Lessons Learned from the Implementation of Housing Support Services in North Carolina Medicaid’s Healthy Opportunities Pilots
The Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy has just published a Community Fact Sheet summarizing the findings of their research paper exploring the design and implementation of, and lessons learned from, the delivery of housing support services via NC Medicaid's Healthy Opportunities Pilot as a way to reduce healthcare costs and improve health outcomes and quality of life for recipients.
Innovative Multigenerational Housing Community Provides Foster Families and Elders a New Opportunity
The WNC Health Policy Initiative has held several listening and working sessions relating to the needs and challenges facing aging adults, children in the foster care system, and affordable housing. Bridge Meadows, a multigenerational housing community in Oregon, offers an example of how to build intersectional, supportive environments to address these and other such issues.
WNC Early Childhood Coalition Launches “Yes On Child Care” Campaign
Identifying and implementing a long-term plan to create a sustainable, well-funded child care system in North Carolina is critical to avoiding the severe negative impacts that losing this critical infrastructure would create, and is a priority focus area for the WNC Health Policy Initiative.
The WNC Early Childhood Coalition, a key partner in the WNC HPI’s Early Childhood Education workgroup, has launched their Yes On Child Care campaign to boost awareness of these issues and to provide opportunities for engagement and advocacy.
Tiny Homes, Big Impact: MAHEC Addresses Housing Crisis for Residents
A new initiative launched by the Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC), co-host of the WNC Health Policy Initiative, offers an innovative housing solution for medical residents serving in rural Western North Carolina - purpose-built, energy-efficient tiny homes placed exactly where they’re needed most.
North Carolina's Medical Debt Relief Incentive Program: A Beacon of Hope for Patients
Across America, 41% of adults struggle with medical bills they cannot pay, a situation that comes with significant financial, emotional and even physical costs, including reduced access to necessary healthcare. On July 26th, 2024 North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper and the NC Department of Health and Human Services took a huge step toward alleviating that burden with the introduction of the Medical Debt Relief Incentive Program, which will eliminate medical debt for millions of Medicaid recipients and middle- and low-income residents across the state.
Community Health Workers - Expanding Healthcare Access in WNC
Facing a dramatically shrinking healthcare workforce, Western North Carolina has identified innovative ways to support and expand the influence of a key role for increasing access among those most vulnerable and most often left behind - Community Health Workers.
Community Health Workers in WNC: An Interview with Honey Yang Estrada - WNC Health Policy Podcast Ep. 8
North Carolina Community Health Worker Association President, Honey Yang Estrada talks about the role of Community Health Workers in increasing healthcare access, reducing healthcare workforce strain and improving public health at the community level.
Language Access Part 3: Strategy, Policy & Resources - WNC Health Policy Podcast Ep. 7
Home to over 70 different languages and high levels of illiteracy, communication barriers in healthcare facilities make accessing healthcare difficult for a large portion of Western North Carolina.
To learn more about language access in our region, NCCHW's audio producer Andrew Rainey speaks with Buncombe County’s Language Access Coordinator, Aaron Vidaurri, the Health Access Programs Manager at the WNC Medical Society Interpreter Network, Rosalia McHattie, Dr Leah Karliner, professor of medicine at the University of CA, San Francisco, Maggie Woods and Gretchen Ramirez from NC’s Division of Broadband Access & Digital Equity, and co-founder of the Cenzotle Language Justice Cooperative, Monse Ramirez, in 'Part 3' of this WNC HPI podcast miniseries.
News Update: HSS Delivers Strategic Framework for National Plan on Aging
On May 30, 2024, the Department of Health and Human Services, through its Administration for Community Living, released its “Aging in the United States: A Strategic Framework for a National Plan on Aging” report, which “lays the groundwork for a coordinated effort…to create a national set of recommendations for advancing healthy aging and age-friendly communities that value and truly include older adults.”
Revolutionizing Healthcare: Unveiling North Carolina’s Strategies to Bridge Health Gaps Through Social Initiatives
Learn more about North Carolina efforts to address health-related social needs via Medicaid and CHIP that are paving the way for a new approach to preventive healthcare and chronic disease management via non-medical social interventions, and that could serve as models for other states and Medicaid programs interested in exploring ways to address health-related social needs.
Special Report: Emerging Issues and Opportunities in Healthcare Policy for WNC
Despite substantial healthcare spending, chronic illnesses remain the biggest threat to premature death and disability, particularly among working-aged individuals. These trends undermine our economy and threaten long-term fiscal and economic well-being in our region, state, and nation. In response, the 2024 WNC Legislative Caucus is committed to addressing three pressing healthcare policy issues: Social Care Delivery Systems, NC Medicaid Expansion, and Workforce Development.
