Low-Income Health Initiative In the Works

In a news conference held Thursday morning, organizers of a new countywide health care initiative described plans to expand coverage for Washtenaw County’s low-income residents. The plan is intended to help local health care providers handle an influx of an estimated 50,000 newly insured patients when federal health care reforms take effect in 2014.

The goal is to develop a plan to provide better health care for the county’s low-income residents, the uninsured and people on Medicaid – prior to changes that will be mandated by the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The Washtenaw Health Initiative (WHI) is a collaboration led by retired Saint Joseph Mercy Health System chief executive officer Bob Laverty, former county administrator Bob Guenzel, and retired University of Michigan treasurer Norm Herbert. The effort is jointly sponsored by the UM Health System and Saint Joseph Mercy Health System, and faciliated by Marianne Udow-Phillips, director of the Center for Healthcare Research & Transformation – a joint venture of UM and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. Several other groups, including Washtenaw United Way and the county public health department, are also involved.

Organizers say they hope this initiative will become a model for other communities nationwide that are facing similar issues.

Details of exactly what kind of services will be provided, what funding and other resources will be tapped, and how a coverage plan will be implemented haven’t yet been determined. Initial steps that could occur as early as this year include reaching out to enroll about 6,000 county residents who are eligible for Medicaid but not currently signed up for that coverage. Another project that could be implemented this year entails coordinating local dental clinics to offer sliding scale fees for low-income residents.

More information is available on the initiative’s website. [.pdf of WHI press release] [.pdf of Washtenaw County health care overview]