Conference Program - NACHC Meetings
Transcription
Conference Program - NACHC Meetings
SHAPING NEW VISIONS FOR FARMWORKER HEALTH UNA NUEVA VISION DE SALUD PARA LOS CAMPESINOS 1965 • 2015 AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW NACHC graciously acknowledges those organizations and individuals who are actively supporting 50 Years of Community Health Centers by their generous sponsorships: 1965 • 2015 AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW LEGACY PARTNER FUTURE CHAMPION GE Foundation PROMOTER AltaMed CVS Health Hyatt Hotels TRAILBLAZER California Primary Care Association East Boston Neighborhood Health Center Family Health Center of Marshfield, Inc. Harbor Health Services, Inc. Hudson Headwaters Health Network Hudson River Community Health InterCare Community Health Network Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers and its affiliates - Connecticut River Valley Farmworker Health Program and HCCN Michigan Primary Care Association Region 1 New England Primary Care Associations Salud Family Health Centers William F. Ryan Community Health Network ALLY The Community Health Care Association of New York State (CHCANYS) Colorado Community Health Network Cornell Scott-Hill Health Center Feygele Jacobs and Family Health Outreach Partners Louisana Primary Care Association Rachel & Jimmy Hanson, Community Health Development, Inc., Uvalde, Texas The Worcester, MA Community Health Centers - Edward M. Kennedy Community Health Center and Family Health Center of Worcester Yakima Neighborhood Health Services As of April 7, 2015 BUILDER A.T. Still University of Health Sciences CompuGroup Medical Feldesman Tucker Leifer Fidell LLP Henry Schein, Inc. Pfizer RxPathways Quest Diagnostics The California Endowment UnitedHealthcare FRIEND CohnReznick LLP Hargrove, Inc. Unity Health Care, Inc. Zancan Press SUPPORTER Allscripts America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) Arizona Alliance of Community Health Centers Benco Dental Capital Impact Partners Capital Link and Community Health Center Capital Fund ClaimRemedi Clinica Sierra Vista Community Health of South Florida Inc. (CHI Miami) Family Care Health Centers, Inc. i2i Systems Iowa Primary Care Association Marriott Wardman Park Hotel Missouri Primary Care Association Morton Comprehensive Health Services, Inc. Jim Luisi and Alan Hobbs, North End Waterfront Health Oklahoma Primary Care Association OSIS Philip W. Johnston Associates PMG, Inc. Provista South Carolina Primary Health Care Association Southeast Health Care Consortium (AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, SC and TN PCAs) Teche Action Clinic UHC Solutions Visualutions, Inc. Waianae Coast Comprehensive Health Center WATTS Healthcare Corporation Welch Allyn LEADER Albany Area Primary Health Care Amy Cunniffee Chamber Hill Strategies Community Health Association of Mountain/ Plains States (CHAMPS) Michael A. Holmes David Mordecai Stevens, MD, FAAFP Dennis and Joyce Kruse Dorcas Grigg-Saito, CEO, Lowell Community Health Center Grace Wang, MD, MPH HealthLinc, Inc. Starling Advisors United Neighborhood Health Services HEALTH INSTITUTE (CHI) & EXPO MAY 5 -7 1965 • 2015 AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW Table of Contents NACHC Board of Directors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Registration Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Hotel Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 NACHC Certificate in Health Center Governance Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 NACHC Certificate in Health Center Governance Program Enrollment Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Key to Moderators and Presenters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Exhibitor Listing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Upcoming NACHC Conferences and Trainings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Hotel Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 1 2014–2015 NACHC Board of Directors EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Chair of the Board Gary M. Wiltz, MD Teche Action Clinic Franklin, LA Chair-Elect J. Ricardo Guzman Community Health & Social Services Center Detroit, MI Immediate Past Chair Kauila Clark Waianae Coast Comprehensive Health Center Waianae, HI Speaker of the House James Luisi North End Waterfront Health Boston, MA Vice-Speaker of the House Grace Wang, MD, MPH, FAAFP International Community Health Services Seattle, WA Secretary Lathran J. Woodard South Carolina Primary Health Care Association Columbia, SC Treasurer Michael A. Holmes Cook Area Health Services Cook, MN Consumer/Board Member Representative Yvonne G. Davis Health Care Partners of South Carolina Florence, SC Parliamentarian Wilford A. Payne Primary Care Health Services Pittsburgh, PA 2 REPRESENTATIVES FROM CHARTERED REGIONS REGION I REGION VI Frances M. Anthes, MSW, LICSW Family Health Center of Worcester Worcester, MA Santos Camarillo Vida Y Salud Health Systems Crystal City, TX Tess Stack Kuenning Bi-State Primary Care Association Bow, NH John M. Silva Morton Comprehensive Health Services Tulsa, OK REGION II Isolina Miranda COSSMA, Inc. Cidra, PR Linda S. Muller The Greater Hudson Valley Family Health Center Cornwall, NY REGION VII Theodore J. Boesen, Jr. Iowa Primary Care Association Urbandale, IA Dennis Kruse Family Care Health Centers St. Louis, MO REGION III REGION VIII Vincent A. Keane Unity Health Care Washington, DC John Mengenhausen Horizon Health Care Howard, SD Richard Shinn Virginia Community Healthcare Association Henrico, VA John Santistevan Salud Family Health Centers Ft. Lupton, CO REGION IV Tary Brown Albany Area Primary Health Care Albany, GA Roland J. Gardner Beaufort-Jasper Hampton Comprehensive Health Services Ridgeland, SC REGION V REGION IX William D. Hobson, Jr. WATTS Healthcare Corporation Los Angeles, CA Tara McCollum Plese Arizona Alliance for Community Health Centers Phoenix, AZ REGION X Berneice Mills-Thomas Near North Health Service Corporation Chicago, IL Anita Monoian Yakima Neighborhood Health Services Yakima, WA Henry Taylor Mile Square Health Center Chicago, IL Leslyn Phelps Glenns Ferry Health Center Glenns Ferry, ID NATIONALLY ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES CLINICIAN BOARD REPRESENTATIVES HEALTH CENTER BOARD MEMBER REPRESENTATIVES Daniel Miller, MD Hudson River Community Health Peekskill, NY Ellen Adlam Peninsula Community Health Services of Alaska Soldotna, AK Felix M. Valbuena, Jr., MD Community Health & Social Services Center Detroit, MI N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Rita Sorrento East Boston Neighborhood Health Center Boston, MA HEALTH INSTITUTE (CHI) & EXPO AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS 1965 • 2015 Welcome 5 -7 MAY YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW Colleagues, Health Center Leaders, Friends of Farmworkers Bienvenidos! Welcome to the 2015 National Farmworker Health Conference in the beautiful and historic River Walk in San Antonio, TX. The conference theme — Shaping New Visions for Farmworker Health – brings attention to the country’s transforming healthcare system and the health centers that are working tirelessly to ensure that system reforms work for our nation’s migrant and seasonal agricultural workers and their families. The model of care that health centers have perfected for the past fifty years serves as a beacon for other healthcare providers to emulate as the preferred model of primary and preventive healthcare delivery for all of America. This year’s program includes speakers who will share the latest news on the recently signed legislation: the Medicare and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 that includes a two year extension of critical mandatory funding for Community Health Centers, as well as the National Health Service Corps (NHSC) and the Teaching Health Centers Graduate Medical Education Program. Attendees will also get information about the Migrant Health Program and its proven record of success. We also hope you join us in recognizing several national health center leaders who will receive NACHC’s 2015 Migrant Health Awards. This year’s audience will also be inspired by a distinguished individual who is a former farmworker, academician, attorney and retired judge and who also serves on the board of a health center. He will speak to the meaning of sacrifice, leadership, advocacy and the responsibility of giving back to our community. We will also hear from his son, a prominent actor, speak about the role his father had in shaping his future and career. The conference offers numerous educational sessions dedicated to leading topics in migrant health that will surely spark your interest and you will have the opportunity to meet new friends, and catch up with old friends and colleagues. As we close the conference, a nationally known and prominent physician, human rights advocate and medical correspondent will talk about the important work that we all do and the need to continue to fight for human rights and social justice. The National Farmworker Health Conference is the only national conference dedicated solely to the healthcare needs of farmworkers and it is an opportunity to learn from each other, share our own experiences and to advance our collective efforts and leadership in migrant health. Needless to say, there is much work to be done as we continue to shape America’s healthcare system to ensure that our migrant and seasonal agricultural workers and their families receive high quality, culturally appropriate care that is accessible, relevant to their needs and provides them the highest level of respect and dignity. On behalf of the National Association of Community Health Centers, its national partners and the conference planning work group, we extend our sincere appreciation for the work that you do to promote