The multi-faceted health care delivery system in Washington includes a variety of private and public providers, and individual, private and public payers. Individual choices are numerous and work is being done at all levels to achieve the Triple Aim of better health, better care and lower cost.
Sources of health insurance for women and children in Washington include the following:
Coverage Type: |
Employer |
Non-Group |
Medicaid |
Other Public |
Uninsured |
Total |
Women 19-64 |
62% |
8% |
18% |
4% |
8% |
100% |
Children 0-18 |
51% |
5% |
38% |
3% |
3% |
100% |
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation estimates based on Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, 2017 |
Medicaid in Washington
In Washington, Medicaid is included in the group of medical assistance programs named Washington Apple Health, and the Health Care Authority (HCA) is responsible for its administration. HCA purchases health care for more than 2 million people, nearly a third of Washington residents, through Apple Health and the Public Employees Benefits Board program. A total of 1,812,286 people in Washington, including more than 800,000 children under age 19, have Apple Health (April 2019).
HCA contracts with managed care organizations to provide physical and behavioral health care services. As of October 2018, over 84 percent of Apple Health clients were enrolled in managed care. HCA’s goal is to have 80 percent of state-purchased health care, and half of commercial health care to be value-based by 2019.
The state Title V program works in partnership with HCA to help ensure alignment of resources, services and programs, and that women and children are provided their covered benefits such as preventive services, health examinations, treatments and follow-up care. We have data sharing agreements with HCA that help us determine the reach and effectiveness of programs and assist us in determining whether people receive their appropriate services. Our agreement with HCA is included in this application.
Medicaid Section 1115 Waiver – Medicaid Transformation
The state is pursuing strategic changes within Medicaid to allow us to move toward better health. In January 2017 Washington entered an agreement with the federal government, a Section 1115 waiver, which allows us to test new, innovative approaches to providing health coverage and care, and to manage costs.
This five-year contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) authorizes up to $1.5 billion in federal investments to promote innovative, sustainable and systemic changes that improve the overall health of Washingtonians.
The demonstration project goals are to:
- Integrate physical and behavioral health
- Convert 90 percent of Medicaid provider payments to reward quality of care
- Improve health equity so all can benefit
- Increase and improve services that support our aging population
These investments will help us spend Medicaid dollars more wisely and ultimately lead to a healthier Washington for all residents. As part of the waiver, each of Washington’s nine Accountable Communities of Health (ACHs) are engaged in mandatory and optional projects. Some ACH’s have focused their optional project on maternal and child health and care coordination, which can include services specifically for women and children with complex health and social needs.
In 2018 an amendment request was submitted to CMS and authorized to provide flexibility to improve access to high quality, clinically appropriate treatment for opioid use disorder and other substance use disorders, while incorporating quality improvement metrics to measure health outcomes.
Health Care Transformation
Washington has a long tradition of health care delivery system reform. State agencies work with the public and private sectors toward building healthier communities through a collaborative regional approach; integrating how we meet physical and behavioral health needs so that the health system focuses on the whole person; and improving how we pay for services by rewarding quality over quantity. The Healthier Washington initiative is described in the Overview of the State.
Practice Transformation
The Healthier Washington Collaboration Portal is an investment area of Healthier Washington, managed in partnership by the University of Washington School of Medicine Primary Care Innovations Lab and DOH to help facilitate practice transformation. This portal was formerly called the Practice Transformation Support Hub and renamed in February 2019 with the sunset of the CMS State Innovation Model Initiative. The portal is a participatory effort between members of the clinical and public health communities of Washington, providing resources to address the health needs of our communities.
DOH coordinates one of 29 Practice Transformation Networks in CMS’s Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative, which aims to support 140,000 clinician practices in transforming the way care is delivered to achieve the Triple Aim. This is a partnership with the Washington Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and Molina Healthcare. The aim of our Pediatric – Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative (P-TCPi) is to advance child health priorities in statewide transformation efforts and help providers prepare for the new payment paradigm (from a pay-for-service model to value-based care), while leveraging the patient-centered medical home model to improve the health of children. P-TCPi includes more than 2,400 pediatric providers and aims to improve the health and well-being of the whole child, resulting in healthy children ready to learn and play, with reduced health disparities, and increased access to care for children and families.
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