Millions of Americans across the nation lack access to high-quality primary care that will enable them to manage their health more effectively. The issue brief below outlines how Medicaid and CHIP can help reduce inequities and improve the health of the nation by expanding access to primary care.
Life expectancy in the United States is decreasing, with chronic disease the leading cause of death and disability; the country’s suicide rates have increased 30% over the last two decades; overdose deaths continue to escalate, including a 94% increase among adolescents in recent years; and disparities in health and access persist across racial and ethnic groups as well as for those in rural areas.
What’s more, patients across the country are increasingly having trouble accessing the very people who consistently help to prevent and address these burdens: primary care.
Today, individuals and families can face major barriers to seeing a primary care clinician, including limited or no practices in their communities; long wait times—of several weeks or more—to be seen; and frequent disruption of coverage due to disenrollments and red tape.
Primary care is critical to better population health and more equitable outcomes.
To address crises in behavioral health, lifestyle-related chronic disease, and access to care, policymakers must work to strengthen primary care across the nation, with a particular focus on Medicaid and CHIP. There is no single silver bullet, but policymakers can rely on strategies that are backed by established and emerging research to support beneficiaries’ access to high-value, whole-person primary care.
These approaches include changing how, and how much, we pay primary care—by reporting levels of spending on primary care and pursuing population-based payment models. Strategies also address how care is delivered, including integrating behavioral health and community health workers, as well as promoting patient-centered medical home and community health center models.
Covering nearly 90 million people, the vast reach of Medicaid and CHIP—particularly as major sources of coverage for people of color and those living in rural areas—makes them a key vehicle for bettering the health of underserved communities. Medicaid covers nearly a quarter of individuals living in rural areas across the U.S.; over 60% of the program’s enrollees identify as Black, Hispanic, Asian American, or other persons of color; nearly half are children; 41% of U.S. births are paid for by Medicaid; and almost a quarter of its covered nonelderly adults report having a disability.
Despite its importance, per person spending on primary care in Medicaid is lower than in commercial insurance and has declined nearly continuously since 2014. Low Medicaid payment rates create barriers to care for patients as practices are forced to limit their Medicaid patient panels.
Unsurprisingly, then, Medicaid enrollees also disproportionately rely on the emergency department as their usual source of care, where care is focused on treating acute symptoms rather than prevention, chronic disease management, and ongoing relationships between patients and their care teams. As unwinding of pandemic-related continuous coverage requirements has proceeded in recent months, over 10 million Medicaid enrollees have lost their healthcare coverage – disrupting their access to affordable primary care.
The Better Health NOW! campaign calls on federal policymakers to pursue two immediate Medicaid-related policy goals:
1. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine defines whole health as: “Whole health is physical, behavioral, spiritual, and socioeconomic well-being as defined by individuals, families, and communities. Whole health care is an interprofessional, team-based approach anchored in trusted relationships to promote well-being, prevent disease, and restore health. It aligns with a person’s life mission, aspiration, and purpose. It shifts the focus from a reactive disease-oriented medical care system to one that prioritizes disease prevention, health, and well-being. It changes the health care conversation from ‘What’s wrong with you?’ to ‘What matters to you?’”
Our Campaign is 50+ organizations strong, demanding better health for all in our nation. We come together from different vantage points: we represent and advocate for patients; we are clinicians; we are employers who want to keep our employees healthy; we are health plans, researchers, health systems, tech firms and pharmaceutical companies. But we are united because we agree on this: communities across the U.S. deserve to be healthier, and primary care is big part of how we can get there. Better Health NOW! advocates for a high-value, lower-cost, equitable health care system that prioritizes whole-person primary care. Read more about who we are and what we stand for.
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Solutions in Medicaid - Better Health NOW 1.2024.pdf | 541.07 KB |