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entitled 'Hurricane Katrina: Federal Grants Have Helped Health Care 
Organizations Provide Primary Care, but Challenges Remain' which was 
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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

July 2009: 

Hurricane Katrina: 

Federal Grants Have Helped Health Care Organizations Provide Primary 
Care, but Challenges Remain: 

GAO-09-588: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-588, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The greater New Orleans area—Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. 
Bernard parishes—continues to face challenges in restoring health care 
services disrupted by Hurricane Katrina. In 2007, the Department of 
Health and Human Services (HHS) awarded the $100 million Primary Care 
Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) to Louisiana to help restore 
primary care services to the low-income population. Louisiana gave 
PCASG funds to 25 outpatient provider organizations in the greater New 
Orleans area. GAO was asked to study how the federal government can 
effectively leverage governmental resources to help area residents gain 
access to primary care services. This report examines (1) how PCASG 
fund recipients used the PCASG funds to support primary care services 
in greater New Orleans, (2) how PCASG fund recipients used and 
benefited from other federal hurricane relief funds that support the 
restoration of primary care services in the area, and (3) challenges 
PCASG fund recipients continued to face in providing primary care, and 
their plans for sustaining services after PCASG funds are no longer 
available. 

To conduct this work, GAO analyzed responses to a GAO survey sent to 
all PCASG fund recipients, to which 23 of the 25 recipients responded, 
and reviewed and analyzed information related to other federal funds 
received by PCASG fund recipients. GAO also conducted site visits at 8 
recipients and interviewed federal and state officials and other 
experts. 

What GAO Found: 

PCASG fund recipients reported that they used the PCASG funds to hire 
or retain health care providers and other staff, add primary care 
services, and open new sites. For example, 20 of the 23 recipients that 
responded to the GAO survey reported using PCASG funds to hire health 
care providers, and 17 reported using PCASG funds to retain health care 
providers. In addition, most of the recipients reported that they used 
PCASG funds to add primary care services and to add or renovate sites. 
Recipients also reported that the grant requirements and funding helped 
them improve service delivery and expand access to care in underserved 
neighborhoods. 

Other federal hurricane relief funds helped PCASG fund recipients pay 
staff, purchase equipment, and expand mental health services to help 
restore primary care. Eleven recipients received HHS Social Services 
Block Grant (SSBG) supplemental funds designated by Louisiana for 
primary care, and two received SSBG supplemental funds designated by 
Louisiana specifically for mental health care. The funds designated for 
primary care were used to pay staff and purchase equipment, and the 
funds designated for mental health care were used to provide a range of 
services for adults and children, including crisis intervention and 
substance abuse prevention and treatment. About two-thirds of the PCASG 
fund recipients benefited from the Professional Workforce Supply Grant 
incentives. These recipients hired or retained 69 health care providers 
who received incentives totaling over $4 million to work in the greater 
New Orleans area. In addition, one PCASG fund recipient expended $7.9 
million it received from Louisiana to provide services through the 
federal Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program. 

PCASG fund recipients continue to face multiple challenges and have 
various plans for sustainability. Recipients face significant 
challenges in hiring and retaining staff, as well as in referring 
patients outside of their organizations, and these challenges have 
grown since Hurricane Katrina. For example, 20 of 23 recipients that 
responded to the GAO survey reported hiring was a great or moderate 
challenge, and among these 20 recipients over three-quarters reported 
that this challenge had grown since Hurricane Katrina. Six of the 7 
recipients that primarily provide mental health services reported that 
both hiring and retention of providers were great or moderate 
challenges. Many PCASG fund recipients also reported challenges in 
referring patients outside their organization for mental health, 
dental, and specialty care services. Although all PCASG fund recipients 
have completed or planned actions to increase their ability to be 
sustainable, it is too early to know whether their various 
sustainability strategies will be successful. 

HHS reviewed a draft of this report and provided technical comments, 
which GAO incorporated as appropriate. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-588] or key 
components. For more information, contact Cynthia A. Bascetta at (202) 
512-7114 or bascettac@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

PCASG Fund Recipients Used PCASG Funds to Support Primary Care Services 
by Hiring Health Care Providers and Other Staff and Adding Services and 
Sites: 

Other Federal Hurricane Relief Funds Helped PCASG Fund Recipients to 
Pay Staff, Purchase Equipment, and Expand Mental Health Services to 
Help Restore Primary Care: 

PCASG Fund Recipients Face Multiple Challenges and Have Various Plans 
for Sustainability: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant Fund 
Recipients: Characteristics, Patients, and Services: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Estimated Annual Population of the Greater New Orleans Area, 
by Parish, as of July 1, 2005, and July 1, 2008: 

