Grant Partners

Massachusetts Law Reform Institute

Year: 2013 *Multi-year Grant: 2014
Amount:$75,000
Boston

The Massachusetts Law Reform Institute will continue its advocacy with MassHealth and the Connector around issues of eligibility, auto-assignment of health coverage, income determinations, and the availability of resources for assisters from community-based organizations.  Additionally, it will continue its work with the Disability Advocates Advancing our Health Care Rights (DAAHR) Coalition on the One Care demonstration for dual-eligible individuals.  

Alliance Foundation for Community Health

Year: 2013 *Multi-year Grant: 2011, 2012
Amount:$125,000
Somerville

A Collaborative Practice Model for Improving Pediatric Mental Health Value:  The Alliance Foundation for Community Health will develop a new method of identifying youth at risk for low quality/high cost mental health treatment. The sample for this study will be drawn from the 101,000 youth under age 20 insured by Network Health. The project will also look within diagnosis groups to compare treatments and expenditures across race/ethnicity, language, geography, and other characteristics. In the second phase of the effort, the project will identify primary care providers who have the largest number of high-expenditure youth and work with them and families to develop more cost-effective approaches to treatment.

Mercy Medical Center

Year: 2013 *Multi-year Grant: 2011, 2012
Amount:$125,000
Springfield

Mercy Medical Center’s Health Care for the Homeless program (Mercy HCH) will collaborate with hospital emergency departments in Hampden, Hampshire, and Franklin counties to “re-direct” homeless persons who are “high-end utilizers” of emergency department services to access health care services through Mercy HCH’s clinical team.  Mercy knows the area’s homeless well and has documented cases where individuals are going to emergency rooms more than 20 times per month. Mercy HCH staff will work with these homeless individuals to obtain stable housing and resolve chronic conditions such as substance abuse and mental health issues.  Over the three-year grant period, the five participating hospital emergency departments will “re-direct” 120 homeless individuals to more appropriate care through the program.

Health Law Advocates

Year: 2013 *Multi-year Grant: 2014
Amount:$70,000
Boston

Health Law Advocates will continue its advocacy work in five areas:  health care reform implementation, medical debt advocacy, children’s mental health access, access to oral health care, and pro-bono legal support.  Additionally, the organization will provide individual representation for residents who have been denied access to health care or have received unaffordable medical bills.  

Brigham and Women’s Hospital

Year: 2013
Amount:$139,099
Boston

Inpatient admissions that originate in the emergency department (ED) result in a significant portion of total health care spending each year, yet there is both wide variation in admission patterns and little understanding of best practices for post-ED care management and potential cost savings. In their project “Identifying Best Practices to Reduce Hospital Admission from the Emergency Department,” the research team will complete an in-depth study of three common conditions leading to admissions from the ED. By analyzing top-performing hospitals, the researchers will develop strategies and best practices around improving care and reducing costs.