February 1, 1999
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Program Results Report
The University of Maryland Baltimore County's Center for Health Program Development and Management contributed to the design, project management and evaluation of Maryland's High-Risk Patient Management Initiative.
October 1, 1997
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Program Results Report
The initiative serves high-risk mothers, infants, and children up to age two who live in the northeast quadrant of Rochester, one of the poorest areas of the city, and who are patients of Rochester General Hospital's outpatient centers.
October 1, 1997
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Program Results Report
CMY works with adolescents ages 11 to 17 who have mental health problems. These are high-risk youth who otherwise would "fall between the cracks" of the health and social service system.
August 1, 2003
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Program Results Report
From 1998 to 2002, staff at University of Missouri's School of Medicine developed and implemented the Missouri Partnership for Enhanced Delivery of Services (MO-PEDS).
June 1, 2000
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Program Results Report
Staff at the State of Minnesota Department of Human Services implemented state policy and administrative support systems for facilitating the development of Minnesota Children's Health Collaboratives-Integrated Fund Initiative (MHIF).
October 1, 1997
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Program Results Report
The Improving Child Health Services: Removing Categorical Barriers to Care initiative was a national program of RWJF aimed at integrating health services for children.
October 1, 1997
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Program Results Report
One of the biggest barriers that keeps low-income families from getting the health services they need for their children is the sheer number of agencies they have to visit.
October 1, 1997
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Program Results Report
DECAT targets children and families who are eligible for Medicaid, and low-income families without health insurance coverage. The program's family service centers provide care coordination for any child or family having assistance needs.
January 23, 2002
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Program Results Report
The Santa Barbara Regional Health Authority developed a long-term intervention model for treating Medicaid-eligible women diagnosed with both mental health and substance abuse problems.
October 1, 1997
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Program Results Report
This initiative serves low-income, foreign-born children of elementary school age who have lived in the U.S. for two years or less and who have unresolved medical problems and/or are having difficulty in obtaining the health care services they need.