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August 2016  

Policy&Practice

9

improve the customer experience,

within the context of the evolving

health care delivery system. The Triple

Aim and Affordable Care Act continue

to be significant drivers of this trans-

formation. The field at-large, defined

here by all human-serving programs

and networks of care impacting

people’s health and well-being,

continues to reconfigure, test, and

modify how services are paid for and

delivered. Human service agencies,

programs, and providers are also

embarking on this journey to rethink

how to efficiently and effectively

provide existing and new services

within this environment.

H/HS agencies at all levels of govern-

ment and across sectors are building

new connections to better ensure

programs, data, providers, and funding

channels are in place to address the

social determinants of health. State

and local agencies are making impor-

tant advancements to improve their

operational efficiencies and program

effectiveness by using the National

Collaborative’s Business and H/HS

maturity models,

1

in conjunction with

Harvard University’s Health and Human

Services Value Curve,

2

as a common

blueprint and benchmark to implement

these paradigm and operational shifts.

Having a Seat at theTable

is the Just the Beginning

While efforts are being made where

they can, this work is not done. Care

coordination requires equitable invest-

ments in infrastructure, deliberate

analysis of risk-sharing, assessing new

roles and responsibilities of workers, and

rethinking how procurement and dis-

tribution of savings is conducted across

programs and providers. But it must

start with commitment by stakeholders

across health care, human services,

public health, and others to acknowl-

edge each sector’s value in this space

and learn to speak to others in their

language. We need to collectively assess

the full environment of human-serving

programs and creation of upstream

solutions making success attainable for

the people with and to whomwe deliver

services. “Success” may entail getting

the lights on so your children can study

for school or some financial support

to feed yourself or your family if you

have limited means, or getting access to

preventive primary care or behavioral

health services to better manage your

health and reduce the amount of expen-

sive medical treatment later on.

Each human-serving sector has to

make a concerted effort to do things

differently and learn about the other

sectors’ programs, payment mecha-

nisms and financing streams, service

delivery networks, and ultimately, how

to contribute to the solution, so we do

not duplicate or pay for something that

already exists. Health care is evolving

to include new payment and service

delivery reforms and move toward

value-based purchasing for services

by creating incentives to improve

the quality of the services provided.

Some of these efforts are looking at

ways to redistribute or create new

payment mechanisms to reimburse

for services that are typically outside

of the health care system—which may

include existing services provided by

the social- or human-service sector.

Simultaneously, human services are

looking at trauma-informed care and

behavioral economics to inform their

practice models and must connect with

the health system to better identify

the access points and impact on health

outcomes and costs.

These are general steps toward

improved care coordination, but true

partnership and non-duplication of

effort is needed. The health sector has

misconceptions about what human or

social services does and the provider

system it entails. The reverse is also

true: there are misconceptions by

the human or social service sector

about the intricate workings of the

health care sector. The miscommu-

nication and misalignment of both

these existing and transforming care

systems’ efforts to impact the same

thing—the health and well-being

of individuals, families, and com-

munities—exemplifies the deep

disconnection between core elements

and functions of our country’s care

delivery networks.

Human services,

along with their

companion sectors

, are uniquely

positioned to design new initiatives

that can significantly support better

health and stronger individuals,

families, and communities. Human

service resources, along with health

care, public health entities, and

others—already strategically located

throughout communities across the

country—can play a major prevention

role to mitigate serious downstream

health and well-being issues like heart

disease, diabetes, and poverty. All care

systems will need to be educated on

the value and opportunities for true

connections as they move forward.

Research and adequate investments

in human services have also lagged

behind that of health over the past

decade. This has made it extremely

difficult to study, measure, and scale

evidence-based social interventions.

In the evolving context of value-

based payment on the health care

side, this lack of information adds

another level of complexity. The

value

of human services is real but diffi-

cult to measure and, many times, is

measured differently than quantifi-

able health outcomes. How do we

know where savings on reductions

in health care costs and improved

outcomes are attributable to specific

social interventions? This question is

valid, yet we cannot lose sight of the

historical presence of human services

in communities, the deeply embedded

trust citizens have for them, services

provided beyond eligibility and

referrals, and the very real political,

under-funded, and highly regulated

environment in which these human

service programs operate.

See National Collaborative on page 46

Improved outcomes,

lower costs, and a

healthier society as a

whole will be the tangible

results of these efforts

through effectively

linking and supporting

integration of operations,

funding, design, and

delivery of care.

Illustration via Shutterstock