healthy communities and healthier lives for the people you serve! National Association of Community Health Centers National Center for Farmworker Health Migrant Clinicians Network Health Outreach Partners Farmworker Justice MHP Salud N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 3 True Partners in Care Centene is committed to transforming the health of the communities we serve, one person at a time. And our experience has taught us that every individual, and every community, faces unique challenges. That is why each of our health plans are developed and staffed locally—with local healthcare professionals serving as our chief advisors. Through our collaborative partnerships with PCAs, HCCNs, hospitals, physicians, and other providers, we bring better solutions for better health outcomes at lower costs. PROUD TO BE A NACHC 2015 LEGACY PARTNER NATIONAL FARMWORKERS HEALTH CONFERENCE Registration Hours and Location Registered Attendees The NACHC Registration Desk is located on the first floor, Salon Del Rey Foyer. Registered attendees can pick up their badge and registration bag during the following hours: Registration Hours Monday, May 4 3:00pm – 5:00pm Tuesday, May 5 7:30am – 12:00pm 1:00pm – 4:00pm Wednesday, May 6 7:30am – 12:00pm 1:00pm – 4:00pm 8:00am – 10:30am Thursday, May Speaker and Exhibitor Check-in NACHC’s Speaker and Exhibitor Check-in is located in the La Condesa Room. All speakers and exhibitors are asked to report to this area upon arrival at the conference. At this location, speakers will receive conference badges, provide NACHC staff with copies of materials, and review or upload presentations. NACHC Registration Policies • ONLY individuals registered and badged may attend conference events. • NO REGISTRATION WILL BE PROCESSED WITHOUT PAYMENT. • Acceptable forms of payment include: organizational checks, all major credit cards, travelers checks, and government purchase orders (provided an original vendor copy is presented with an authorized signature). • Registrations received after Tuesday, April 7, the early-bird registration deadline, will be invoiced for the additional amount. • Participants sending registrations after Friday, April 24 will be handled as “on-site registrants.” Please bring your completed registration form and payment (credit card/organizational check) to the NACHC on-site registration desk. • Personal checks will NOT be accepted for on-site registration. Cancellations and Refunds All cancellations must be CONFIRMED IN WRITING and must be received at NACHC by Friday, April 24 (certified mail is recommended). Cancellations RECEIVED ON/BEFORE the April 24 deadline will be assessed a $100 processing fee. Cancellations RECEIVED AFTER April 28 are not refundable. Conference “NO SHOWS” ARE NOT REFUNDABLE. NO EXCEPTIONS. Please allow six to nine weeks following the conclusion of the conference for refund processing. No refunds will be processed prior to the conference. Hotel Information Hilton Palacio del Rio 200 S Alamo St, San Antonio, TX 78205 210-222-1400 Housing Policies In an effort to ensure that the conference hotel is able to accept the maximum number of reservations, NACHC has implemented the following housing policies: • Each reservation must have a unique name. No person may book more than one room in their name. • A deposit of one night’s room and tax will be taken at the time of booking in order to guarantee your reservation. • Should you need to cancel, cancellations must be made 30 days in advance in order to refund your deposit. For cancellations within 30 days prior to your arrival date, deposits are nonrefundable unless the hotel is able to resell your cancelled room. N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 5 General Information Business Center The Hilton Palacio del Rio Business Center can serve as your extended office while you’re in town. The business center, located on the lobby level, offers a full range of services including: photocopying, faxing, word processing, computer workstation rental, and much more. Cellular Telephones — PLEASE Turn OFF Your Cell Phone Please be considerate of others. Ringers on cell phones and other electronic devices should be turned off or switched to vibrate mode in conference education sessions, meetings, and social events. Conference Attire We invite you to dress in comfortable business casual style for the conference. In addition, hotel meeting rooms can sometimes be chilly, so you are advised to bring a sweater or light jacket. Continuing Education Credits In order to receive NACHC governance certificate credits for the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday breakout sessions, conference attendees will need to: 1) Have their conference badge scanned by room monitors at the end of each education session attended. Scanning allows NACHC to capture data needed for processing continuing education credits. 2) Complete “Session Evaluations” distributed at the conclusion of each workshop attended. All completed evaluation forms are to be returned to room monitors. Lost and Found Please check with the hotel’s front desk for lost and found items. Messages In case of an emergency, callers should contact the hotel directly and ask that a copy of the message be given to the NACHC Registration staff. The Hilton Palacio del Rio telephone number is 1-210-222-1400. Messages will be posted on a designated message board near the NACHC registration area. Press We look forward to working with any Media in attendance at the 2015 National Farmworker Health Conference. Please contact Amy Simmons Farber, Communications Director, National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC), 301-347-0400, asimmons@ nachc.com, 301-347-0400 (work), 202-309-0338 (mobile) with any questions. NACHC Membership Organizations or individuals who are not members of NACHC and are interested in joining may contact the NACHC office at 301-347-0400. 6 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e experience momentum BKD National Health Care Group 225 CHCs The waves of change never stop in the health care industry. Regulations are always evolving, and you can’t afford to tread water. BKD National Health Care Group is at ease in your world. Our advisors help approximately 225 community health centers with a wide variety of accounting, tax and consulting issues. Experience how our expertise can help your organization get ahead of the curve. BKD is proud to be a National Association of Community Health Centers 50th Anniversary Legacy Partner. Michael B. Schnake, CPA, CGFM® mschnake@bkd.com // 417.865.8701 bkd.com NACHC Certificate in Health Center Governance Program for Board Members NACHC is pleased to provide a certificate program designed for Health Center Board Members who wish to follow a formal path of training and skills enhancement in the area of health center governance. Individuals who wish to enroll in the Certificate in Health Center Governance Program must complete the enrollment form (located on page 9) and submit it at the beginning of the conference to the NACHC Governance counter along with a $25 application fee. Note: The application fee is waived for applicants who serve on the board of a NACHC Organizational Member in good standing and who are registered for the conference. How do I become certified in Health Center Governance? To obtain certification, you must complete a total of 31 contact hours through attendance/participation in education sessions offered at one of NACHC’s national conferences (Community Health Institute (CHI), the Policy & Issues Forum (P&I), or the National Farmworker Conference). One contact hour equals one hour of session time. The total required number of contact hours must be obtained within three years of enrollment in the program. If 31 contact hours are not completed within that three-year time period, you must re-enroll and pay the application fee, if applicable. Due to the changing scope and nature of information related to health centers and the healthcare environment, previously earned contact hours will not be counted toward the new enrollment period. Program participants must attend the following sessions in person: • Board Member Boot Camp: Parts A, B, C, and D • At the Bar for Board Members (5 contact hours offered only at the CHI and P&I) (2 contact hours offered only at the CHI) Program participants must attend a minimum of 24 contact hours within the three-year enrollment period. Participants may choose from all other NACHC conference education sessions that are designated for contact hours. NACHC provides education content in the areas of CLINICAL, FINANCE, GOVERNANCE, MANAGEMENT, TECHNOLOGY, and POLICY. Participants are encouraged to select a comprehensive course of study based on individual interests and needs. Scanning and Evaluations In order to receive Continuing Education Units (CEUs) at this NACHC conference, ALL attendees must: • Have their conference badges scanned by room monitors at the end of each education session attended. AND • Complete session evaluations distributed at the conclusion of each session attended. These simple steps ensure that CEUs are accurately processed and that valuable feedback is provided for the development of future NACHC programs. In addition to earning educational credits through NACHC conference attendance, participants can receive credits online via MyNACHC Learning Center (MyNACHC) at mylearning.nachc.com. Need your governance status? No more waiting! All records will be updated within four weeks after the conference. Using your NACHC login information, go to the MyNACHC Learning Center (MyNACHC) at mylearning.nachc.com. Log in using your iMIS ID and password, information for the governance program will be found under the “Governance Program” tab. If you need login assistance or additional information about the Board Governance Program, contact Neha