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Facing a Potential Funding Crunch, Community Health Centers in
Medically Underserved Areas Around the Country Report They Are Considering
Reductions in Staffing and Services That Would Limit Patients’ Access to Care
With
a key source of federal funding set to expire in September, community health
centers across the country are considering steps to reduce staffing, close
some locations and eliminate or reduce services as they cope with uncertainty
about their future financing, according to a new KFF/GWU survey and analysis.
The
Community Health Center Fund (CHCF), established by the Affordable Care Act,
accounts for 72 percent of health center grant funding and is set to expire
at the end of September unless Congress extends it. The fund provided $4
billion in federal money to health centers in fiscal 2019. The CHCF helps
1,362 health centers provide care to 28 million patients annually in
medically underserved rural and urban areas in the U.S., including patients
who lack health insurance. It also helps pay for services that typically
are not covered by insurance, such as dental care.
The
new survey of community health centers, conducted from May to July 2019 and
designed and analyzed by researchers at KFF and the Geiger Gibson Program in
Community Health Policy at the George Washington University, sheds light on
the strain on health centers and their ability to serve low-income patients
as they maneuver to prepare for a potential delay in funding.
A
small number of health centers have taken steps in response to uncertain
funding, and a much larger number are considering such steps, including:
In
2017, the CHCF lapsed for five months before Congress extended it for two
years, and health centers experienced similar disruptions to staffing and
services back then due to the delay. In the current Congress, bills have
advanced out of committee in the House and Senate that would extend the CHCF
at current funding levels for four and five years, respectively, but have not
yet gone to a floor vote in either chamber. Lawmakers will have roughly
three weeks to consider such legislation after returning from their August
recess before another funding delay – and the potential steps centers may
take to cope with it – sets in.
The
2019 Kaiser Family Foundation/George Washington University Survey of
Community Health Centers was designed and analyzed by researchers at KFF and
GWU, and conducted by the Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy at
GWU. The survey was fielded from May to July 2019 and was emailed to 1,342
CEOs of federally funded health centers in the 50 states and the District of
Columbia. The response rate was 38%, with 511 responses from 49 states and
DC. Additional support for the survey was provided by the RCHN Community
Health Foundation.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is
a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, California.
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Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Community Health Centers Considering Staffing, Service Cuts Amid Uncertain Federal Funding
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