Table 2: Number of Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) 
Fund Recipients That Used PCASG Funds to Add or Expand Services, by 
Service Type, as of October 28, 2008: 

Table 3: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund 
Recipients' Expenditures of Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) 
Supplemental Funds Designated for Primary Care, through August 2008: 

Table 4: Amounts and Percentages of Social Services Block Grant 
Supplemental Funds Designated for Mental Health Care That Were Expended 
by Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant Fund Recipients, by Type 
of Service, as of March 3, 2009: 

Table 5: Health Care Providers Who Received Professional Workforce 
Supply Grant Incentive Payments and Were Employed by Primary Care 
Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund Recipients, by Provider 
Type, through August 2008: 

Table 6: Selected Characteristics of Primary Care Access and 
Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund Recipients, September 21, 2007, 
through March 20, 2008: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Timeline of Health-Care-Related Federal Grants Assisting the 
Greater New Orleans Area Since Hurricane Katrina: 

Figure 2: Number of Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) 
Fund Recipients That Used PCASG Funds to Hire Health Care Providers, as 
of October 28, 2008: 

Figure 3: Ratings by Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant 
(PCASG) Fund Recipients of Challenges to Providing Primary Care 
Services, and Comparison with Period Prior to Hurricane Katrina: 

Figure 4: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund 
Recipients' Patient Population, by Health Insurance Status, September 
21, 2007, through March 20, 2008: 

Figure 5: Encounters at Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant 
(PCASG) Fund Recipients, by Service Type, September 21, 2007, through 
March 20, 2008: 

Abbreviations: 

ACF: Administration for Children and Families: 

CCP: Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program: 

CMS: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services: 

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency: 

FQHC: Federally Qualified Health Center: 

HHS: Department of Health and Human Services: 

HPSA: health professional shortage area: 

HRSA: Health Resources and Services Administration: 

JPHSA: Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority: 

LaCHIP: Louisiana Children's Health Insurance Program: 

LDHH: Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals: 

LDSS: Louisiana Department of Social Services: 

LPHI: Louisiana Public Health Institute: 

LSU: Louisiana State University: 

MCLNO: Medical Center of Louisiana at New Orleans: 

MHSD: Metropolitan Human Services District: 

PCASG: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant: 

SAMHSA: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration: 

SSBG: Social Services Block Grant: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 13, 2009: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
Chairman: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Mary L. Landrieu: 
Chairman: 
Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

Nearly 4 years after Hurricane Katrina, the greater New Orleans area 
continues to face challenges in restoring health care services 
disrupted by the storm.[Footnote 1] Before the hurricane, the low- 
income population in the area had relied on hospital emergency rooms 
and outpatient clinics, mostly hospital-based, as its main source of 
primary care.[Footnote 2] These clinics provided care to many patients 
who were uninsured or covered by Medicaid.[Footnote 3] Following the 
hurricane and the subsequent flooding, the hospitals and clinics closed 
because of the significant damage they had sustained. As studies have 
shown, disaster survivors continue to experience poor physical and 
mental health for prolonged periods after the event.[Footnote 4] After 
the hurricane, various health care provider organizations in the area 
were able to reopen some health care clinics. However, gaps remained in 
the availability of health care services in the greater New Orleans 
area. 

To help address the continuing health care needs of low-income area 
residents, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) awarded 
the $100 million Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) to 
the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals (LDHH) in July 2007. 
[Footnote 5] The grant is administered at the federal level by HHS's 
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). It is intended to 
restore and expand access to primary care services, including mental 
health care services[Footnote 6] and dental care services, without 
regard to a patient's ability to pay. The grant is also intended to 
decrease costly reliance on emergency room use for primary care 
services for patients who are uninsured, underinsured, or covered by 
Medicaid. CMS required LDHH to use the grant to provide short-term 
funding to outpatient provider organizations to help them take such 
actions as increasing their staff, renovating clinics, and opening new 
clinic sites. LDHH provided funds to 25 organizations--which we refer 
to as PCASG fund recipients; as of March 20, 2008, the recipients were 
operating 75 sites that were eligible to use PCASG funds.[Footnote 7] 
The Louisiana Public Health Institute (LPHI) administers the PCASG for 
LDHH and distributes grant funds as its local partner. For an 
organization to be eligible for PCASG funding, it must have been a 
public or private nonprofit organization serving patients in the 
greater New Orleans area--which CMS defined as Jefferson, Orleans, 
Plaquemines, and St. Bernard parishes--at the time that Louisiana's 
grant proposal was submitted. It must also have had the intent to be 
sustainable, that is, able to continue providing primary care after 
PCASG funds are no longer available.[Footnote 8] 

In addition to the PCASG, other federal grants were awarded following 
Hurricane Katrina that could help support access to primary care 
services. These include the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) 
supplemental funds from HHS's Administration for Children and Families 
(ACF) and grants from the Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training 
Program (CCP), which is administered by the Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA) and its federal partner, HHS's Substance Abuse 
and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).[Footnote 9] 
Provider organizations also could benefit from CMS's Professional 
Workforce Supply Grant, through which incentives were paid to 
prospective or current employees. Grants from the Health Center Program 
of HHS's Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) were also 
available during this time to certain organizations providing primary 
care services. 