Desai at ndesai@nachc.com or (301) 347-0469. If you have questions about board governance credits during the conference, NACHC staff is available to assist you at the NACHC Speaker and Exhibit Check-In Desk. 8 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e NACHC Certificate in Health Center Governance Program for Board Members ENROLLMENT FORM Name: ________________________________________________ Title: __________________________________________________ Health Center Organization: ______________________________________________________________________________________ Address: _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ City: __________________________________________________ State: ___________________________ Zip: _________________ Phone: _______________________________________________ Fax: __________________________________________________ E-Mail: ________________________________________________ IMIS ID: ________________________________________________ (in the event NACHC may need to contact you directly) (your badge #) I wish to receive all correspondence related to the Certificate in Health Center Governance Program: at the above address at the following address: Mailing Address: _______________________________________________________________________________________________ City: __________________________________________________ State: ___________________________ Zip: _________________ Phone: _______________________________________________ Fax: __________________________________________________ E-Mail: ________________________________________________ The Certificate Program enrollment fee of $25 is waived for individuals who serve on the board of a NACHC Organizational Member in good standing. My health center is not a NACHC Organizational Member, so my enrollment fee of $25 is enclosed. _____________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Signature Date For NACHC use only: Date received: ________________________________ Organizational Member in Good Standing: ______Yes _______No Enrollment Fee: $ ________ Enclosed Amount: $ ______________ N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 9 NACHC MEMBERSHIP POWER THROUGH ASSOCIATION Created by and for America’s health centers, NACHC has adapted to the changing needs of its members for over three decades – helping them grow, develop and thrive as high-quality, cost-effective health care providers in America’s underserved OUR MISSION MEMBERSHIP BENEFITS MEMBERSHIP VALUE To promote the provision of In addition to programs, news, and NACHC Members are much more high quality, comprehensive information; NACHC provides its likely to have a positive operating and affordable health care that members with a range of services: • Advocacy • Professional Development • Training and Technical Assistance • Staffing and Purchasing Programs • Conference Discounts • Insurance Resource Center and more! margin than Nonmembers. On is coordinated, culturally and linguistically competent, and community directed for all medically underserved populations. average, NACHC Members have: • Higher revenues per patient • Larger total budgets • Additional NHSC assignees • More patients JOIN NACHC TODAY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR 20% TEAM-UP DISCOUNT! . For additional information, please visit www.nachc.org, or contact Maurice Denis at: Tel (301) 347-0400 Fax (301) 347-0459 Email mdenis@nachc.org HEALTH INSTITUTE (CHI) & EXPO As of 4/14/15 Subject to change. AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS 1965 • 2015 MAY Program 5 -7 YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW Monday, May 4, 2015 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm NACHC Farmworker Committee Meeting 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm Registration Salon Del Rey C Salon Del Rey Foyer Tuesday, May 5, 2015 7:30 am – 12:00 pm 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm Registration 8:00 am – 9:00 am Coffee La Corona 8:00 am – 3:30 pm Table Top Exhibit Open La Corona 8:30 am – 12:00 pm FTuA1 OPENING GENERAL SESSION – Community Health Center Program and Policy Updates James Luisi, NACHC Speaker of the House, Master of Ceremonies 8:30 am – 10:00 am Welcome and Greetings: Texas Association of Community Health Centers HRSA Update Salon Del Rey Foyer Salon Del Rey Ballroom Seiji Hayashi, MD, MPH, FAAFP, Chief Medical Officer and Senior Advisor for Special Populations HRSA/BPHC Dr. Hayashi is the Chief Medical Officer and Senior Advisor for Special Populations for the Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC) at the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Dr. Hayashi oversees BPHC’s clinical quality strategy for the nation’s 1,300 health center organizations that operate approximately 9,000 sites. These community health centers, migrant health centers, health care for the homeless centers, and public housing primary care centers provide comprehensive, culturally competent, quality primary health care to almost 23 million people. Health centers are health homes for more than one in three people living in poverty. Dr. Hayashi is a board-certified family physician and continues to care for patients at a federally qualified health center in the District of Columbia. Dr. Hayashi graduated from Vassar College with a degree in Studio Art. He received his medical degree from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and he completed the Family and Community Medicine Residency Program at the University of California San Francisco. He received his Masters of Public Health from the Harvard School of Public Health while serving as a fellow for the Commonwealth Fund/Harvard University Fellowship in Minority Health Policy. Federal Policy Update Dan Hawkins, Senior Vice President, Public Policy and Research, NACHC Dan Hawkins directs NACHC’s overall policy agenda and strategies, policy related research and data analysis. He oversees NACHC’s activities related to federal and state legislative and administrative policy, as well as its development and use of data, information and research. Prior to joining NACHC, Dan served as a VISTA volunteer, Executive Director of a migrant and community health center located in south Texas, and as an assistant to HHS Secretary Joseph Califano during the Carter Administration. Dan has also lectured on health policy at Harvard, Johns Hopkins, George Washington, and other universities, and has been interviewed frequently by major newspapers and radio/television networks. 10:00 am – 10:30 am Refreshment Break La Corona N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 11 2015 Migrant Health Awards 2015 Lifetime Achievement in Migrant Health Award Adalberto Jimenez Roberto S. Juarez Board Member Adelante Healthcare Phoenix, AZ Chief Executive Officer Clinicas del Camino Real Ventura, CA John W. McFarland, DDS Executive Vice President, Dental Services Salud Family Health Centers Fort Lupton, CO 2015 Migrant Health Center Award Omni Family Health Bakersfield, CA Francisco L. Castillon, MPA, Chief Executive Officer 2015 Outstanding Migrant Health Center Public Service Award Bruce Gray Chief Executive Officer Northwest Regional Primary Care Association Seattle, WA 12 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Tuesday, May 5, 2015, continued 10:30 am – 12:00 pm FTuA2 National Farmworker Alliance – Policy and Programmatic Update General Session Salon Del Rey Ballroom Lupe Martinez, President and CEO, United Migrant Opportunity Services (UMOS) Lupe Martinez has been with UMOS for 46 years. Under his leadership, UMOS has grown to become the largest Hispanic-run, non-profit agency in the state of Wisconsin and one of the largest in the United States. Mr. Martinez sits on numerous boards. Among them, he is Chairman of the National Farmworker Alliance, and Chairman of MAFO, a national partnership of Farmworker and Rural organizations. Martinez, was honored with the Cesar Chavez Humanitarian Award, as well as the World Citizen Award from the International Institute of Wisconsin. Presentation of 2015 NACHC Migrant Health Awards • Migrant Health Outstanding Public Service Award • Migrant Health Center Award • Lifetime Achievement in Migrant Health Award 2015 National Center for Farmworker Health Commemorative Artwork Unveiling Roberta “Bobbi” Ryder, President and CEO, National Center for Farmworker Health, Inc., 2015 Artist of Commemorative Artwork Unveiling Presentation by Artist 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm Lunch (on your own) N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 13 National Center for Farmworker Health Annual Commemorative Artwork and Scholarships Erin Brady Worsham Artist, 2015 National Center for Farmworker Health Commemorative Artwork Purchase Your Signed Copy Tuesday, May 5, 2015 12:00pm – 1:30pm 3:00pm – 3:30pm 5:00pm – 5:30pm Wednesday, May 6, 2015 7:30am – 8:00am 10:00am – 10:30am 12:00pm – 1:30 pm 3:00pm – 3:30pm Thursday, May 7, 2015 8:00am – 8:30am 10:00am – 10:30am Nashville artist and writer, Erin Brady Worsham, did not study art until she was 34. A 1980 graduate of Western Kentucky University with majors in Theater and German, Worsham spent some years on the road as a professional actress. She married fellow actor Curry Worsham in 1987 and they settled in Nashville, TN. She enrolled in Watkins Art Institute in 1991 and found her calling. Having grown up in Louisville, KY, with a mother who was an artist, she was no stranger to art, but had never formally studied. Life changed dramatically for Worsham and her husband on Sept. 7, 1994, when she received a diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gehrig’s Disease) and was given three years to live. She was just 36. All art stopped. In the summer of 1999, Curry installed the software that would allow her communication device to interface with her computer and move the