2014-04-28



May 5, 2014

May is National Melanoma/Skin Cancer Detection and Prevention Month



May is National Melanoma/Skin Cancer Detection and Prevention Month

In This Week’s Issue

Announcements

Trainings & Webinars

Funding Opportunities

SBIRT

Ask CHCACT!

Upcoming CHCACT Meetings

Resources

This Week in Health Policy News

Events/Educational Opportunities

Announcements

The Ninth Annual Weitzman Symposium is scheduled for Thursday May 15, 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM at Wesleyan University in Middletown. RSVP information and featured presenters can be found here.

The 2014 National Health Service Corps Scholarship Program is now open. All applications must be completed by May 15, 2014. Click here for program details and application packets.

The 2014 NURSE Corps Scholarship Program application cycle is now open.All completed applications must be submitted by May 22, 2014 to be considered. Click here for all program details, including upcoming informational webinars.

FTCA Deeming Deadline Approaching. A new Program Assistance Letter (PAL) released by the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA), details the process by which Health Centers must submit Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) applications for 2015. You can access the PAL here. Deeming applications are due by Friday, May 23.

The final seminar in the Health Disparities Institute Seminar Series will be held Thursday May 29 from 12:00 PM – 2:00 PM, presented by Dr. Adewale Troutman. Registration details  and a seminar description is available here.

Enroll America announces open registration for its first-ever national conference, June 16-18 in Washington, DC. The conference, called State of Enrollment: Getting America Covered, brings together key health coverage leaders from around the country to debrief on the first open enrollment period and hear from experts on all aspects of outreach and enrollment in Medicaid and the new health insurance marketplaces. Registration and details are available at stateofenrollment.org.

Send us your success stories! How are the outreach and enrollment efforts going at your health center? How many people have you helped so far? We’d love to know. Please send your success stories to ask@chcact.org.

Tweet of the Week

Thx to @rosadelauro for meeting with #CT #FQHCs today! #AccessistheAnswer pic.twitter.com/1P5Vdfw4De

— CHCACT (@CTHealthCenters) April 29, 2014

 

 

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New on Get-Centered

Our Get-Centered Blog features Community HealthCorps member Kylie O’Donnell and her reflections on serving at this year’s CT Mission of Mercy.

SBIRT in Your Corner

FQHCs are currently recruiting for three open Health Educator positions – check out the CHCACT Job Bank for listings.

And, learn more about CT SBIRT here!

 

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Trainings & Webinars

ECRI Institute on behalf of HRSA is offering two opportunities to participate in its free live webinar, “Building and Maintaining an Effective Triage System.” Safely and effectively triaging patients is a critical patient safety process. Health centers and free clinics face significant risks if patient triage is not done in a consistent and effective manner. Triage must be performed by an appropriate person who can assess the patient, ask pertinent questions, and prioritize the needs of those seeking care. Understanding and regularly refining your organization’s triage process is essential.

Tuesday, May 13, 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM

Wednesday, May 14, 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM

NACHC offers weekly webinars for newly funded grantees aimed at addressing frequent grantee questions and challenges. This week’s webinar, “Critical Elements of a Risk Management Program” is May 8 at 2:00 PM. Click here for details.

COPE (Collaborative Opioid Prescribing Education) for REMS. Prescribing opioids safely ultimately depends on the trust between prescriber and patient. Training can enhance trust by improving communication and collaborative skills. COPE-REMS is an interactive, self-paced, online training developed at the University of Washington-Seattle. This no-cost, online CME course is aimed at opioid prescribing providers—including physicians, registered nurses, ARNPs, physician assistants, psychologists—and other care managers who are involved in treating patients with chronic pain. Click here for more information.

NACHC is offering a series of webinars for FQHC and PCA staff dedicated to Human Resources every Wednesday, May 7 through June 4, 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM. The first in the series is called “Addressing the Challenges in the Credentialing and Privileging Process.” Registration for each webinar is open through Monday each week. Click here for more information.

CT Community Care, Inc (CCCI) is offering trainings to become leaders of Live Well Workshops, which teach individuals chronic disease self-management skills. Health centers are great locations for Live Well group sessions! Trainings will occur June 4, 6 ,11 and 13 in Wethersfield, from 8:30-4:30 each day. Contact Deb Smith at CCCI to register: 860-314-2205.

The CT-RI Public Health Training Center announces the following webinars:

Updates on Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccines: Coverage, Impact and Future Directions. Thursday, May 8, 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM

CT Healthy Homes – From Carpets to Cosmetics: Chemical Risks in Consumer Products. Wednesday, May 14, 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM

The CT-RI Public Health Training Center announces a training opportunity: Cross-Cultural and Diversity Inclusiveness on Tuesday May 20 in Hartford or Tuesday May 27 in Orange, both 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM. Details can be found here.