Social Determinants of Health: Impact Health and the Healthy Opportunities Pilot - WNC Health Policy Podcast Ep. 6
Social drivers or social determinants of health are the nonmedical conditions and experiences that help contribute to a person's whole wellbeing. In this episode of the HPI podcast, we’ll be learning about the Healthy Opportunities Pilot, a program that uses Medicaid funds to address critical housing, food security, transportation, safety needs of qualifying individuals. Expected to be expanded in November of 2024, this pilot represents a new direction for healthcare funding in N.C. and may influence health policy nationwide.
Language Access Part 2: Language Access in WNC - WNC Health Policy Podcast Ep. 5
Home to over 70 different languages and high levels of illiteracy, communication barriers in healthcare facilities make accessing healthcare difficult for a large portion of Western North Carolina.
To learn more about language access in our region, NCCHW's audio producer Andrew Rainey speaks with Buncombe County’s Language Access Coordinator, Aaron Vidaurri, the Health Access Programs Manager at the WNC Medical Society Interpreter Network, Rosalia McHattie, and co-founder of the Cenzotle Language Justice Cooperative, Monse Ramirez, in 'Part 2' of this WNC HPI podcast miniseries.
Executive Summary: Emerging Issues and Opportunities in Healthcare Policy for WNC
Despite substantial healthcare spending, chronic illnesses remain the biggest threat to premature death and disability, particularly among working-aged individuals. These trends undermine our economy and threaten long-term fiscal and economic well-being in our region, state, and nation. In response, the 2024 WNC Legislative Caucus is committed to addressing three pressing healthcare policy issues: Social Care Delivery Systems, NC Medicaid Expansion, and Workforce Development.
Language Access Part 1: Why Language Access Matters for Health, and Where We Are Today - WNC Health Policy Podcast Ep. 4
Home to over 70 different languages and high levels of illiteracy, communication barriers in healthcare facilities make accessing healthcare difficult for a large portion of Western North Carolina.
To learn more about language access in our region, NCCHW's audio producer Andrew Rainey speaks with Buncombe County’s Language Access Coordinator, Aaron Vidaurri, the Health Access Programs Manager at the WNC Medical Society Interpreter Network, Rosalia McHattie, and co-founder of the Cenzotle Language Justice Cooperative, Monse Ramirez, in 'Part 1' of this WNC HPI podcast miniseries.
2024 Women’s Health Awareness Conference - WNC
Join us on April 13, 2024 for the Western North Carolina site of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences’ 10th Annual Women’s Health Awareness Conference, featuring FREE health screenings, health education sessions, healthy living sessions, and health resources, plus exhibitors from many regional community partners who support women’s health in WNC. Hosted at MAHEC’s Biltmore Forest campus in conjunction with the WNC Health Policy Initiative.
Thanksgiving Food Waste Will Top 300 Million Pounds/$600M in 2023
This Thanksgiving, Americans will waste ~312 million pounds of food at a cost of over $600M - enough to feed every hungry person in the U.S. for a week.
Envisioning Elemental Care: Multimedia Messages of Community Health Workers
Emma Olson, Associate Director of the NC Center for Health and Wellness (NCCHW), presented a short film depicting the impact and experiences of community health workers (CHWs) across Western North Carolina as a Lightning Talk at The Imagining America 2023 National Gathering: Radical Reckoning – Invoking the Elements for Collective Change.
Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week - Nov 11-18
Nov. 11-18 2023 is Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week. This week, across the country, schools, towns, municipalities and community organizations host events, activities, and programs to promote the relationships and shared work being done to combat hunger and homelessness, and to support those efforts by engaging volunteers and the community in active work to address those situations.
New Report Recommends 30 Strategies to Support Healthy Aging in North Carolina
North Carolina’s population is rapidly aging. By 2028, 1 in 5 residents will be over age 65, and by 2038 most North Carolina counties will have more residents aged 60+ than those under age 18. This signifies major changes in the health care needs of our state for which families, communities, medical providers, and policymakers must prepare.
A new report, A Place to Thrive: Creating Opportunities to Age Well in North Carolina, from the North Carolina Institute of Medicine’s Task Force on Healthy Aging recommends 30 actionable strategies for improving social connections, falls prevention, food and nutrition security, and mobility to support healthy aging for all North Carolinians.