HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced the availability of $60
million in Affordable Care Act grants to states and communities to help
individuals and their caregivers better understand and navigate their
health and long-term care options.
Through this opportunity
made possible by the Affordable Care Act HHS' Administration on Aging
(AoA) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will
work collaboratively to award funds for an integrated approach that
focuses on the unique needs of seniors, disabled Americans and their
caregivers as they seek health care and long-term care.
"The
Affordable Care Act seeks to lower health care costs, improve the
quality of health care and perhaps most importantly give people more
control over their own care. These new grants, authorized under the new
law, will help seniors, individuals with disabilities and their families
get better quality care and more control. We've also streamlined the
process for states and people who rely on these funds," said Secretary
Sebelius.
"We know how difficult it can be for caregivers and
patients to try and deal with a sudden illness or chronic disease while
at the same time trying to navigate through a complex health care system
to figure out where you can get help. These new funds that we have
bundled together will help promote better opportunities for coordination
of health and long-term supports," said Sebelius.
The purpose of
this new grant program authorized by the Affordable Care Act is to
create streamlined, coordinated statewide systems of information,
counseling, and access that will help people find consumer-friendly
answers they seek to meet their health and long-term care needs. AoA
and CMS will administer the funding through separate announcements, but
will coordinate implementation and monitoring through a single process.
Some specific areas of focus will include assisting individuals
who are under-served and hard to reach with information about their
Medicare and Medicaid benefits, helping older adults and individuals
with disabilities live at home or in settings of their choosing with the
right supports, assisting people transition from hospital or nursing
home stays back into the community, and strengthening linkages between
the medical and social service systems.
"When it comes to
long-term health care, each patient has a unique mix of complex medical
and social needs that must be considered when seeking care," said
Marilyn Tavenner, acting CMS administrator. "Our health care system can
offer many options to meeting those needs from traditional nursing home
care to home and community-based services. Making patients and their
families aware of these options will help them make inherently difficult
decisions about long-term care. This integrated program will help
families make informed choices and make sure patients have more control
over their own care."
AoA and CMS have provided grants to states
for several years to develop person-centered systems of information,
counseling and access to make it easier for individuals to learn about
and access their health and long-term services and support options. This
grant program through the Affordable Care Act strengthens and enhances
the ability of states to truly integrate the medical and social services
care models.
"AoA's national
network of community-based organizations has long served as the central
place for individuals and families seeking information and help to
address health and long term care challenges. This collaborative
opportunity between AoA and CMS will further strengthen the network's
capacity to help people in a more coordinated and comprehensive way in
the communities where they live," said Kathy Greenlee, assistant
secretary for aging.
Funds will be
available to states, area agencies on aging (aaa's), State Health
Insurance Assistance Programs (SHIPs) and Aging and Disability Resource
Centers (ADRCs). Through the grant program, states and local aging and
disability programs will receive funds to:
* provide outreach
and assistance to Medicare beneficiaries on their Medicare benefits
including prevention;
* use additional funds through a competitive
process to provide Options Counseling on health and long-term care
through ADRCs;
* use additional funds through a competitive process
to strengthen the ADRCs role in Money follows the Person program and
support state Medicaid agencies as they transition individuals from
nursing homes to community-based care; and
* coordinate and
continue to embed tested Care Transition models that integrate the
medical and social service systems to help older individuals and those
with disabilities remain in their own homes and communities after a
hospital, rehabilitation or skilled nursing facility visit.
"CMS
and AoA share a long-standing goal of expanding access to
community-based care for the elderly and individuals with disabilities.
The Affordable Care Act provides significant resources for state
Medicaid agencies and providers to balance the nation's long-term care
systems and assure that individuals have a choice of where and how they
receive their services," said Cindy Mann, director of CMS's Center for
Medicaid, CHIP, and Survey and Certification.
The announcement
combines funding opportunities from several provisions in the Affordable
Care Act signed into law by President Obama on March 23, 2010,
including the Role of Public Programs (Title II, Sections 2403 - Money
Follows the Person and 2405 - Funding for Aging and Disability Resource
Centers) and Improving the Quality and Efficiency of Health Care (Title
III. Section 3306 - Funding for Outreach and Assistance for Low-Income
Programs).
These grants also complement President Obama's "Year
of Community Living Initiative," which focuses on better serving those
individuals with disabilities who need ongoing services and support
programs in the community such as those provided by AoA, CMS and other
HHS agencies.
The deadline for applications is: Monday, July
30, 2010. Grants will be awarded in September 2010. For more
information about this grant opportunity, please visit http://www.aoa.gov/AoARoot/Grants/Funding/index.aspx
or www.grants.gov.
To learn more about the Affordable Care Act,
please visit www.healthreform.gov
Note: All HHS press releases, fact
sheets and other press materials are available at http://www.hhs.gov/news.
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