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PUBLIC HEALTH FUNDING IN TEXAS

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State law does not mandate local governmental entities to provide public health ... CURRENT INITIATIVES. LLB. TALHO. TAMHO. Bob Galvan. rgalvan245_at_charter.net ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PUBLIC HEALTH FUNDING IN TEXAS


1
PUBLIC HEALTH FUNDING IN TEXAS
  • BOB GALVAN, DrPH, MPH, MS

2
HISTORY
  • INADEQUATE PUBLIC HEALTH COVERAGE IN TEXAS
  • ASSURING A STRONG HEALTH SAFETY NET IN TEXAS

3
SHCC REPORT CONSLUSIONS
  • Many counties in Texas have limited or no public
    health presence
  • State law does not mandate local governmental
    entities to provide public health services. Local
    health departments have been asked to absorb
    indigent patient care
  • Federal and state Medicare cutbacks and federal
    welfare reform resulted in local public health
    health entities losing reimbursement for services
    provided in indigent patients

4
SHCC REPORT RECOMMENDATIONS
  • All Texans should have the benefit of
    appropriately funded core (essential) public
    heath services
  • Public entities should have oversight of core
    public health functions
  • Core PH activities should be undertaken
    collaboratively and guided by priorities set by
    the community
  • Long-term funding mechanism should be developed

5
House Concurrent Resolution HCR 44
  • HRC 44 was established by the 75th Texas
    Legislature in summer 1997
  • The purpose of HCR 44 was to
  • study the current role of local governments in
    providing public health services
  • Submit a full report of their findings and
    recommendations to the 76th Legislature when it
    convenes in January 1999

6
HCR 44 PROCESS
  • Convene a group of individuals representing
    stakeholders to review Public Health in Texas
  • Provide a model that would completely revamp
    Public Health in Texas
  • Provide a fiscal model for funding the New
    Public Health Model

7
HCR 44 PROCESS, CONTINUED
  • The Stakeholders which started with 4
    individuals representing 4 agencies resulted in
    having 55 individuals representing 55 agencies
  • The difficulties dealing with agendas and
    personalities and the dynamics of such

8
HCR 44 PROCESS, CONTINUED
  • The Current Pubic Health Model in Texas
  • Local Health Departments
  • County Health Departments
  • TDH Regional Offices
  • City/County Health Departments

9
HCR 44 PROCESS, CONTINUED
  • 64 Local Health Departments in Texas which
    receive funding from TDH and are classified as
    state participating
  • 8 City Health Departments
  • 31 County Health Departments
  • 25 Public Health Districts (including City/County
    and County/County Districts)

10
HCR 44 PROCESS, CONTINUED
  • Over 80 Local Health Departments that are
    classified as non-participating
  • Several are large, full service departments but
    some are small
  • Provide mainly Environmental Services
  • Non-Participating Health Departments are still
    eligible for certain federal funds

11
HCR 44 PROCESS, CONTINUED
  • The New Model of Public Health in Texas
  • Provide per capita funding to health departments
  • Set up a system where Public Health services are
    available to all Texans
  • Provide the opportunity to set up unique
    agreements between city and county county and
    county city and other cities county and other
    cities and require TDH to provide PH services if
    no other agency could provide these services

12
HCR 44 PROCESS, CONTINUED
  • The funding issues were the most challenging
  • State Appropriations
  • Tobacco Windfall
  • Regional Office Administrative Budget

13
HCR 44 RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Incorporate Core Essential Services as defined by
    IOM 1988 Report
  • Fund Public Health Services at 5.00 per capita
  • Provide Public Health Services to all Texans
    through innovative arrangements by various
    agencies

14
HOUSE BILL 1444
  • HB 1444 introduced by Rep. Dianne Delisi
  • Defined Essential Public Health Services
  • Created Grants for Essential Public Health
    Services
  • Created a Public Health Consortium

15
HOUSE BILL 1444
  • Funding The initial request for 5.00 per
    capita was reduced to a total of 10 million
  • As a result, Innovation Grants were made
    available to local health departments for
    demonstration projects

16
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • House Resolution 257 was introduced by
    Representative Villarreal in the 2005 Regular
    Legislative Session
  • More than 3 million Texans reside in 121
    federally designated whole county health
    professional shortage areas
  • Three point three million (3.3 million) Texans
    were living in an additional 47 partial county
    and 47 special population health professional
    shortage areas as of June, 2004

