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Report Seeks to Transform Missouri Medicaid System

Community Engagement; Policy

A series of public discussions sponsored by the Brown School and the Center for Health Economics and Policy has resulted in a white paper that recommends major changes in Missouri’s Medicaid system to enhance access to high-quality care while containing rising costs. Recommendations for Missouri Medicaid Transformation is based on input by stakeholders who gathered in person, and later virtually through the  in workshops led by the Center, a part of the Institute for Public Health.

The recommendations include:

  • Expanding Primary Healthcare Homes to include more Medicaid enrollees.
  • Replacing fee-for-service payments to hospitals with global budgets.
  • Moving more Medicaid enrollees into managed care organizations.
  • Streamlining eligibility, funding and communication across programs.

“This work represents our Center’s fifth installation in a string of events to steer a discussion of how Missouri’s health care system can be transformed to enhance access to high quality care, improve outcomes, while also helping contain costs,” said Timothy McBride, co-director of the Center and Bernard Becker Professor at the Brown School. “It can give the state access to a range of voices on these crucial issues.” The project was led by Abigail Barker, research assistant professor at the Brown School; and Lauren Kempton, an MSW/MPH  student at the Brown School and lead author of the report.

The workshops convened a diverse group of individuals and organizations, including health-care providers, urban and rural hospitals, long-term care facilities, researchers and policymakers.

“Bringing together stakeholders to craft policy solutions to our knottiest social problems is what the Clark-Fox Policy Institute is all about,” said Atia Thurman, associate director of the institute. “Our discussions reflected a wide range of opinions, but all of the participants shared a common goal: Making our Medicaid system work better for the people who need it the most.”