mouse. Worsham began to reclaim her art. She operates the computer and composes her pictures with a switch taped between her eyebrows. Since that time her work has been seen in exhibits around the United States, as well as in Canada and Australia. She has had four one-woman shows in Nashville. Worsham’s first one-woman show, “Artist Always,” sponsored by Vanderbilt University Hospital and the Society for the Arts in Healthcare, began touring the country in 2003. In April of 2004, the show was on display in the Russell Rotunda in Washington, DC. Worsham has participated in disability arts festivals and exhibits around the world, including kickstART! and kickstART2 in Vancouver, BC, the High Beam Festival in South Australia, the VSA International Arts Festival in Washington, DC, the Chicago Disability Arts and Culture Festival, the Survivor Art Foundation’s “Breaking the Walls of Bias” Exhibit at the Hofstra Museum in New York and “The Artist’s Voice” Exhibit at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville. Worsham’s work has garnered her several awards, including the 1999 MDA Personal Achievement Award, the 2001 Jo Andrews Award (Metropolitan Nashville Government), the 2003 Alumnae of the Year (Sacred Heart Academy, Louisville, KY), the 2004 Spirit of da Vinci Award (Engineering Society of Detroit/National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Michigan Chapter) and the 2005 Truth in Media Award (Tennessee Right to Life). A limited number of fine art prints, commemorative posters and greeting cards are available for sale at the conference. Proceeds of art sales benefit the National Center for Farmworker Health Migrant Health Scholarship Fund and awards will be made next year based on the volume of sales from this year. Scholarship awards in the amount of $1,000 each will be made at this conference to six recipients. The scholarship recipients are individuals who are currently employed at community/migrant health centers and have decided to advance their education and recommit to migrant health as their career choice. Awardees represent a variety of health professions, disciplines and backgrounds. Come join us for the grand unveiling and awarding of scholarships during the Opening General Session. 14 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Tuesday, May 5, 2015, continued 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm FTuA3 GENERAL SESSION: Salon Del Rey Ballroom Sacrifice, Success, Leadership and Giving Back to Community Rachel Gonzales-Hanson, Chair, NACHC Farmworker Health Committee, Mistress of Ceremonies Juan Antonio Chavira, PhD, Judge (Retired) Juan Antonio Chavira was born in Eagle Pass, Texas, on the border, on August 13, 1943. As a child and as a young man he traveled the migrant stream with his parents — Wisconsin, Iowa, West Texas and later California. He obtained his elementary education at Our Lady of Refuge School from the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, and is a proud graduate of Eagle Pass High School Class of 1962. He graduated from the University of Houston in 1966 and joined the Peace Corps. He worked for two years in Southern Peru, introducing hybrid potatoes and working in reforestation. He returned to the U.S. and joined VISTA, working in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas, organizing for Colonias del Valle. After VISTA, he enrolled in graduate school at the University of Texas at Austin, earning an MA and PhD by 1977. He has taught at the Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the University of Texas-Pan American, and the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, Texas. Academically he is known for his work on Curanderismo and cultural studies. In 1980 Chavira enrolled at the University of Texas School of Law, earning a JD in 1983. He was assistant District Attorney for Bexar County serving as head of the Family Violence Unit and the Career Criminal Unit. He also prosecuted in the 183rd District of Texas, covering Frio and La Salle Counties. In 1993 he was appointed Associate Judge for Child Support Enforcement covering the South Texas counties of Bexar, Dimmit, Frio, La Salle, Maverick and Zavala. Ricardo Antonio Chavira, Actor (INVITED) A native of South Texas, Ricardo Antonio Chavira was born in Austin and raised in San Antonio, where he graduated from Robert E. Lee High School, now the Performing Arts School, and Incarnate Word College. Chavira received his MFA from the highly regarded UC-San Diego’s Professional Actor Training Program in 2000, and moved to Los Angeles shortly thereafter. Since that time, he has worked consistently in all areas of the entertainment industry – film, television and theatre. He recently finished filming the independent film “ Powder and Gold,” the first feature to be filmed in the Dominican Republic. His additional film credits include Touchstone’s “The Alamo” and several independent films. He is known for his work over eight seasons on “Desperate Housewives” for ABC, as well as the short-lived series “Welcome to the Family” for NBC. Other television credits include a series regular role on “The Grubbs,” recurring roles on “Six Feet Under” and “The Division,” and guest starring roles on “Monk,” “Joan of Arcadia,” “Kingpin,” “24,” “George Lopez Show” and “JAG,” as well as “NYPD Blue” and two other Steven Bochco series, “Philly” and “City of Angels.” He also co-starred in the A&E film, “Kings of South Beach.” 3:00 pm – 3:30 pm Refreshment Break La Corona N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 15 Cut down barriers to better care See better results from: · Interoperability and a single, integrated patient record · Improved outcomes using population health tools · Revenue cycle, billing, claims, and clearinghouse expertise The NextGen team exceeded our expectations. They’re open to our advice, quick to answer questions, and efficient at solving problems. We have honest communication and a great working relationship. I look forward to our ongoing partnership. Sarah Ortiz Revenue Cycle Manager CommUnityCare Copyright © 2015 NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, LLC. All rights reserved. NextGen is a registered trademark of QSI Management, LLC, an affiliate of NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, LLC. All other names and marks are the property of their respective owners. NACHC Farmwork.indd 1 4/9/15 1:13 PM Tuesday, May 5, 2015, continued 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm EDUCATION SESSIONS FTuA4 Conducting a Community Needs Assessment Monica Dreitcer, Associate Project Manager, Health Outreach Partners Kristen Stoimenoff, MPH, Deputy Director, Health Outreach Partners, Inc. Health centers continually strive to provide quality care that meets the needs of underserved communities. Conducting a community health needs assessment is a critical component of effective program planning and ensuring that resources are directed appropriately to the services that are most needed by the communities that health centers serve. Needs assessments can also help health centers identify the key strengths and unique assets of the communities they serve. Further, a community health needs assessment is a HRSA program requirement of all Health Center Program grantees. In this session Health Outreach Partners (HOP) will lead participants through the process of planning, implementing and disseminating a community health needs assessment using HOP’s new Needs Assessment Toolkit. The workshop will give participants the opportunity to review the various phases of a needs assessment, including: goal setting, identifying resources, potential collaborations, data collection methods and analysis, and addressing challenges. Participants will also consider a variety of data collection tools and techniques, and ways to select the methods that best fit their needs. Through small group activities, participants will explore how to plan their own community health needs assessment and consider how to apply the findings upon its completion. Learning Objectives: • Describe the phases of a community health needs assessment. • Identify types of data collection methods and analysis tools. • Utilize tools for planning a needs assessment. FTuB4 Population Health Drivers Contributing to the Improvement of Oral Health of Farmworker Children and Their Families Guadalupe Cuesta, Director, National Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Collaboration Office Steve Davis, Director, Outreach Services, Greene County Health Care, Inc. Velma Hendershott, President and CEO, InterCare Community Health Network Mark Koday, DDS, Chief Dental Officer, Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic Donald L. Weaver, MD, Associate Medical Officer, Clinical Workforce Center, NACHC A population health driver diagram can be used as a framework to align community efforts on a health challenge. With the aim of improving the oral health of farmworker children and their families, this diagram can be used to: • List primary and secondary drivers that specify actions that can be taken and to achieve desired outcomes. • Identify roles each organization in the community can play. • Define additional actions that need to be taken to impact the challenge. Each speaker in this session will discuss the drivers that have been successful in their respective communities and what needs to be done at the national, state, and local levels to increase the availability of oral healthcare for all farmworker children and their families. Learning Objectives: • Identify existing resources that are available in their community to help improve primary and oral health integration. • Determine how the population health driver diagram can be used in their community. • Identify at least two roles their own health center can play. • Determine steps they can take to link with Migrant Head Start Programs. Salon A Salon C N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 17 Tuesday, May 5, 2015, continued FTuC4 Chronicles: The Community and Migrant Health Center Story Feygele Jacobs, President and CEO, RCHN Community Health Foundation Nicole Rodriguez-Robbins, Project Coordinator, RCHN Community Health Foundation Community health centers have a rich history, dating back to the Migrant Health Act of 1962 and the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, which launched the new model of community and neighborhoodbased care. The 50th anniversary of the Community Health Center Movement provides an opportunity to recognize the important and ongoing work of health centers, which goes beyond direct clinical services and encompasses education, civic engagement, community economic development and job creation in order to meet the broader needs of their communities. Chronicles: The Community and Migrant Health Center Story (a special joint project of the RCHN Community Health Foundation and the Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy at the Milken Institute School of Public Health and Health Services at The George Washington University) honors the contributions of community health centers by inviting each health center to create an on-line, web-based profile documenting its own history as part of a tapestry of the CHC Movement. The website allows viewers everywhere to pay a virtual visit to every community health center in the U.S., and see the positive impact CHCs have had on their communities. Chronicles has been newly revamped and upgraded to make it user-friendly and accessible. The presentation will include a site demo of the historical timeline, and the many and varied in-depth contributed stories and insights including an archive dedicated to the Migrant Health Center Program, related photos and documents. Participants will learn how to create a profile page for their CHC or PCA on Chronicles. Learning objectives: • Introduce participants to the value of social history documenting the story of the health center movement in urban and rural communities across the country. • Encourage participation in the Chronicles project as a vehicle for archiving health center history, providing public education, and documenting the continued value of health centers in their communities. • Explain and demonstrate how organizations can directly participate in the Chronicles effort by contributing and posting photos, documents and stories. 5:00 pm – EVENING 18 Dinner On Your Own To Explore San Antonio and Celebrate Cinco De Mayo N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Salon B Committed to helping you BUILD HEALTHIER COMMUNITIES One-source solution to help support your mission » Medical and surgical supplies » Pharmaceuticals » PCMH solutions Learn more at mckesson.com. » Laboratory supplies and equipment » Medical and office equipment Wednesday, May 6, 2015 7:30 am – 8:30 am Coffee La Corona 7:30 am – 12:00 pm 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm Registration 7:30 am – 3:30 pm Table Top Exhibit Open 8:00 am – 10:00 am FWA1 General Session Salon Del Rey Ballroom Yvonne G. Davis, NACHC Consumer/Board Member Representative, Mistress of Ceremonies Part 1 Immigration Policy Update Overview: President Obama’s Executive Actions on Immigration and Farmworkers Salon Del Rey Foyer La Corona Adrienne DerVartanian, Director of Immigration and Labor Rights, Farmworker Justice On November 20, 2014, President Obama announced major executive actions on immigration. The executive actions include important opportunities for hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and their families to obtain work authorization and relief from deportation. For farmworkers and their families, immigration status is a key barrier to access to healthcare. Please join us to hear Farmworker Justice provide a national perspective on administrative relief and immigration policy affecting farmworkers and the role health centers and other community organizations can play to help inform farmworkers about the new policies. Part 2 Effective Collaborations with Growers/Producers Facilitator: Dori Rose Inda, JD, Chief Executive Officer, Salud Para La Gente, Wastonville, CA J. Allen Carnes, Wintergarden Produce, Uvalde, TX Karen Watt, Watt Farms Country Market, Albion, NY Connee Canfield, Executive Director, Rural Initiatives for Shelter and Education, Decatur, MI This session will explore effective collaborations between community and migrant health centers and Agricultural Growers/Producers to improve access to healthcare for farmworkers and ensure Growers/ Producers have a healthy workforce. Community health centers will share models and strategies to help you develop effective partnerships with growers in your community. 10:00 am – 10:30 am Refreshment Break 10:30 am – 12:00 pm FWA2 GENERAL SESSION Innovative Strategies to Increase Access to Care for Farmworkers – Panel Discussion Juan Carlos Olivares, Chief Executive Officer, Yakima Valley Farmworkers Clinic Bobbi Ryder, Chief Executive Officer, National Center for Farmworker Health, Inc. Rachel Gonzales-Hanson, Chief Executive Officer, Community Health Development, Inc. This session will provide an overview of the campaign: Innovative Strategies to Serve 1 Million Farmworkers by 2020. The campaign, initiated by NACHC’s Farmworker Health Committee and the National Center for Farmworker Health, addresses health centers serving migrant and seasonal agricultural workers. The panel will discuss the goals of the campaign and outline specific strategies and recommendations designed to achieve this goal. 20 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e La Corona Salon Del Rey Ballroom Wednesday, May 6, 2015, continued 2015 Presentation of the Recipient of the Emerging Leader Health Award In 2007, the Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy established an Emerging Leader award to honor the next generation of community health leaders. The award is designed to highlight and share the accomplishments of exceptional young members of health centers and PCAs, and nominees’ accomplishments represent not just fulfilling their duties, but using their job as a springboard to go beyond what is expected. Sara Rosenbaum, JD, Harold and Jane Hirsh Professor, Milken Institute School of Public Health, The George Washington University Recipients: Michael Malloy Program Coordinator Connecticut River Valley Farmworker Health Program Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers Boston, MA Kenett Melgar Blue Ridge Community Health Services, Inc. Hendersonville, NC 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm Networking Lunch La Vista 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm EDUCATION SESSIONS FWA3 Outreach and Enrollment in Health Coverage for Farmworkers - Part 1 P2P Networking Session Alexis Guild, Migrant Health Policy Analyst, Farmworker Justice Kristen Stoimenoff, MPH, Deputy Director, Health Outreach Partners Monica Dreitcer, Associate Project Manager, Health Outreach Partners Millions of people, including members of hard-to-reach populations like migrant and seasonal agricultural workers gained access to affordable health insurance coverage through Medicaid, CHIP, or the Marketplaces after the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). For many, having insurance is a new experience that can be both confusing and frustrating. For first-time beneficiaries, grasping concepts like copays, deductibles, and out of-network providers can be challenging. In addition, there are specific requirements under the ACA for H2A workers that will be outlined in this Mega Session. Outreach and enrollment workers are in a unique position to help the newly insured understand these requirements and how to use insurance and access health services. As we enroll more agricultural workers and their families into coverage, we need to take the vital next step to help them get connected to a healthcare home and health services, and to fully utilize their benefits. In this interactive session, HOP and Farmworker Justice representatives will guide participants, via group discussions and activities, in assisting outreach and enrollment workers in learning the requirements for agricultural workers and improving their skills for increasing health insurance literacy – ensuring patient activation among agricultural workers and their families. Participants will take away strategies for providing clear, concise and accurate education about how to make the most of health insurance coverage. Learning Objectives: • Summarize ACA policies that impact Farmworkers, specifically H2A workers. • Identify at least two strategies for overcoming barriers to health insurance enrollment and health insurance literacy. • Describe the importance of health insurance literacy for health care access. Salon C N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 21 Wednesday, May 6, 2015, continued FWB3 Introduction to Health Center Governance Kimberley Hinton, Deputy Director for Training and Technical Assistance, NACHC (This is the first of two sessions regarding Board Governance. Also see FWC4.) Boards of Directors not only need to be able to be in compliance (do the “right” things - meet their fiduciary responsibilities and the FQHC program requirements for governance) but they also need to be able to do things “right” - run effective meetings, demonstrate effective decision-making, and be able to address some of the common problems that board members may encounter. These two sessions are intended to build those skills, beginning with the basics and then moving to helping participants develop high-performing boards. Learning Objectives: • Describe the roles and responsibilities of the health center Board of Directors. • Discuss how to operationalize those roles and responsibilities. • Demonstrate how they relate to the BPHC’s program requirements. FWC3 Workforce Initiatives in Community Health Centers Feygele Jacobs, President and CEO, RCHN Community Health Foundation Teri Brogdon, MEd., Education and Training Design Director, Salud Family Health Centers Mary Zelazny, Chief Executive Officer, Finger Lakes Community Health CHC Entry-Level Workforce Projects: Lessons Learned In 2012 the RCHN Community Health Foundation launched its Workforce Initiative aimed at helping community health centers to identify and address the challenges of recruiting, training and retaining a highly skilled entry-level workforce in the wake of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the increase in demand for healthcare workers across professions and at all levels. Project objectives were to support CHCs in growth and transformation efforts, implement and evaluate strategies to embed workforce talent and capability, and optimize capacity of CHCs to serve as high quality and high-performing medical homes. Over a two year period, 10 grantees developed unique projects based on their local needs, but relevant to the broader health center community. This session will provide an overview of the program along with project reports from two grantees that serve the migrant farmworker population, Salud Family Health Center / Plan de Salud del Valle, Inc. (Ft. Lupton, CO) and Finger Lakes Community Health (Penn Yan, NY). Learning Objectives: • Understand community-level context for health center workforce development. • Learn about best practices to attract, develop and retain entry-level workers in Community Health Centers. • Share goals, strategies and outcomes from the Salud Medical Staff College (SMSC) Project and Finger Lakes Point of Entry Project 3:00 pm – 3:30 pm Refreshment Break 22 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Salon B Salon A La Corona RCHN Community Health Foundation Is proud to join National Association of Community Health Centers and health center colleagues in celebration of the 50th anniversary of America’s Health Centers. We are honored to support you in advancing health care access for all and telling the community health center story. rchn community health foundation Wednesday, May 6, 2015, continued 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm EDUCATION SESSIONS FWA4 Outreach and Enrollment in Health Coverage for Farmworkers - Part 2 P2P Networking Session (It is recommended that participants attend Part 1 to maximize the information presented in this session.) Alexis Guild, Migrant Health Policy Analyst, Farmworker Justice Kristen Stoimenoff, MPH, Deputy Director, Health Outreach Partners Monica Dreitcer, Associate Project Manager, Health Outreach Partners Millions of people, including members of hard-to-reach populations like migrant and seasonal agricultural workers gained access to affordable health insurance coverage through Medicaid, CHIP, or the Marketplaces after the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). For many, having insurance is a new experience that can be both confusing and frustrating. For first-time beneficiaries, grasping concepts like copays, deductibles, and out of-network providers can be challenging. In addition, there are specific requirements under the ACA for H2A workers that will be outlined in this Mega Session. Outreach and enrollment workers are in a unique position to help the newly insured understand these requirements and how to use insurance and access health services. As we enroll more agricultural workers and their families into coverage, we need to take the vital next step to help them get connected to a healthcare home and health services, and to fully utilize their benefits. In this interactive session, HOP and Farmworker Justice representatives will guide participants, via group discussions and activities, in assisting outreach and enrollment workers in learning the requirements for agricultural workers and improving their skills for increasing health insurance literacy – ensuring patient activation among agricultural workers and their families. Participants will take away strategies for providing clear, concise and accurate education about how to make the most of health insurance coverage. FWB4 Integration Primary Care and Behavioral Health Services for Farmworkers Gayle Lawn-Day, PhD, MPA, Chief Executive Officer, MHP Salud Community Health Workers are uniquely positioned to bridge the gap between communities and services, especially in hard-to-reach populations. Adding in the sensitivity of this topic and the unique aspects of cultural impact, Community Health Workers can be effective in ways other health workers cannot. As part of an integrated team, they can create avenues of communication and assistance where none existed before. Learning Objectives: • Understand why Community Health Workers can be a unique and useful tool in this area. • Identify key national outcomes to support the use of Community Health Workers in this area. • Understand key components to success and integration. 24 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Salon C Salon A Wednesday, May 6, 2015, continued FWC4 Ensuring A Highly Effective and Efficient Board: Developing a Model for Success Salon B Kimberley Hinton, Deputy Director for Training and Technical Assistance, NACHC Boards of Directors not only need to be able to be in compliance (do the “right” things - meet their fiduciary responsibilities and the FQHC program requirements for governance) but they also need to be able to do things “right” - run effective meetings, demonstrate effective decision-making, and be able to address some of the common problems that board members may encounter. These two sessions are intended to build those skills, beginning with the basics and then moving to helping participants develop high-performing boards. Learning Objectives: • Describe the characteristics of a high performing board and board members. • Analyze how well their boards meet those characteristics. • Demonstrate, through the use of vignettes, their ability to apply those characteristics. Thursday, May 7, 2015 8:00 am – 9:00 am Coffee La Corona 8:00 am – 10:30 am Registration 8:00 am – 10:30 am Table Top Exhibit Open 8:30 am – 10:00 am EDUCATION SESSIONS FThA1 Navigating the Community Health Worker Landscape Colleen Reinert, MPH, Chief Programming Officer, MHP Salud Farmworker healthcare faces the unique challenge of serving a special population while navigating a changed healthcare environment that emphasizes patient-centered care, improved access, and enhanced health outcomes. As a result, community-based outreach efforts that are culturally and linguistically responsive are more important than ever. One of the most time-tested and effective community-based approaches is the Promotor(a) de Salud or Community Health Worker (CHW) model. The CHW field has never been stronger as its evidence base grows and it gains recognition and momentum at the local, state and national levels. In this interactive workshop, participants will receive an overview of the current CHW landscape in the Unites States, including the history and definition of CHWs; CHW opportunities within healthcare reform and the Affordable Care Act; information on organized state and national CHW initiatives and how to become involved; a discussion of standardized CHW education and credentialing; and an examination of current CHW compensation models and development toward sustainable funding mechanisms. Learning Objectives: • Describe the field of Community Health Workers and its current trends. • Explain how CHWs can play a role in health care reform. • Connect with a wider network of CHW information and resources. Salon Del Rey Foyer La Corona Salon A N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 25 Thursday, May 7, 2015, continued FThB1 Importance of Advocacy and CivicEngagement Salon B Yvette Ramirez Ammerman, Associate Director, Western Operations, NACHC Alex Harris, Manager, Special Populations, NACHC Yvette Ramirez Ammerman, Associate Director, Western Operations, NACHC Alex Harris, Manager, Special Populations, NACHC This session will be conducted in Spanish and English. Esta sesión estará en español e inglés. Health Centers are trusted providers in the communities they serve, and as such they have a unique opportunity to engage farmworkers on important issues. This networking session will address the challenges, opportunities, and best model practices for civic engagement and community education. The session will break up into two groups: Discussion Table 1, How to Grow and Engage Your Grassroots Base This session will be conducted in Spanish and will cover strategies for communicating with farmworker patients and engaging them in issues related to health centers and their patients. The facilitator will discuss model approaches and work with group members to create viable civic engagement plans for their health centers. Discussion in Table 2, Civic Engagement: Can Health Centers Do It? Community health center leaders are often confused about the limits of their ability to engage their communities within the confines of the 501(c)3 and 330 grant requirements for non-partisan civic engagement. This session will discuss ways to avoid potential pitfalls while brainstorming ways to integrate successful civic engagement efforts at your health center. Learning Objectives: • Acquire a clear understanding of the IRS, Federal 330, and other requirements governing civic engagement activities for Federally Qualified Health Centers and other non-profit entities. • Highlight the importance of the farmworker voice in shaping policy decisions, especially those directly related to health centers, and learn how to implement clear strategies to encourage a culture of advocacy among farmworker communities. • Address subjects or issues related to the topics presented. 26 FThB1 La importancia de la Salon B defensay elcompromiso cívico N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Los centros de salud son proveedores médicos que tienen la confianza de sus comunidades. Es así que tienen una oportunidad única para involucrar a los trabajadores agrícolas en los temas que los afectan. Esta sesión interactiva cubrirá los retos, las oportunidades y las buenas prácticas para el compromiso cívico y la educación comunitaria. Habrá dos grupos. El primero, titulado Cómo crecer e involucrar a la comunidad en la defensa y el compromiso cívico estará en español y cubrirá estrategias para comunicar con los trabajadores agrícolas e involucrarlos en temas relacionados a los centros de salud y sus pacientes. El facilitador hablará de modelos útiles y trabajará con miembros del grupo para crear planes funcionales para hacer el compromiso cívico y la defensa en los centros de salud. El segundo grupo se llama El compromiso cívico: pueden los centros de salud hacerlo? Los líderes de los centros de salud muchas veces se confunden en cuanto a los límites a la habilidad para hacer la defensa y el compromiso cívico en sus comunidades por causa de las reglas de 501(c)3 y la subvención de 330. Esta sesión explicará cómo evitar problemas con estas reglas, y los participantes propondrán algunas maneras para integrar el compromiso cívico en su centro de salud. Objetivos de aprendizaje: • Aprender los requisitos para los centros de salud en cuanto a actividades de defensa y compromiso cívico incluyendo las reglas del IRS y la subvención federal 330 • Entender la importancia de la voz de los trabajadores agrícolas en influir decisiones políticas, especialmente las decisiones que afectan a los centros de salud, y aprender cómo implementar estrategias claras para crear una cultura de defensa y compromiso cívico entre las comunidades de trabajadores agrícolas • Abordar sujetos y preguntas relacionados a los temas presentados Congratulations to America’s Health Centers as you celebrate 50 years of value in healthcare. Hyatt Regency Chicago Central downtown location steps from the Magnificent Mile chicagoregency.hyatt.com Hyatt Regency Orlando Hyatt’s newest addition: Florida’s premier luxury convention hotel orlando.regency.hyatt.com Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego Largest waterfront hotel on the west coast manchestergrand.hyatt.com Thursday, May 7, 2015, continued FThC1 Succession Planning at All Levels Roberta “Bobbi” Ryder, Chief Executive Officer, National Center for Farmworker Health, Inc. To many, “Succession Planning” means one thing: “When is the boss retiring and how will subsequent changes in leadership affect the organization?” While top level executive change is critical to the Migrant Health Movement, given the age of the program and the significant number of executives who have devoted their careers to running Migrant and Community Health Centers, real Succession Planning happens at all levels of the organizational structure, and is multidisciplinary in scope. This workshop will provide tools that can be useful at any level, and will encourage frank dialogue about the risks associated with lack of a viable corporate succession plan. Salon C Learning Objectives: • Understand the concept that successful organizational succession planning is, in the long run, in the best interests of both the health center corporation and the individual careers of all involved. • Learn the value of incorporating Succession Planning into the organizational structure through adoption of systems policies and procedures. • Identify tools that can be adapted for individual and departmental use to help to anticipate change, and learn how to initiate conversations about career and succession planning into ongoing staff relations in an open and non-threatening manner. • Explore the “Good”, “Bad” and “Ugly” through lessons learned among peer organizations. 10:00 am – 10:30 am Refreshment Break 10:30 am – 11:30 am FThA2 GENERAL SESSION Curanderismo: Mexican American Folk Healing Avein Saaty-Tafoya, Vice-Chair, NACHC Farmworker Health Committee, Mistress of Ceremonies La Corona Salon Del Rey Ballroom Juan Antonio Chavira, PhD, Judge (Retired) The practice of Curanderismo, or Mexican American folk medicine, is part of a historically and culturally important healthcare system deeply rooted in native Mexican healing techniques. Dr. Chavira will describe the practice from an insider’s point of view, based on his three-year apprenticeship with curanderos (healers). Dr. Chavira will present an intimate view of not only how curanderismo is practiced, but also how it is learned and passed on as a healing tradition. By providing a better understanding of why curanderos continue to be in demand despite the lifesaving capabilities of modern medicine, this presentation will serve as an indispensable resource to health professionals who work within Mexican American communities, to students of transcultural medicine, and to urban ethnologists and medical anthropologists. Presentation of 2015 NACHC 2015 Lifetime Achievement in Migrant Health Award John W. McFarland, DDS Executive Vice President, Dental Services Salud Family Health Centers Fort Lupton, CO 28 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Thursday, May 7, 2015, continued 11:30 am – 12:30 pm FThA3 General Session Lathran J. Woodard, NACHC Secretary, Mistress of Ceremonies Salon Del Rey Ballroom Holly G. Atkinson, MD, MS, FACP, Director, Human Rights Program, Mount Sinai Global Health; Co-Director, Advancing Idealism in Medicine Program; and Assistant Professor of Medicine and Preventive Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai As part of Dr. Atkinson’s role as Director of the Human Rights Program, she is also Co-Director of the Mount Sinai Human Rights Clinic, where asylum seekers who have suffered torture, trafficking and other egregious human rights violations are medically and psychologically evaluated. She is also past president of Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), a human rights organization that shared in the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize, having served on its board for more than 16 years. She now serves as an expert medical advisor to PHR and is a member of its asylum network. Today, her research focuses on documenting the linkages between the human rights violations and health outcomes, especially as it applies to the well-being of women and girls. She has conducted research in several countries around the world, including most recently Bahrain and Burma. Dr. Atkinson also has extensive experience as a medical correspondent, including assignments with NBC’s Today show, The CBS Morning News, Lifetime Medical Television, the PBS health show BodyWatch and most recently, HealthiNation. She was founding editor of HealthNews, the consumer health newsletter of the Massachusetts Medical Society (MMS), publisher of The New England Journal of Medicine, where she remained at the helm for more than 12 years. Dr. Atkinson graduated Phi Beta Kappa with honors in Biology from Colgate University. She has an MD from the University of Rochester and an MS from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She is a Fellow of the American College of Physicians and a member of the AOA Honor Medical Society, the American Public Health Association, and the American Medical Women’s Association, where she co-chairs AMWA’s Physicians Against Human Trafficking initiative. Dr. Atkinson is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 12:30 pm – 1:00 pm Closing Remarks Rachel Gonzales-Hanson, Chair, NACHC Farmworker Health Committee Salon Del Rey Ballroom Need Help? We want to ensure that your attendance at this conference is an enjoyable experience. If we can be of any assistance, please call on any member of the Meetings Team. Mary Hawbecker Senior Vice President, NACHC Operations and Chief Financial Officer Cynthia J. Gady Associate Vice President Tricia Fleisher Willhide, CMP, CEM Assistant Director Narine Hovnanian Meetings Manager N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 29 Key to Modertors and Presenters Ammerman, Yvette – FThB1 Koday, Marc – FTuB4 Atkinson, Holly– FThA3 Lawn-Day, Gayle – FWB4 Brogden, Teri – FWC3 Martinez, Lupe – FTuA1 Canfield, Connie – FWA1 Carnes, J. Allen – FWA1 Olivares, Juan Carlos – FWA2 Chavira, Juan Antonio – FTuA3, FThA2 Cuesta, Guadalupe – FTuB4 Reinert, Colleen – FThA1 Rodriguez-Robbins, Nicole – FTuC4 Davis, Steve – FTuB4 Rosenbaum, Sara – FWA2 DerVartanian, Adrienne – FWA1 Ryder, E. Roberta – FWA2, FThC1 Dreitcer, Monica – FTuA4, FWA3, FWA4 Stoimenoff, Kristen – FTuA4, FWA3, FWA4 Gonzales-Hanson, Rachel – FWA2 Guild, Alexis – FWA3, FWA4 Watt, Karen – FWA1 Weaver, Don – FTuB4 Harris, Alex – FThB1 Hawkins, Dan – FTuA1 Zelazny, Mary – FWC3 Henderschott, Velma – FTuB4 Hinton, Kimberley – FWB3, FWC4 Hiyashi, Seiji – FTuA1 Inda, Dori Rose – FWA1 Jacobs, Feygele – FTuC4, FWC3 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 31 HEALTH INSTITUTE (CHI) & EXPO AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS 1965 • 2015 Exhibitors 5 -7 MAY YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW NACHC Member National Health Center Week Sponsor 50th Anniversary Sponsor ViP/ViS Partner National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) The National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) is the leading membership organization representing the nation’s network of community-based health centers. Through NACHC, health centers have direct access to benefits and services tailored specifically to their needs and unique environments. Stop by our booth to learn more about NACHC and discover some of our new and exciting benefits, products, programs, and services. Maurice Denis, 7501 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 1100W, Bethesda, MD 20814-4838 Phone: (301) 347-0400 Fax: (301) 347-0459 Email: mdenis@nachc.com www.nachc.com Community Health Ventures The Value in Purchasing (ViP) and the Value in Staffing (ViS) programs are the only NACHC-endorsed national group purchasing programs. Come visit us and see how to get discounted pricing for your staffing; medical, dental, and office supplies and services; capital equipment; and injectibles. ViP and ViS Partners offer the deepest discounts and the best products and services supporting community health centers. Danny Hawkins, 102 South Alfred Street, Alexandria, VA 22314-3002 Phone: (703) 684-3982 Fax: (703) 706-5896 Email: djhawkins@nachc.com www.communityhealthventures.com 50th Anniversary LEGACY PARTNERS BKD, LLP As a top-tier CPA and advisory firm, BKD, LLP helps community health centers nationwide with unique financial issues. BKD National Health Care Group provides audit, tax, accounting outsourcing, operations consulting, cost-report preparation, strategic positioning, and Medicare, Medicaid, and third-party reimbursement consulting to thousands of healthcare providers, including approximately 225 CHCs. Experience objectivity and peace of mind from a firm with resources that bring insight and understanding to improve business performance. Mike Schnake, 910 E. St. Louis Street, Suite 200, Springfield, MO 65806 Phone: (417) 865-8701 Fax: (417) 865-0682 Email: mschnake@bkd.com www.bkd.com 32 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Centene Corporation Centene is the leading multi-line healthcare enterprise that provides programs and services to the uninsured and underinsured. Helen Bryson, 7711 Carondelet Avenue, Suite 600, St. Louis, MO 63105 Phone: (803) 960-1947 Fax: (314) 558-2428 Email: hbryson@centene.com www.centene.com McKesson Medical-Surgical McKesson Medical-Surgical delivers a comprehensive offering of healthcare products, equipment, technology, and service solutions to support community health centers. By partnering with out customers to provide business solutions and supplies, it allows them to focus on what matters most—delivering quality healthcare. Kathryn Gray, 8741 Landmark Road, Richmond, VA 23228 Phone: (804) 553-2241 Email: kathryn.gray@mckesson.com www.mckesson.com 50th Anniversary PROMOTER SPONSOR Pfizer RxPathways Pfizer RxPathways helps eligible patients get access to their Pfizer medicines by offering a range of support services including insurance counseling, copay help, and the provision of Pfizer medicines for free or at a savings and more. Kelly Costello, 235 E. 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017 Phone: (202) 446-1225Email: kcostello@apcoworldwide.com www.pfizerrxpath.com 50th Anniversary SUPPORTER SPONSOR Benco Dental Benco Dental, headquartered in Pittston, Pennsylvania, is the largest privately-owned, full-service distributor of dental supplies, dental equipment, dental consulting, and equipment services in the U.S. Founded in 1950 by Benjamin Cohen, the company has remained family owned and focused on the unique mission of “delivering success smile after smile.” John Lamb, 295 Centerpoint Boulevard, Pittston, PA 18640 Phone: (830) 399-3986 Fax: (888) 329-2362 Email: jlamb@benco.com www.benco.com N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 33 Exhibitors AVAZZIA AVAZZIA is an ISO13485 certified, FDA registered medical device manufacturer based in Dallas, Texas. AVAZZIA’s patented interactive neuromodulation devices and accessories are non-invasive, non-pharmaceutical technological microcurrent innovations cleared by the FDA for symptomatic relief and management of chronic, intractable pain, and adjunctive treatment in the management of post-surgical and post-traumatic pain. They are hand-held, portal, battery operated and easy to use. Custom designed accessories are available for specific needs or convenience. Benjamin Soong, 13140 Coit Rd, Suite 515, Dallas, TX 75240 Phone: (214) 575-2820 Fax: (214) 575-2824Email: bsoong@avazzia.com www.avazzia.com Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation Paralysis Resource Center The Paralysis Resource Center promotes the health and well-being of people living with all types of paralysis (SCI, MS, CP, Stroke, etc) as well as their caregivers and families by offering a host of FREE services. This includes several forms of peer support, comprehensive information resources and referral services as well as grants to non-profits. Shannon O’Connor, 636 Morris Turnpike, Short Hills, NJ 07078 Phone: (973) 467-8270 ext: 7208 Fax: (973) 912-9433Email: SoConnor@ChristopherReeve.org www.paralysis.org Merces Consulting Group Inc. Merces helps FQHC’s develop strategies to structure their organizations; implement compensation programs to attract, retain and motivate executives, providers and staff; and effectively communicate to employees. Merces CEO compensation programs provide Boards with confidence that their approach will be transparent, defensible and appropriate In this time of additional disclosure and heightened scrutiny. Edmund B. Ura, 306 S. Washinton Ave., Suite 300, Royal Oak, MI 48067 Phone: (248) 507-4670 Fax: (248) 414-6116Email: ebura@mercesconsulting.com www.mercesconsulting.com The Neenan Company What will your new community health center enable you to do? The Neenan Company creates exceptional community health clinics. We believe that when the right approach is taken to design and construction, the outcome is a facility that serves as a change agent to significantly improve operational flexibility, staff productivity, patient satisfaction, and image in the community. Steve Barnes, 2607 Midpoint Drive, Ft. Collins, CO 80525 Phone: (303) 710-1601 Fax: (970) 493-5869Email: steve.barnes@neenan.com www.neenan.com www.va.gov 34 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e 1965 • 2015 AMERICA’S HEALTH CENTERS YEARS AN ENDURING LEGACY VALUE FOR TODAY AND TOMORROW HYATT REGENCY ORLANDO, ORLANDO, FL Upcoming NACHC Conferences and Trainings MARK YOUR CALENDARS! The National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) offers a wide variety of online and regional education trainings that encompass all facets of health center operations. Whether you need a refresher or are just starting out in a health center, NACHC offers trainings that will help you become more effective. Below is a partial list of upcoming trainings and conferences provided by NACHC. DATES CONFERENCE/TRAINING HOTEL CITY May 13-14, 2015 Accountable Care: Moving From Volume to Value Hyatt House Charlotte City Center Charlotte, NC June 2-4, 2015 The Practical Art of Health Center Finance Hilton Garden Inn Austin Downtown Austin, TX June 15-18, 2015 Managing Ambulatory Health Care I: Introductory Course for Clinicians in Community Health Centers (MAHC I) (co-sponsored with Northwest Regional Primary Care Association) Embassy Suites Portland, OR July 22-23, 2015 Practice Operations Management Level II (POM II) DoubleTree Suites by Hilton Salt Lake City, UT July 28-August 1, 2015 PDI Conference Westin Columbus Columbus, OH August 21-25, 2015 Community Health Institute (CHI) & EXPO The Peabody Orlando Orlando, FL October 27-29, 2015 Financial, Operations Management/ Information Technology (FOM/IT) Conference Planet Hollywood Las Vegas, NV November 16-18, 2015 PCA and HCCN Conference Delray Beach Marriott Delray Beach, FL January 11-14, 2016 Managing Ambulatory Health Care I: Introductory Course for Clinicians in Community Health Centers (MAHC I) (co-sponsored with Northwest Regional Primary Care Association) Delray Beach Marriott Delray Beach, FL March 16-19, 2016 Policy & Issues Forum (P&I) Marriott Wardman Park Washington, DC August 5-6, 2016 Revenue Cycle 360 Liaison Capitol Hill Washington, DC August 26-30, 2016 Community Health Institute (CHI) & EXPO Hyatt Regency Chicago Chicago, IL November 2-4, 2016 Financial, Operations Management/ Information Technology (FOM/IT) Conference Planet Hollywood Las Vegas, NV March 28-April 3, 2017 Policy & Issues Forum (P&I) Marriott Wardman Park Washington, DC August 25-29, 2017 Community Health Institute (CHI) & EXPO Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego, CA October 25-27, 2017 Financial, Operations Management/ Information Technology (FOM/IT) Conference Planet Hollywood Las Vegas, NV March 13-18, 2018 Policy & Issues Forum (P&I) Marriott Wardman Park Washington, DC August 24-28, 2018 Community Health Institute (CHI) & EXPO The Peabody Orlando Orlando, FL March 26-April 2, 2019 Policy & Issues Forum (P&I) Marriott Wardman Park Washington, DC To register for these and future trainings, visit us at www.nachc.com/trainings OR http://meetings.nachc.com. For additional information on NACHC Training, contact Sherry Giles at sgiles@nachc.com or Narine Hovnanian at nhovnanian@nachc.com. 36 N A C H C 2015 N at i o na l Fa r m w o r k e r H e a lt h Co nf e r e nc e Hilton Palacio del Rio COnFEREnCE CEnTER GUEST ELEVATORS WEST EL MIRADOR A B LA VISTA FOYER C B C LOBBY A D E F EAST GUEST ELEVATORS LA CORONA GUEST ELEVATORS MEZZaninE LA CONDESA LA DUQUESA PREFUNCTION STAIRWAY TO TERRACE GARDEN BUSI CEN C B LA PRINCESA MAIN LEVEL A LA REINA KeY Meeting/Conference Rooms HACIE I SALON DEL REY amenities HACIE II SERVICE KITCHEN LO B B Y pav i L i O n UPPER LEVEL MAIN LEVEL SALON DEL REY B C B A A STAIRWAY TO TERRACE GARDEN SERVICE KITCHEN HACIENDA II HACIENDA III HACIENDA I HACIENDA IV BUSINESS CENTER PREFUNCTION LA DUQUESA LA REINA UPPER LEVEL LOc aTIO N LA CORONA GUEST ELEVATORS LA PRINCESA H i LTO n pa L aC i O d E L R i O 200 South Alamo Street | San Antonio, TX 78205 This historic building, built in the late 1800’s and just steps from the River Walk in HemisFair Park, ALK ER W t H e pAv i l i o N by H i lt o N SAN ANTONIO INT’L AIRPORT (11 MILES) THE ALAMO RIV Location, location, location! 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