The CT Department of Public Health announces Programa de Manejo Personal de la Diabetes, a program designed to help empower Spanish-speaking persons with diabetes to build self-confidence and to better manage their diabetes. Training dates are May 29-30 and June 5-6. More information and requirements can be found here.

The CT Mobile Integrated Healthcare Summit will be held Tuesday, June 10, 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM at the CCSU Institute of Technology and Business Development in New Britain. Full details can be found here.

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Funding Opportunities

REMINDER from HRSA: There are several critical actions you must take to ensure competitive Health Center Program applications can be submitted successfully. First, your organization must have an active SAM.gov registration at the time of application submission. Second, you must have an active AOR (Authorized Organization Representative) in Grants.gov that is approved to submit an application. As a matter of HHS grants policy, without a current SAM.gov registration and a registered AOR, your application will be rejected in grants.gov without further consideration.

Click here to view all of HRSA’s open funding opportunities.

The Aetna Foundation announces the opening of its 2014 Regional Grants Program – GoLocal: Cultivating Healthy Communities. This grant program will help to support initiatives that encourage healthy eating and active living, particularly within low-income, underserved and minority communities. Grants will be awarded for $25,000 and $50,000 over two cycles, April 10, 2014 – June 5, 2014 and June 16, 2014 – July 30, 2014. Visit the Aetna Foundation website for more information.

 

Ask CHCACT!

“Ask CHCACT,” a new advice column, will feature questions from health center staff, answered by your favorite CHCACT staff members! For the first several months, the column will focus exclusively on Outreach & Enrollment. Send your questions to ask@chcact.org! Ask CHCACT columns are also archived on the Outreach & Enrollment Resources section of the CHCACT web site. This site is now available to the public, with no log-in requirement!

Will Simmons answers this week’s question:

Will Simmons, Community HealthCorps Member, answers this week’s question.

 

Q: I’ve heard there’s no longer in-person assistance available now that open enrollment is over, is this true?

 

A: No! While it is true that the navigator and in-person assister (IPA) programs have been ended for the year, consumers can still get assistance with anything related to Access Health CT at their local health center. Every health center in Connecticut has Access Health CT Certified Application Counselors on staff who can help you with any questions you have or walk you through an application. So if you need to report a change, start a special enrollment period, appeal an AHCT decision, complete an application, or have any other questions that relate to AccessHealthCT.com, your local health center can help. Be sure to call ahead to schedule an appointment!

You can find the location and contact information of your nearest health center from this list http://www.chcact.org/find-a-health-center/

You can also search for the locations of individual CACs using Access Health CT’s assistance tool: https://www.accesshealthct.com/AHCT/DisplayAssistanceSearch?activetab=help. We recommend searching by city so that you can find nearby CACs, even if they aren’t in your zip code (remember to choose the “Assistance” option).

 

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Upcoming CHCACT Meetings

“Coffee and En-Rolls” – a bi-weekly meeting for Certified Application Counselors (CACs) and their supervisors, facilitated by CHCACT consultant Fran Freer and AmeriCorps member Will Simmons. Join us every other Thursday @ 9:00 am to share Best Practices and hear the latest news about Access Health CT and enrollment: 888-994-2509, participant passcode 519603#. (Please note new number). Upcoming dates: May 8 and May 22.

All CHCACT Staff can be reached by calling 860.667.7820.

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This Week in Health Policy News

Here is a sampling of health policy news from around the state in the past few weeks. If you see something in your local newspaper that you would like featured here in future weeks, please contact Deb Polun at dpolun@chcact.org.

 

Featured Stories

4.28.14 Bridgeport News: BCAC Breakfast Will Focus on Food, Health (feat. Southwest Community Health Center)

 

State Health News

5.5.14 CT Mirror: Cmsr Bremby Finalist for Fort Worth City Manager Job

5.2.14 Journal Inquirer: ECHN Ruled Out Nonprofit Affiliation Before Agreeing to Buyout

4.29.14 CT Mirror: House OK’s Nursing Home Transparency, Despite GOP Talkfest

4.29.14 CT Mirror: CT Lawmakers Join War on Heroin, Painkillers

4.29.14 WNPR: Advocates, State Working to Expand Behavioral Health Coverage for Poor

4.28.14 CT NewsJunkie: Bill Giving Nurses Ability to Practice Without Docs Headed to Gov’s Desk

4.29.14 CT Mirror: Business Groups Question Malloy Health Reform Funding Plan

 

ACA/Health Reform

5.5.14 Reuters: Fewer in US Lack Health Insurance, But Issues Remain – Poll

5.2.14 The Hill: Regs to Clarify Obamacare Eligibility for People Leaving Jobs

 

National/Other Health News

5.5.14 NY Times: Polio Spreading at Alarming Rates, World Health Organization Declares

5.1.14 Hartford Courant: CDC – Hundreds of Thousands of Americans Die Unnecessarily Every Year

5.1.14 Kaiser Health News: Doctors Think Others Often Prescribe Unnecessary Care

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Resources

The National Institute for Children’s Health Quality has developed a free, interactive Collaborative Action Now to Defeat Obesity (CAN DO) Playbook. Details are available here.

