Workforce Capacity
FEATURED ARTICLE
States Race to Secure Home- and Community-Based Services during COVID-19
/in The RAISE Act Family Caregiver Resource and Dissemination Center Blogs, Featured News Home Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Health Workers, COVID-19, Health Coverage and Access, Long-Term Care, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health, State Resources, The RAISE Family Caregiver Resource and Dissemination Center, Workforce Capacity /by Wendy Fox-Grage, Salom Teshale and Paige SpradlinUpdated May 7, 2020 In the past two months, 35 states* have rapidly amended their Medicaid home- and community-based services for older adults and their family caregivers to ensure access to long-term services and supports during the COVID-19 crisis. Under new federal rules, the states applied for Medicaid 1915(c) Appendix K waivers to make temporary or […]
Toolkit: Upstream Health Priorities for Governors
/in Policy Toolkits Behavioral/Mental Health and SUD, Chronic and Complex Populations, Community Health Workers, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Healthy Child Development, Housing and Health, Long-Term Care, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Medicaid Expansion, Medicaid Managed Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Palliative Care, Population Health, Quality and Measurement, Social Determinants of Health, Value-Based Purchasing, Workforce Capacity /by NASHP WritersGovernors can control costs, advance their priorities, and enhance lives by improving the social and economic conditions that make up 80 percent of the factors affecting their residents’ health. Governors are uniquely positioned to maximize state resources to address the conditions affecting health by leading cross-agency and public-private collaborations, leveraging siloed state resources, and advancing evidence-based health policy approaches.
States Rapidly Build their Telehealth Capacity to Deliver Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs Behavioral/Mental Health and SUD, Chronic and Complex Populations, COVID-19, Health Coverage and Access, Workforce Capacity /by Kristina Long, Jodi Manz and Eliza MetteStates are turning to telehealth to minimize direct contact between patients, providers, and other staff during the COVID-19 pandemic. For opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment, this shift represents a significant departure from how these services have been historically delivered and requires rapid organizational changes.
States Address Provider Shortages to Meet the Health Care Demands of the Pandemic
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home COVID-19, Health Coverage and Access, Population Health, Workforce Capacity /by Ariella Levisohn and Elinor HigginsAs states mobilize to meet the crushing health care demands resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, policymakers are increasing the flexibility and capacity of their health care systems. One strategy is to address provider shortages that existed even before the pandemic by loosening health care licensing requirements and expanding scope-of-practice rules. As states work to address […]
CARES Act in the States: Targeting New Health Funding in a Time of Crisis
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home COVID-19, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Housing and Health, Medicaid Managed Care, Population Health, Relief and Recovery, Social Determinants of Health, Workforce Capacity /by Trish Riley and Ellen SchneiterThe landmark $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES), enacted last week, includes critically important new funding to help states in their fight to combat COVID-19. Governors and legislatures, most adjourned to comply with social distancing bans on public gatherings, will need to make quick but informed decisions about how best to […]
States Use Federal Waivers to Expand Health Care Resources to Confront COVID-19
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home CHIP, Chronic and Complex Populations, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Long-Term Care, Medicaid Expansion, State Insurance Marketplaces, Workforce Capacity /by NASHP StaffAcross the nation, states are responding to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic using flexibility permitted by federal waivers and maximizing their resources as they work collaboratively with municipalities, health plans, hospitals, and marketplaces to address the severity of the COVID-19 epidemic within their borders. The federal government has offered Medicaid waivers to give states critically-needed flexibility […]
How the Families First Coronavirus Response Act Affects State Medicaid Programs
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home Eligibility and Enrollment, Essential Health Benefits, Health Coverage and Access, Medicaid Expansion, Workforce Capacity /by Anita CardwellLast week, the Families First Coronavirus Response Act was signed into law to provide additional resources to help states address the effects of COVID-19. The law eliminates patient cost sharing for COVID-19 testing and related services in most forms of health coverage, it establishes an emergency paid leave program, extends sick leave benefits, and expands […]
States Act Quickly and Creatively to Curb COVID-19
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home CHIP, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health, State Insurance Marketplaces, Workforce Capacity /by NASHP StaffAcross the nation, states are taking steps to curb the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) and meet their residents’ unique needs by restricting social interaction based on the severity of their outbreaks, offering “grab and go” lunches for children whose schools have closed, loosening licensing standards to increase the provider workforce, and offering opioid use […]
NASHP’s Top Five Reads of 2019
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home Administrative Actions, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Health Workers, Health Coverage and Access, Health System Costs, Legislative Tracker, Population Health, Prescription Drug Pricing, State Rx Legislative Action, Work Requirements, Workforce Capacity /by NASHP StaffEach year, NASHP publishes more than 100 reports and resources to give state leaders the information they need to craft effective legislation and health policies. Below are our most-read resources of 2019. Rx Legislative Tracker: This resource with its map interface gives you the status of every state’s legislation to curb prescription drug costs since 2015, […]
States Increase Access to Oral Health Services and Support Overall Health
/in Policy Child Oral Health, Community Health Workers, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Oral Health, Population Health, Workforce Capacity /by NASHP StaffAcross the nation, states are developing innovative approaches to increase access to oral health services. These policies underscore the critical relationship between overall health and oral health. This blog and two new National Academy for State Health Policy fact sheets explore how several states, including Minnesota and Arizona, are expanding their oral health workforce to […]

For individuals living with complex, often chronic conditions, and their families, palliative care can provide relief from symptoms, improve satisfaction and outcomes, and help address critical mental and spiritual needs during difficult times. Now more than ever, there is growing recognition of the importance of palliative care services for individuals with serious illness, such as advance care planning, pain and symptom management, care coordination, and team-based, multi-disciplinary support. These services can help patients and families cope with the symptoms and stressors of disease, better anticipate and avoid crises, and reduce unnecessary and/or unwanted care. While this model is grounded in evidence that demonstrates improved quality of life, better outcomes, and reduced cost for patients, only a fraction of individuals who could benefit from palliative care receive it. 
























































































































































State Strategies to Increase Diversity in the Behavioral Health Workforce
/in Behavioral/Mental Health and SUD Featured News Home, Reports Behavioral/Mental Health and SUD, Opioid Use Disorder, Workforce Capacity /by Mia Antezzo, Jodi Manz, Eliza Mette and Kitty Purington