务至关重要,尤其是对于那些受多种慢性病影响尤为严重的社区。社区卫生工作者在开展外展工作方面的独特专业知识使他们有能力帮助人们注册参加医疗补助或通过健康福利交易所提供的保险。新的支付模式为资助和维持社区卫生工作者提供了机会。
如果社区卫生工作者作为文化中介以及医疗服务不足社区与医疗服务提供系统之间桥梁的能力和潜力得到充分挖掘,他们就能支持PPACA的有效实施。《患者保护与平价医疗法案》及当前的支付结构为将社区卫生工作者整合并维持为这些新的服务提供和注册模式的一部分提供了前所未有的重要手段。