More on the Pathways HUB

On Tuesday July 19th, we hosted a second presentation on the Pathways HUB, this one from Dr. Sarah Redding. This webinar more specifically looked at the process of building a HUB and achieving certification, as well as some examples of specific Pathways and how to build or bundle one’s own Pathways. Once again this was a lively discussion with ample question and answer time from Dr. Redding, and we are so grateful she took the time to share with us. You may watch the webinar or download the slides here in case you missed it. 

 

Integrated Care Community Strategy Team meetings delayed

We have decided to hold off on starting out Integrated Care work group until September. Our Social Determinants and Population Health work groups are identifying strategies that address health upstream, and our ACH Project Team is exploring the Pathways HUB model to see if it fits for our regional project. We feel the decisions made by these groups will be crucial in shaping our Integration strategies, so we’ve decided to delay. If you want to be involved in the Integrated Care work group once if forms, shoot us an email

ACH Touch Base Webinar

The Healthier Washington Community Transformation Team hosts a monthly Touch Base webinar to share updates about Accountable Communities of Health and their developing role in transforming our states healthy system. 

Their next webinar will be Monday, July 25th from 1-2pm. 

Register here to join the call.

If you have questions about ACHs, you may send them to CommunityTransformation@hca.wa.gov in advanced to have them addressed on the call. 

 

 

Presentation from the Pathways HUB

We would like to extend a huge thank you to Bob Harnach and MIke Bonetto for presenting on the Pathways HUB to our Regional Project Team. Their presentation gave us a lot to explore, and we look forward to continuing conversations within the community action team around the viability of this model for our region. 

If you would like to know more about the Pathways HUB, Mike & Bob were gracious enough to share their slides and a recording of the presentation. 

Pathway to our Regional Health Improvement Project

We’ve been eagerly awaiting news on the Medicaid Transformation Waiver but, since we aren’t ones to just sit around, we’re moving full speed ahead.

We’ve spent months synthesizing the wealth of information generated in our Idealized Design and Community Linkage mapping sessions to develop and inform our Regional Health Improvement Plan and the selection of a Regional Health Improvement Project. During our focus group conversations, our community worked together to inventory existing linkages between community resources, and identify where linkages were broken or non-existent. Across those conversations, one need presented itself over and over again: the need to “coordinate the coordinators.”

The diversity of partners in our ACH Leadership Council members demonstrates the leadership and dedication needed to radically improving the health of our region. We agree the most emergent need is not to scale any one community resource or service but to build stronger and more navigable connections between the coordinators and resources already available.

This was realized in our design sessions as a need for “air traffic control” or a patient-centered workforce that helps coordinate services across all sectors. Independent organizations need the flexibility to explore their own models and develop their strengths, but to nurture healthy community, patients need services that communicate, collaborate, and speak the same language of care.

From this idea, we’ve pulled together a workgroup to explore the Pathways HUB model and serve as the steering committee for our Regional Health Improvement Project. Alisha Fehrenbacher from Empire Health Foundation, presented on to the ACH Leadership Council in March on her experiences implementing the Pathways HUB model (view her slides here) in Oregon. It is an evidence-based model currently deployed in over 20 regions of the US, that positions care organizations around a centralized HUB, and has been shown to effectively address risk factors, improve health and reduce costs.

We feel confident this model has a lot to offer our region and are excited to explore it further. The workgroup will continue to develop our plan throughout the summer, with the hope that we will be in position to hit the ground running once we hear about the waiver. If you are interested in joining the Leadership Council, please email Alison@betterhealthtogether