Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Alzheimer's Disease State Plans: History, Reason, Strategy, and Status
Matthew Baumgart
Senior Director, Public Policy
Alzheimer's Association
The Original State Plan Movement: 1984-1995
The Current State of State Plans: 2014
Why State Plans?
- States provide services and benefits the federal government may not
- Needs vary state to state
- Medicaid
- Long-term care
- Federal government
- State plans can address gaps
It's All About the Venn
- National Plan
- Data; Awareness
- Studies; HP 2020
- Elder Abuse; Workforce
- Medicare; Research
- Public Health Road Map
- Data; Awareness
- Studies; HP 2020
- Integration; Assess Needs
- Educate PH; Identify Roles
- State Plans
- Data; Awareness
- Integration; Assess Needs
- Elder Abuse; Workforce
- Licensing; Respite Care
A Four-Phase Process
- Winning a State Mandate
- Law or Executive Order
- Greater Buy-In
- Broader Involvement
- Developing a State Plan
- Appointments to Task Force
- Comprehensive in Scope
- Public Input
- Changing Policy
- Prioritize Recommendations
- Basic First; Niche Later
- What's “Winnable”
- Ensuring Enforcement
- Executing Program
- Enforcing Policies
- Makes Plan a Reality
The Recommendations (35)
- Public Awareness - 27
- Early Detection and Diagnosis - 18
- Care and Case Management - 32
- Quality of Care - 27
- Health Care System Capacity - 20
- Training - 33
- Workforce Development - 20
- Home- and Community-Based Services - 28
- Long-Term Care - 18
- Caregivers - 30
- Research - 25
- Brain Health - 14
- Data Collection - 27
- Safety - 27
- Legal Issues - 16
- State Government Structure - 19
State Plan Implementation
alz.org/stateplans
Questions?
Files
Document
Mtg12-Slides7.pdf (pdf, 626.36 KB)