Grant Partners

Massachusetts Senior Action Council 2012

Year: 2012 *Multi-year Grant: 2011
Amount:$60,000
Dorchester

The Massachusetts Senior Action Council will enable the voice of seniors in pursuit of two key objectives.  First, to defend current health coverage which is essential for vulnerable seniors and people with disabilities to obtain needed services.  Second, for the development of a robust advocacy strategy for improving existing health care systems, restraining health care cost growth, and redressing current inequities caused by coverage gaps and variations in quality.

Judge Baker Children's Center

Year: 2011 *Multi-year Grant: 2012, 2013
Amount:$94,703
Boston

Judge Baker Children's Center (JBCC) will implement the Modular Approach to Therapy for Children (MATCH) in four outpatient clinics in the Greater Boston area as a step toward bringing the model to scale in Massachusetts.  In addition, JBCC will compare the costs of treatment using MATCH with typical treatment costs at the participating sites.  MATCH will be utilized to treat children with multiple complex disorders, including some combination of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, and disruptive conduct, including the problems associated with attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder.  Treatment Response Assessment for Children (TRAC) will be used as an outcome measurement system that guides clinicians through the implementation of MATCH.  

Cambridge Cares About AIDS 2011

Year: 2011
Amount:$53,636
Cambridge
Program Area: Health Care Disparities

Visiting Nurse Association of Greater Lowell, Inc.

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

Visiting Nurse Association of Greater Lowell will deliver home health care services, self-care education and coaching, and tele-monitoring to high-cost patients identified by the Lowell General Physician Hospital Organization (PHO) and Lowell Community Health Center. The project will serve 100 “high utilizers” in its first year and will triple in size by its third year. Targeted patients will be those diagnosed with congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or diabetes. In-home assessment, coaching, and monitoring will be provided to patients who do not qualify for these services under current payment and benefit guidelines because they are not homebound and do not have acute, but rather chronic conditions. The project’s goal is to demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of these services.

Alliance Foundation for Community Health

Year: 2011 *Multi-year Grant: 2012, 2013
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.