A medical home and reduced-cost healthcare for low-income, uninsured adults.
No, I don't mean the Jim Carey movie about a goofy animal detective.
I'm writing about the Access Coverage Enrollment Program-that ACE. ACE
Ventura provides a medical home in the Ventura County Medical Center
medical system and reduced-cost healthcare for low-income, uninsured
adults.
California Sen. Sheila Kuehl's SB 1448 established
the Health Care Coverage Initiative in 2006, enabling California to
access federal funding approved for demonstration projects such as ACE.
The federal funds are administered by the California Department of
Health Care Services. DHCS awarded a Coverage Initiative grant to the
Ventura County Health Care Agency, one of ten such grants in
California. Other recipients include Los Angeles and Orange Counties.
Ventura
County will receive $10 million per year for three years and expects to
develop comprehensive medical services-with an emphasis on preventive
and chronic disease care-for some 12,500 people. Services include
primary care office visits, immunizations, specialty care, imaging and
laboratory work, prescriptions, urgent care, inpatient hospital care
and specialty care, including mental health.
Applicants must be
19-64 years of age, uninsured and not eligible for Medi-Cal or other
government programs, citizens or lawful permanent residents, live or
work in Ventura County, and have a family income that does not exceed
200 percent of the federal poverty level.
The annual enrollment fee is $0, $50 or $100, based on income. Modest co-pays will apply for most services.
Why
just adults 19-64 years of age? Because the vast majority of low-income
children-90 to 95 percent statewide-are enrolled in Medi-Cal or Healthy
Families, and more than half of those not actually enrolled are
eligible for enrollment. And, Ventura County already has an ACE for
kids. Seniors, 65 years of age and older, receive Medicare or similar
benefits.
Why extend services to adults ineligible for existing
government programs? Because these low-income uninsured adults already
use the county safety net services, but do so inefficiently, with no
means for payment. Acute and episodic care is poor care and state law
requires the county to absorb the cost. The ACE grant provides the
money for the county to develop programs to provide more effective and
economic preventive and chronic disease care.
What happens when
the grant runs out? Grant recipients were determined to have the
ability to develop an infrastructure and financial base to sustain the
program going forward, presumably from safety net money more wisely
spent.
More information about the Health Care Coverage Initiative
is available at www.dhcs.ca.gov/services/Pages/CoverageInitiative.aspx.
Eligible patients may be referred to VCMC at 805/677-5260. I'm
available at thurstonrc@dock.net.