logo
UAMS and partners help to expand access for community health workers

UAMS and partners help to expand access for community health workers

Yahoo18-04-2025

SPRINGDALE, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is working to grow the health care workforce.
Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders recently established the Community Health Worker Act to give community health workers improved access to health and social resources.
Community health workers connect resources to the community, in an effort to bridge the gap between health care providers and the people they serve.
Through the act, certified CHWs may now receive compensation services from the Arkansas Medicaid program or a health benefit plan.
'What a community health worker does is the connection of resources and how they help the community members, whether it's connecting them to resources like applications for Medicaid, SNAP and WIC,' Carolina Vargas, a community health worker at UAMS said. 'How they help them navigate that health system, so for example, insurance coverage.'
In 2022, UAMS launched a one-year CHW training program. Since then, it has trained over 175 community health workers from around the state.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Republicans are also sweating Medicaid cuts in Big Beautiful Bill, poll finds
Republicans are also sweating Medicaid cuts in Big Beautiful Bill, poll finds

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Republicans are also sweating Medicaid cuts in Big Beautiful Bill, poll finds

More than four in 10 Republicans are worried about the Medicaid cuts being contemplated as a part of President Donald Trump's domestic policy mega-bill, a reminder that key parts of President Donald Trump's base also stand to be adversely impacted by the sprawling legislation. One-third of respondents to the new KFF poll identify as MAGA Republicans, reflecting the overall enrollment in the joint state/federal health care program. Among enrollees, more than a quarter are Republican, including 1 in 5 who identify as MAGA Republicans, according to the pollWhil. Republicans who control the U.S. Senate now have the bill, which passed the U.S. House by a single vote late last month. The upper chamber is contemplating its own changes to the legislation, which would blow up the deficit and impose sweeping social service cuts as it seeks to make Trump's first-term tax cuts permanent. The poll found that a large majority of rural Americans and those with lower household incomes, another key part of Trump's base, are worried that Medicaid reductions would lead to more children and adults losing coverage. They said they also feared it would harm health care providers in their communities and make it more difficult for them and their families to access care, according to the poll. Those findings broke down along partisan lines. Nonetheless, half of rural Republicans said they were worried about people becoming uninsured, according to the poll. Rural health care providers, who often rely on Medicaid funding, may be "especially vulnerable to the decreased federal spending included in the reconciliation bill," according to KFF pollsters. Public views on how the Republican White House's policies will impact the nation's health care system are largely partisan. But overall, most of the public says the administration's policies will weaken Medicaid and Medicare, including most Democrats and independents. Republicans said they expect those policies to strengthen or have no impact on these programs. Read More: A 'historic battle': Mass pols protest Medicaid cuts in 'Big Beautiful Bill' | John L. Micek Among Republican Medicaid enrollees, however, 'views are mixed with similar shares saying the policies will strengthen, weaken, or have no impact on the program they rely on,' according to the poll. In Massachusetts, Democratic Gov. Maura Healey and her allies in the state Legislature have predicted grim consequences for MassHealth, as Medicaid is known in the Bay State. As it's currently written, the bill that passed the U.S. House by a single vote last week would reduce Medicaid spending by nearly $700 billion over a decade, according to an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office. That would cost the state's health care system $1.75 billion, affecting 250,000 people statewide, MassLive previously reported. This is my classroom. ICE isn't welcome here. What a monk, a librarian and a dentist have to do with Harvard's fight with Trump Harvard relinquishes possession of slave photos after years-long dispute Trump says Musk has 'lost his mind' as he disses peace offering Judge blocks Trump admin from banning Harvard international students from entering US Read the original article on MassLive.

Illinois Department of Healthcare data breach reveals Social Security and child support details
Illinois Department of Healthcare data breach reveals Social Security and child support details

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Illinois Department of Healthcare data breach reveals Social Security and child support details

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WTVO) — The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) is alerting the public to a data breach that may have exposed customers' private information to hackers. According to HFS, the agency became aware of a phishing campaign targeting its employees around February 11th, 2025. The agency said employees' emails and documents were compromised, and may have included customer names, social security numbers, driver's license or state ID number, financial information related to child support, child support or Medicaid identification and case numbers, and birth dates. HFS said 933 individuals were impacted in the breach, 564 of which were Illinois residents. The Department said all affected individuals were notified by May 23rd. 'Potentially affected individuals can also contact consumer reporting agencies to place a free fraud alert or security freeze on their accounts, or the Federal Trade Commission to learn more about fraud alerts, credit freezes, or other identity theft resources,' HFS said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

My Son Is Counting on Medicaid Work Requirements
My Son Is Counting on Medicaid Work Requirements

Wall Street Journal

timean hour ago

  • Wall Street Journal

My Son Is Counting on Medicaid Work Requirements

Benton, Ark. Medicaid was created to help people like my son. He is 17, has severe autism and epilepsy, and needs constant attention. Yet thanks to ObamaCare's Medicaid expansion, he is stuck on a multiyear waiting list for in-home care because able-bodied adults are competing for the same resources. Republicans in the Senate can help states fix this by strengthening the Medicaid work requirements in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act they're about to pass.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store