SAMHSA has released a helpful Behavioral Health Barometer. It contains data that you may find useful for grants and reports. It is available on their website here.

The PBRN Resource Center is pleased to announce the recent launch of a PBRN Playlist on the AHRQ Primary Care YouTube Channel. This playlist contains video recordings of national webinars hosted by the AHRQ PBRN Resource Center. The channel and all recordings can be accessed here.

ECRI Institute announces new resources for Credentialing and Privileging Non-Physician Providers and Staff. Credentialing is not just for physicians and other clinical providers. HRSA Policy Information Notice (PIN) 2002-22 states that health centers must credential any individual who is required to be licensed, registered, or certified by the state, commonwealth, or territory in which the health center is located. This list includes, but is not limited to, licensed independent practitioners (LIPs) (e.g., physicians, dentists, nurse practitioners, nurse midwives) as well as other licensed or certified personnel such as registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, physician’s assistants, laboratory technicians, social workers, medical assistants, dental hygienists, and nutritionists. The list should include locum tenens and volunteers as well. Click here to read their Get Safe! announcement and access their checklists and other resources.

The SAMHSA-HRSA Center for Integrated Health Solutions Telebehavioral Health Training and Technical Assistance Series is designed to help safety net providers and rural health clinics understand and adopt telebehavioral health services. The implementation of telehealth services for mental health and substance abuse allows for increased access to these services, particularly in rural or underserved areas. The 6-session training will provide health centers with the tools/resources necessary to identify and implement a telebehavioral health program. Learn more here.

The American College of Physicians (ACP) has launched a High Value Care Coordination Toolkit intended to improve communication about referrals between primary care and subspecialist providers. The toolkit includes a checklist of information that must be provided in a generic referral to a subspecialist, a checklist of information that must be provided in a subspecialist’s response to a referral request, model care coordination agreement templates between several providers and care settings, and an outline of recommendations to providers that can help them prepare patients for referral using a patient- and family-centered approach.

Birth to 5: Watch Me Thrive! – HHS and the Administration for Children and Families has launched Birth to 5: Watch Me Thrive! to encourage healthy child development, universal development and behavioral screening for children, and support for the families and providers who care for them.

Scope of Project Webpage: HRSA has released a new “Scope of Project” Page on the BPHC website. This page provides a “one-stop-shop” for Health Center Program Scope of Project and Change-in-Scope policy, process, and resources. View the new Scope of Project webpage.

New Rural Mental Health and Substance Abuse Toolkit Launched. The Rural Assistance Center, University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center, and the NORC Walsh Center for Rural Health Analysis launched this toolkit, designed to help rural communities and organizations develop and implement programs that meet the targeted mental health needs of communities based on proven approaches and strategies.

ECRI has developed Asthma Care for the Pediatric Patient. Asthma is a challenging, common, chronic childhood illness associated with significant school absenteeism, emergency department visits, and hospital admissions. Racial and ethnic disparities in both asthma management and outcomes put safety net populations at particular risk. This self-assessment checklist will help healthcare providers assess and develop a patient-focused asthma treatment plan.

ECRI Institute has archived recordings of many webinars and trainings including the Optimizing Healthcare Outcomes for the Pediatric Population webinar. Visit the website here to browse a list of the archive. A login is required to access the recordings. If you would like a login, email Clinical_RM_Program@ecri.org or call (610) 825-6000 ext. 5200.

Be Involved in Your HealthCare Brochure – The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) has released an easy-to-read brochure for patients to help them be prepared before, during, and after medical appointments.

Intimate Partner Violence in the U.S. Report – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has released Intimate Partner Violence in the United States – 2010, a report describing the prevalence and impact of intimate partner victimization (IPV) using data from the 2010 National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey. The report also includes opportunities for IPV prevention and ways to interrupt IPV patterns.

The HUSKY Eligibility Manual was updated in February! Visit the CT Voices website to download the updated manual. The newest edition of reviews:

Eligibility guidelines for HUSKY A, B, and D (coverage for children, youth, parents, pregnant women and low-income adults), including common points of confusion and potential barriers to enrollment. It does not address the HUSKY C program (coverage for the aged, blind and disabled).

