CHCS November 17, 2020
Michael Canonico

Even before the COVID-19 crisis hit, the U.S. had historically underinvested in primary care, spending only five to seven cents of every health care dollar on primary care services. The pandemic exacerbated the situation by decreasing provider revenue, particularly for safety-net practices and clinics serving low-income people covered by Medicaid. At the same time, Medicaid directors navigating pandemic-driven budget cuts are seeking to ensure that people continue to receive care for chronic conditions, behavioral health, and related social needs.

Supporting advanced primary care is one strategy that states can use to meet these challenges. Components of advanced primary care include: deploying community health workers and team-based care; integrating behavioral health services, including depression and substance use screening and treatment; identifying...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Insurance, Medicaid, Patient / Consumer, Payer, Physician, Primary care, Provider, States
Congress can help curb high health care costs—it starts with primary care
Lawmakers push for primary care payment reform
Retail clinic failures show collaboration may work better than competition
Generative AI: A game-changer for primary care physicians
Opinion: Listen: Free medical tuition alone isn’t enough to close gaps in primary care

Share This Article