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September 18, 2023
Report
Katie M. Huber
William K. Bleser
Rebecca G. Whitaker
Karina Vasudeva
Jessye Halvorson
Amanda Van Vleet
Michelle J. Lyn
Robert S. Saunders
Publication
Oct 18, 2024
Oct 9, 2024
Sep 16, 2024
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Copublished with the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy
States, payers, and health systems across the United States are developing cross-sectoral solutions to address health-related social needs. However, most evidence on the effectiveness of these interventions to date is from time-limited interventions focused on specific subpopulations or services and often in urban areas only. In 2019, as part of North Carolina’s Section 1115 Medicaid Demonstration, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) authorized up to $650 million in Medicaid funding to implement the Healthy Opportunities Pilots (“Pilots”). The Pilots, launched in 2021, is a cross-sectoral program providing 29 evidence-based services to address social needs related to housing, food, transportation, interpersonal violence, and toxic stress through networks of community-based organizations (CBOs) to eligible Medicaid enrollees in three regions of the state. The Pilots will test the impact of these interventions at scale in Medicaid for the first time, including through major new payment and delivery designs. An ongoing evaluation sponsored by CMS will examine the effect of the Pilots on health outcomes, health care utilization, and health care costs.
To complement this evaluation, the authors conducted a multi-method qualitative study to generate timely and practical findings and recommendations from the planning, capacity-building, and early implementation of the program. Our findings can be useful not only to the Pilots’ policymakers, implementors, and providers, but also to stakeholders interested or involved in similar or smaller-scale initiatives in other states.
We identified six implementation and policy themes with recommendations for cross-sectoral programs to address social needs:
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