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State Policy Considerations to Support Equitable Systems of Care for Children and Youth with Special Health Care NeedsĀ 

NASHP

racial, ethnic, linguistic, economic, geographic) that intersect with their health needs or disability status. 7 For CYSHCN from families with low incomes or who live in rural settings, access to services and specialists is also a significant barrier, resulting in higher levels of unmet health needs.

Medicaid 124
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How Healthcare Facilities Can Prepare for Expanded Inclusion Criteria for Telehealth and RPM Solutions in Value-Based Care Settings

HIT Consultant

With RPM, care can be moved into the home: value-based care here means delivering quality healthcare in the setting that works best for patients that both improve lives and lowers costs. This type of clinical data often holds the potential to help transform the healthcare system. Another benefit of RPM?

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National Care Coordination Standards for Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs (CYSHCN): Proceedings from the National Forum on Care Coordination for CYSHCN

NASHP

For example, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Innovation Center is currently supporting the Integrated Care for Kids (InCK) model across seven sites in six states. This model aims to improve quality of care for children, including CYSHCN, through integrated care delivery systems that include care coordination.[12].

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Public Health Modernization Toolkit: Key Commitments, Priorities, and Strategies to Advance Collaboration between Public Health and Health Systems

NASHP

This feedback, along with state-collected health data, helped shape Oregonā€™s five priority areas : institutional bias; adversity, trauma, and toxic stress; behavioral health; access to equitable preventive services; and economic drivers of health.

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Behavioral Health System Modernization along the Continuum

NASHP

North Carolinaā€™s InCK program , led by Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, brings together partners from Medicaid, behavioral health, child welfare, juvenile justice, education, Title V, mobile crisis, and more to coordinate care and address the health and social needs of children in five counties.