You asked us to study how the federal government can effectively 
leverage governmental resources to help the victims of Hurricane 
Katrina gain access to primary care services. In this report, we 
examine (1) how PCASG fund recipients used the PCASG funds to support 
the provision of primary care services in the greater New Orleans area, 
(2) how PCASG fund recipients used and benefited from other federal 
hurricane relief funds that support the restoration of primary care 
services in the greater New Orleans area, and (3) challenges the PCASG 
fund recipients continued to face in providing primary care services, 
and recipients' plans for sustaining services after PCASG funds are no 
longer available. 

To determine how the PCASG fund recipients used PCASG funds to support 
the provision of primary care services in the greater New Orleans area, 
[Footnote 10] we conducted site visits at 8 of the 25 PCASG fund 
recipients during April 2008. To identify the locations for our site 
visits, we chose a selective sample of the recipients, including some 
that offered mental health care services or dental care services and 2 
that were Health Center Program grantees. In addition, we included at 
least 1 recipient from each of the area's four parishes. During these 
visits we collected documents and interviewed PCASG fund recipient, 
state, and local officials. Based in part on information we gathered 
during the site visits, we developed a Web-based survey. Our survey 
focused on how recipients used PCASG funds, the challenges they 
continued to face, and their plans for sustainability. Before we 
disseminated the survey to the 25 recipients, the survey questions were 
peer-reviewed by LPHI because of its expertise on the grant program. We 
received responses from 23 of the 25 recipients, a response rate of 92 
percent. Based on activities we conducted to assess the reliability of 
the survey data, such as reviewing survey data for inconsistencies and 
completeness, we determined that the data were sufficiently reliable 
for the purposes of this report. We also reviewed the recipients' 
applications for PCASG funding and interviewed officials at LDHH and 
LPHI about how the recipients used PCASG funds. 

To answer our question on how the PCASG fund recipients used and 
benefited from other federal funds for hurricane relief, we identified 
relevant funding sources that recipients used or benefited from, and we 
examined the funding amounts and the ways the funds were used. 
Specifically, we reviewed and analyzed data from LDHH on expenditures 
related to the supplemental SSBG, on awards made under CMS's 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant Program, and on the CCP. Through 
assessments of internal consistency and verification with state and 
local officials, we determined that these data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of this report. We also interviewed officials 
at LDHH and PCASG fund recipients about these programs. 

To answer our questions on challenges PCASG fund recipients continued 
to face in providing primary care services and how the recipients 
planned to sustain primary care services after PCASG funding is no 
longer available, we used information collected from the Web-based 
survey. We also analyzed interviews we conducted with 10 recipients, 
including the 8 we visited, and with federal, state, and local agency 
officials. In addition, we reviewed sustainability plans that the 
recipients included in their applications for PCASG funding. 

To provide additional information on the PCASG fund recipients, we used 
data collected by LPHI on types of services that the recipients 
offered. We also used patient and encounter data[Footnote 11] that LPHI 
summarized for us. PCASG funds were not the only funds used to support 
the services these data describe. Based on activities we conducted to 
assess the reliability of these data, such as discussing with LPHI 
officials their processes to establish the accuracy and reliability of 
the data they gave us, we determined that the data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of our report. 

We conducted our work from February 2008 through June 2009 in 
accordance with all sections of GAO's Quality Assurance Framework that 
are relevant to our objectives. The framework requires that we plan and 
perform the engagement to obtain sufficient and appropriate evidence to 
meet our stated objectives and to discuss any limitations in our work. 
We believe that the information and data obtained, and the analysis 
conducted, provide a reasonable basis for any findings and conclusions 
in this product. See appendix I for more information about our scope 
and methodology. 

Background: 

Since Hurricane Katrina, the population of the greater New Orleans area 
has decreased, and the health care delivery system for the low-income 
and uninsured population in the area has begun to change from one that 
was largely hospital-based to a more community-based system of primary 
care. Since the disruption to the health care system caused by the 
hurricane, several federal agencies have awarded grants that facilitate 
access to primary care. 

