Community Clinics To Assume Key Reform Role

Community Clinics To Assume Key Reform Role

New federal funding for community health centers is an essential, if oft-overlooked, aspect of the health reform overhaul. In California, the centers could become the medical home for several million additional patients.

Questions over the cost and mechanics of expanding access to health coverage have dominated the early stages of the new federal health reform law’s rollout. Less attention has been focused on who will treat as many as 32 million people, including five million Californians,  expected to gain access to care through the law. Community health centers already care for millions of low-income people, and under the health reform law, CHCs will become the primary source of care for millions more.

Background on CHC Model

Since 1965, CHCs have served in a safety-net capacity, annually providing primary care and other basic services to about 20 million people in the U.S., many of whom are immigrants and residents of rural areas and inner cities. CHCs have a significant presence in California, according to the National Association of Community Health Centers. More than 2.5 million patients were treated at the state’s 1,049 CHCs in 2008.

Advocates of the clinics note that CHCs have filled gaps in the U.S. health care system for relatively minimal cost. Patients who visit CHCs are charged based on their ability to pay. The clinics’ staff members receive salaries and, as a result, have little incentive to order additional tests or procedures to generate more revenue, a criticism of fee-for-service payment methods.

However, CHCs have drawn criticism from some private practices that contend the clinics provide unfair competition. The centers also have had difficulty recruiting staff, in part because of low compensation.

Reform Package Aims To Grow CHC Presence

Nationwide, the federal government currently funds more than 8,000 CHCs — also known as federally qualified health centers — which are administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration and operated by roughly 1,200 grantees.

The number of CHCs grew sharply under President George W. Bush, who doubled the annual discretionary funding for CHCs to $2.2 billion by fiscal year 2008. The clinics also received about $2 billion dollars from the 2009 federal economic stimulus package, helping them to serve an additional three million patients.

Anticipating a potential rush of newly insured patients, federal lawmakers designed the health reform package to double access to CHCs by 2015. The package puts $9.5 billion toward a new trust fund to expand CHCs’ operational capacity between 2011 and 2015, intended to help CHCs add another 15,000 providers to their staffs. Another $1.5 billion is earmarked for the clinics’ capital needs.

The National Association of Community Health Centers estimates that the funding would help the clinics reach an additional 20 million patients per year. The overhaul also allocated some funding for medical students’ tuition as an incentive to work in primary care clinics.

Private funding also has begun to trickle to CHCs as the health reform overhaul begins to take effect. For instance, Sutter Health recently awarded $1.48 million in grants to 18 community health clinics located across Northern California.

CHCs are well-positioned to address some of the gaps in the overhaul. Some patient advocates in California have expressed concern that the state’s 2.6 million undocumented immigrants will have fewer options for medical care, as hospitals and physicians likely will prioritize the growing number of insured patients. Many of these undocumented immigrants are expected to turn to CHCs, which also offer translation and interpretation services.

CHCs’ team-based approach to primary care also may serve as a model for the medical home initiatives encouraged in the overhaul, according to a recent essay in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Administration Efforts

Reform Reaction

From the States

On the Hill

Employer Fallout

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