AI Article Synopsis

  • New York and Massachusetts have implemented 1115 Medicaid demonstration waivers to focus on social determinants of health and better engage community organizations in health outcomes.
  • An evaluation of 359 public comments from direct service providers within these states, narrowed to 58 focusing on social service delivery, revealed concerns about funding and improving healthcare-community organization relationships.
  • Community organizations expressed feelings of underfunding and disenfranchisement while suggesting that the states should enhance support to foster better partnerships and improve integration of social services into healthcare delivery.

Article Abstract

New York and Massachusetts 1115 Medicaid demonstration waivers aimed to prioritize social determinants of health and engage community-based organizations to improve health outcomes. This is an evaluation of community-based organizations' public comments regarding their participation in social services delivery within the 1115 waivers. Both states solicited public comments on waiver implementation to date and potential improvements. The research team extracted all publicly available comments ( = 359) made by direct service providers between November 2016 and April 2019. The sample was then limited to only comments that discussed social service provision and health care-social service partnerships ( = 58). Findings are presented in 2 stages: (1) concerns regarding delivery system reform incentive payments funding levels, timing, and flow and (2) perspectives on how states and Medicaid administrators could improve health care-community organization relationships. Resource-dependent, community-based organizations protested insufficient funding. Additional comments identified specific design, structure, and implementation aspects of the 1115 waiver that could improve partnerships. Despite 1115 waivers prioritizing social service integration, community-based organizations still feel underfunded and disenfranchised. Aligning with health care standards requires significant time and effort. Given resource constraints, the state must facilitate these investments. Community organizations' feedback can also offer guidance on waiver strategies in other states.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11103731PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/haschl/qxad060DOI Listing

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