Greater New Orleans Area Population: 

The estimated population of the greater New Orleans area decreased from 
999,349 in July 2005 to 807,032 in July 2008, a level of about 81 
percent of the population before Hurricane Katrina. Most of the 
decrease in population was in Orleans and St. Bernard parishes. (See 
table 1.) 

Table 1: Estimated Annual Population of the Greater New Orleans Area, 
by Parish, as of July 1, 2005, and July 1, 2008: 

Parish: Jefferson; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2005: 450,848; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2008[A]: 436,181. 

Parish: Orleans; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2005: 455,046; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2008[A]: 311,853. 

Parish: Plaquemines; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2005: 28,565; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2008[A]: 21,276. 

Parish: St. Bernard; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2005: 64,890; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2008[A]: 37,722. 

Parish: Total; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2005: 999,349; 
Estimated annual population as of July 1, 2008[A]: 807,032. 

Source: U.S. Census Bureau. 

[A] The July 2008 estimate was the most recent estimate available at 
the time we did our work. 

[End of table] 

Health Care Delivery in the Greater New Orleans Area: 

Before Hurricane Katrina, most health care for the low-income and 
uninsured population in the greater New Orleans area was provided in 
emergency rooms and outpatient clinics at Charity and University 
hospitals, which together were known as the Medical Center of Louisiana 
at New Orleans (MCLNO). MCLNO is part of Louisiana State University's 
(LSU) statewide system of public hospitals. About half of MCLNO's 
patients were uninsured, and about one-third were covered by Medicaid. 
As a result of damage from Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent 
flooding, Charity and University hospitals were closed. In November 
2006, LSU reopened University Hospital, under its new, temporary name, 
Interim LSU Public Hospital. Charity Hospital remained closed as of 
June 2009. 

In addition to the hospital outpatient clinics, other types of clinics 
provided primary care, including mental health care, for the low-income 
and uninsured population before Hurricane Katrina. These included 
health centers participating in HRSA's Health Center Program. Under 
Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act, HRSA provides grants to 
health centers nationwide to increase access to primary care.[Footnote 
12] HRSA uses a competitive process to award grants, including New 
Access Point grants for new grantees or for existing grantees to 
establish additional sites. Existing grantees may also compete for 
Expanded Medical Capacity grants to increase service capacity, such as 
by expanding operating hours, or Service Expansion grants to add or 
expand services, such as mental health, oral health, and pharmacy 
services. 

All health center grantees are Federally Qualified Health Centers 
(FQHC), which enjoy certain federal benefits such as enhanced Medicare 
and Medicaid payment rates. However, not all FQHCs receive Health 
Center Program grants, and those that do not are sometimes referred to 
as having an FQHC Look-Alike designation. Four health center grantees 
served the greater New Orleans area at the time HHS awarded the PCASG 
in July 2007. 

In 2007, Louisiana enacted the Health Care Reform Act of 2007, which 
directed LDHH to develop and implement a new health care delivery 
system for the state's Medicaid recipients and low-income uninsured 
citizens.[Footnote 13] LDHH proposed short-term and long-term 
recommendations,[Footnote 14] which included changes to the Louisiana 
Children's Health Insurance Program (LaCHIP) in 2008 to expand coverage 
to more children.[Footnote 15] LDHH also submitted a demonstration 
waiver application to CMS for its Medicaid program to expand coverage 
and create a coordinated system of care.[Footnote 16] 

Federal Assistance to Restore Access to Primary Care: 

In response to Hurricane Katrina, several federal agencies provided 
grants that assist with the restoration of primary care in the greater 
New Orleans area. (See figure 1.) FEMA provided CCP funds to Louisiana 
for certain mental health services. ACF provided supplemental SSBG 
funds for primary health care services, among other things. In 
addition, CMS provided Professional Workforce Supply Grant funds to 
reduce health care provider shortages and PCASG funds to restore access 
to primary care. 

Figure 1: Timeline of Health-Care-Related Federal Grants Assisting the 
Greater New Orleans Area Since Hurricane Katrina: 

[Refer to PDF for image: timeline] 

Hurricane Katrina: August 2005; 

Hurricane Rita: September 2005; 

FENMA & SAMHSA’s Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program: 
$29 million[A] (August 2005 – December 2008); 

ACF’s Social Services Block Grant Supplemental: $168 million[B] 
(February 2006 – September 2007, extended to September 2009); 

CMS’s Professional Workforce Supply Grant: $50 million[C] (March 2007 – 
September 2009)[D]; 

CMS’s Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant: $100 million[C] 
(July 2007 – September 2010). 

Note: End dates represent the dates after which funds will no longer be 
available according to the original grant, unless otherwise indicated. 

[A] Dollar amount is for amount of grant funds awarded to Louisiana 
that Louisiana distributed in the greater New Orleans area. In December 
2008, