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Description

If we want people to experience whole person health – states will have to do a lot of silo-busting to integrate, streamline and coordinate disparate medical, social and economic programs. Data will be the axis of the strategy, but who owns that data and what guardrails are needed? How do we encourage not just data but also technology sharing across state programs?

Jess Kahn joins me to discuss state efforts to integrate programs, technology and data to support whole person health. She’s a partner at McKinsey specializing in state Medicaid and social service programs, public-sector data and technology. Before joining McKinsey she led Medicaid data and systems at CMS. 

We discuss:

Jess highlights the dangerous gap in federal authority and accountability around the sensitive social data:

"So the risks are really clear… this is data that tells you a lot more about the vulnerabilities people have … There isn't a federal agency that asserts that they have some kind of legal authority to set boundaries … Who's going to write that regulation? Who's going to tell state Medicaid agencies – or any entity for that matter – what the guardrails are around collection, around sharing, around ownership?”

#healthcare #investments #housing #medicaid #health #socialdeterminantsofhealth #managedcare 

Relevant Links

Health Data Utility Framework - a Guide to Implementation [PDF]

Hubert Humphrey Quote in HHS Building 

Websites of Health Data Utilities Mentioned in Episode:

CRISP Health

Contexture

CyncHealth 

IHIE