Eligibility rules and tips for special populations, such as newborns, young adults, 19 and 20 year-olds, and immigrants.

The applications process and resources available for assistance.

How to renew HUSKY coverage each year.

HUSKY benefits and services.

The new state marketplace, Access Health CT, the main portal through which applications for HUSKY are processed.

Resources for Population Health Improvement Workshop Video –The Institute of Medicine (IOM) Roundtable on Population Health Improvement held a workshop as part of an effort to advance the integration of primary care and public health. The workshop focused on a wide range of resources to help with population-based interventions and improving population health. View the Population Health Improvement Workshop Video.

Core Competencies and Resources for the Integrated Workforce: New Core Competencies and Resources. The SAMHSA-HRSA Center for Integrated Health Solutions (CIHS) and the Annapolis Coalition on the Behavioral Health Workforce have released a new resource to help establish standards of excellence for team members working in integrated care settings. Use the nine competencies outlined in Core Competencies for Integrated Behavioral Health and Primary Care to shape workforce training, inform job descriptions, and recruit ideal candidates. Be sure to visit the workforce section of the CIHS website for up-to-date resources relevant to each competency and to all parts of the integrated care team.

For the past two months, the National Council for Behavioral Health has hosted a Behavioral Health Centers of Excellence crowdsourcing project on our Conference 365 blog. The concept paper, biweekly blog posts by Dale Jarvis, and your responses are literally shaping our definition of what behavioral health centers of the future look like.

Linking Costs to Outcomes. “Value”— defined as the best patient outcomes at the most affordable prices — is the buzzword in current health reform discussions. Use this Basic Cost and Caseload Calculator to reduce patient wait times, increase staff productivity, & improve quality of documentation.

The American Lung Association’s Freedom from Smoking program is a FREE 7-week program designed to provide the support needed in comfortable, confidential group settings to help people quit smoking. The program will be offered in six locations throughout eastern CT this Spring. To learn more, click here or call Carolyn Wilson at (860) 448-4882, ext. 318.

On behalf of the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), ECRI Institute is providing FREE Risk Management and Patient Safety Resources. Each edition includes hot topics from clinical risk management and healthcare news and is provided every other week at no cost to your health center. To learn more about your free risk management resources go to: https://www.ecri.org/Clinical_RM_Program.

Evidence-Based Practice Program and Effective Health Care Program Reports – The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) has released new reports that provide informative evidence-based practices and summarize the research findings on benefits and harms of different clinical treatment options. View more information on AHRQ reports.

Rural Care Coordination Toolkit – The Rural Assistance Center (RAC) and Walsh Center for Rural Health Analysis launched a Rural Care Coordination Toolkit to help rural communities and organizations identify and implement a care coordination program. This toolkit contains resources to help communities develop programs that can improve quality and continuity of care, as well as patient outcomes, building on best practices of successful care coordination program models. The toolkit is available for free on the RAC website.

AmeriCorps has developed this infographic which shows all the great ways they impacted America’s health in one year.

Check out the FQHC Resources Library on the CHCACT web site here! It’s chock full of webinars and other informative resources and includes a message board to facilitate communication across centers. To gain access to the Resources section, contact Deb Polun, at dpolun@chcact.org.

 

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Events/Educational Opportunities

Click here to view our full events calendar. Click here for NACHC Seminars/Conferences/Webcasts.

Welcome to our new events calendar! The calendar is updated on a regular basis with upcoming events, webinars, educational opportunities, outreach activities and more. You can sort the calendar by category and subscribe to calendar updates by clicking here.

Agenda

Agenda

Day

Month

Week

Categories

CHCACT event

community/outreach

conference

local event

meeting

national event

tobacco

webinar

workshop/training

Tags

aca

access health ct

aco

adolescent health

advocacy

ahec

ahrq

aids

ambulatory care

antibiotics

baltimore

behavioral health

benefit

berlin

bloomfield

bod

boston

bphc

bridgeport

cancer

care management

ccpa

cdc

charter oak

chcact

child health

childhood obesity

children

chip

chronic disease

chs

chwc

cifc

citizen corps

cms

community healthcorps

connecticut

corps community day

cromwell

ct dph

ct health

ct nonprofits

cultural competence

danbury

danielson

data

dental

development

diabetes

dot

dph

east hartford

ecri

education

ehb

ehr

emergency preparedness

enrollment

esrd

exchange

fair haven

faith

families

farmington

fda

film screening

finance

fitness

florida

flu

fqhc

ftca

generations

genetics

grants

greenwich

groundbreaking

guilford

hamden

hands on hartford

hartford

hccn

hcsmct

health disparities

health equity

health extension

health it

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