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Seven Steps for Building a Community-Based Palliative Care Benefit Within Medicaid
/in Palliative Care Featured News Home Chronic and Complex Populations, Palliative Care /by Salom TeshaleHow States Can Frame the Message and Gather Support
/in Framing the Message and Gathering Support Chronic and Complex Populations, Framing the Message, Palliative Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration /by NASHP StaffSustainability and Value: State Reimbursement Strategies
/in Reimbursement Strategies Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Palliative Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration, Program Design, Reimbursement Strategies, Value-based Payment /by NASHP StaffNASHP Resource Hub: State Strategies to Build and Support Palliative Care
/in Policy Reports, Toolkits Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Health Workers, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Featured Policy Home, Health Coverage and Access, Health System Costs, Long-Term Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Palliative Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration, Population Health, Workforce Capacity Chronic and Complex Populations /by Kitty Purington, Wendy Fox-Grage and Salom TeshalePalliative care helps individuals with serious illness better manage the symptoms and stressors of disease. These services are interdisciplinary, person- and family-centered, and can help people at any stage of a serious illness.
States are uniquely positioned to influence how Americans think about access, and experience palliative care.
Infographic: The Value of Building a State Palliative Care Benefit
/in Reimbursement Strategies Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Palliative Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration, Reimbursement Strategies /by Salom TeshaleTen States Selected to Attend Palliative Care Summit in Chicago
/in Policy Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas Blogs, Featured News Home Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health Coverage and Access, Long-Term Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Palliative Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration, Population Health, Primary Care/Patient-Centered/Health Home, Quality and Measurement /by NASHP WritersNASHP is pleased to announce the 10 states selected to attend the State Policymakers Palliative Care Summit, supported by a grant from The John A. Hartford Foundation. Policymakers, including legislators as well as Medicaid and public health officials from Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Texas, will participate in the day-long summit where they will learn from national and state experts about strategies to improve access to and quality of palliative care. For more information about palliative care, explore NASHP’s Palliative Care Resource Hub and sign up for its palliative care listserv.
Palliative Care: A Primer for State Policymakers
/in Policy Reports Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Health Workers, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health Coverage and Access, Health System Costs, Long-Term Care, Medicaid Managed Care, Palliative Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration, Population Health, Primary Care/Patient-Centered/Health Home, Workforce Capacity /by Lyndsay Sanborn and Kitty PuringtonWebinar: Advancing Palliative Care for Adults with Serious Illness – A National Review of State Palliative Care Policies and Programs
/in Policy Webinars Chronic and Complex Populations, Palliative Care /by NASHP StaffThursday, Jan. 17, 2019
1-2 p.m. (EST)
Palliative care access remains a challenge across the country, despite its alignment with many states’ goals to improve patients’ health care experience and care quality, and reduce costs. Palliative care is interdisciplinary, patient-centered care for individuals with serious illness, provided in a hospital, in the community, or in the home, that can be delivered alongside curative treatment at any time following an individual’s diagnosis.States, as regulators, payers, and innovators of health care, are uniquely positioned to improve the lives of Americans with serious illnesses by promoting access to palliative care.
In September 2018, NASHP conducted a comprehensive scan of how states are supporting the delivery of palliative care to adults. This webinar highlights major trends observed from all 50 states and Washington, DC, promising policy approaches, and key considerations for states identified through the scan. Additionally, the webinar features Texas’ work to advance palliative care through stakeholder engagement and Medicaid quality improvement initiatives. This webinar is supported through The John A. Hartford Foundation.
Moderator:
Kitty Purington, Senior Program Director, NASHP
Speakers:
Rani Snyder, Program Director, The John A. Hartford Foundation
Rachel Donlon, Project Director, NASHP
Jimmy Blanton, Director, Health Quality Institute, Medicaid and CHIP Services, Texas Health and Human Services
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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. 























































































































































