Milestone: Assess the penetration of the patient-centered medical home model, and expand enrollment in medical homes
Primary care practices that are patient centered medical homes focus on coordinating each patient’s care across settings and over the lifespan. By building high-performing medical homes states can increase access to coordinated care.
*Milestone details:
*Full name: Assess the degree to which state residents are enrolled in patient-centered medical homes and develop new or support existing efforts to expand enrollment in medical homes.
*Relevance to the ACA:
The ACA provides resources states can use to support, improve, or expand new and existing medical home efforts. While the law promotes the medical home model it does not require states to launch or enhance medical home programs. Some relevant provisions include:
§2703 – Creates a new state plan option for states to establish health homes for Medicaid beneficiaries with chronic conditions. Also offers states enhanced funding for up to eight quarters after approval of a state plan amendment (SPA) implementing this option.
§3021, §10306 – Explicitly identifies the medical home model as one that could be tested by the new CMS Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation.
§3502 – Establishing Community Health Teams to Support the Patient-Centered Medical Home.
§4108 – Incentives for Prevention of Chronic Diseases in Medicaid.
§5405 – Grants to states for establishing programs to educate providers on topics including the medical home.
§10333 – Community-based networks will help providers offer comprehensive, coordinated care for low-income populations.
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Maine
Utah and Idaho jointly submitted a successful CHIPRA Demonstration Grant proposal to, "develop a regional quality system, guided by the Medical Home model, to enable and assure ongoing improvement in the healthcare of children enrolled in Medicaid/CHIP programs. The project will focus attention on improving care and outcomes for children and youth with special health care needs" (proposal abstract). The project is referred to as the Children's Healthcare Improvement Collaboration or CHIC. To learn more, please see the attached proposal or visit: http://medicine.utah.edu/upiq/CHIC-CHIPRA/index.htm.