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Community-Based Health Centers (CHCs) provide access to case-managed,
family-oriented preventive and primary health care services for people living in medically underserved communities. Utah's CHCs are:
Responsive . . .
Each health center is governed by a local board of directors. The majority of board members are center patients who live in the community.
Improving Access and Reducing Health Disparities . . .
CHCs provide care for individuals and families who may not have access to other providers, such as rural/frontier residents, the working poor and uninsured, as well as vulnerable and high-risk populations (i.e., pregnant women, migrant and seasonal farm workers, homeless, elderly and persons with HIV/AIDS).
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CHCs served over 88,000 Utah residents
in 2006.
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CHCs provide culturally appropriate
services, including translation.
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The rate of low birth weight babies
delivered by Utah's community health centers is 4.0 percent,
compared to the State of Utah rate of 8.1 percent.
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Cost-Effective . . .
CHCs provide high quality care through a proven cost-effective model. National studies demonstrate that CHC patients:
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Have an average annual cost of care that is over 10 times less
than the average per capita spending on personal health care. |
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Health center Medicaid patients are 19% less likely to use
emergency rooms for primary care treatable conditions. |
Accountable . . .
CHCs meet high standards of accountability through oversight by local boards of directors and the U.S. Public Health Service.
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91% of CHCs in Utah maintain JCAHO accreditation for ambulatory care
facilities. |
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Health centers maintain a
regular schedule of financial audits and regular Federal
reviews.
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CHCs' services are provided on an
ability-to-pay basis. Medicare and Medicaid, as well as other insurance,
are billed for those with coverage. Patients are charged on a
sliding-fee scale to ensure that income or insufficient insurance
coverage are not barriers to care.
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