17
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • The Federal Government has also identified 359
    medically underserved areas and medically
    underserved populations in Texas
  • Five point five million (5.5 million) Texans are
    living without health insurance and resort to
    primary care in Hospital ERs
  • Prescriptions costs are projected to rise by 11.2
    between 2000 and 2010

18
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • In 2001, Health Care expenditures alone accounted
    for 40 of total net expenditures in Texas
  • Public Hospital Districts reported1.2 Billion in
    un-reimbursed care
  • Without revisiting HB 1444, there could be a
    crisis in Public Health in Texas

19
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • Request the Speaker of the House to provide for
    an interim house study to make recommendations to
    the legislature relating to the delivery of
    public health and medical care services more
    effectively in rural and suburban areas

20
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • 1, Identify incentives and resources necessary to
    promote personal responsibility, encourage
    preventive care, and expand use of available
    primary care services
  • 2. Identify cost-effective technological
    innovations to improve health care access and
    coordination

21
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • 3. Improve access to secondary and tertiary care
    in rural communities
  • 4. Identify how health care services can be
    improved through collaboration across funding
    streams
  • 5. Identify how public health can be improved in
    Texas through incentives tied to the CDC National
    Public Health Performance Standards

22
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • 6. Develop multi-county public health entities
    authorized to collaborate to ensure that the
    essential public health services outlined in
    Subchapter E, Chapter 121, Health and Safety
    Code, are available to all Texans
  • 7. Create regional planning authorities or
    designate existing organizations to assume
    responsibilities for the foregoing purposes

23
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • HR 257 was passed unanimously by the House
    Committee on Public Health
  • The resolution language was amended and included
    in SB 1188 on the House side but was not included
    in the final conference report (the house and
    senate committee formed to reconcile the
    different versions of the bill it was removed)

24
HOUSE RESOLUTION 257
  • No Action by the Legislature to form an interim
    committee to explore this directive

25
ACCESS TO CARE
  • 27 Counties have zero to one physician
  • 9 counties have no primary care physician,
    nurse practitioner or physician assistant
  • 64 counties have no hospital
  • 54 counties are health professional shortage
    areas
  • 80 counties are medically underserved and have
    limited public health services

26
PH INFRASTRUCTURE
  • Texas per capita public health spending is
    currently 50 of the national average
  • Retirees outnumber those entering the field
  • 78 of local health department personnel did not
    graduate with public health degrees
  • Less than 50 of all public health agencies have
    adequate communications and infrastructure

27
SO WHAT????
  • Local PH agencies serve a surveillance role to
    prevent disease spread BUT only 74 of LPHA
    serving jurisdictions less than 25.000 provide
    any surveillance or epidemiology
  • In a 1999 CDC test (e-mail alert), only 35 of
    local health departments received the message
  • 2001 CDC study showed only 68 of county health
    agencies have internet connectivity
  • 69 of local health agencies serve jurisdictions
    less than 50,000 persons and ½ serve less than
    25,000 individuals

28
CAPACITY BUILDING
  • There persists the need for investment in
    capacitance issues
  • More than two of every three dollars spent by the
    nine states on essential public health services
    (6.1 billion of 8.8 billion) went for personal
    health services
  • Population-based health services spending was
    only one percent of total health care

29
CAPACITY vs. WILL
  • States provide the largest amount of funds for
    population-based health services providing 50
    percent of the funding for these activities
  • Federal funding accounted for 32, while local
    and other sources (fees and reimbursements)
    accounted for the remaining 18 of
    population-based health expenditures

30
CAPACITY vs. WILL
  • But in 2000 in Texas
  • The state spent 49 per capita while locals spent
    62
  • On a nation wide basis states spend 98 and
    locals spend 85

31
THE UNINSURED
  • Texas is the uninsured capital of the United
    States
  • 52 of Texans are covered by private insurance
  • State spent 17 billion on 2.7 million recipients
    over 7,000 per man, woman and child on
    Medicaid or CHIP
  • Costs are increasing 13 15 annually

32
ALTERNATIVES
  • We need to provide a uniform front in addressing
    the Public Health funding issues that face Texas
  • We need to develop collaborative and informed
    constituents and bring this issue to legislators
    for their support and action
  • HR 257 was passed unanimously by the House
    Committee on Public Health, remind your
    legislators
  • Couple this language with current legislation in
    HB 1444

33
CURRENT INITIATIVES
  • LLB
  • TALHO
  • TAMHO

34
Bob Galvanrgalvan245_at_charter.net
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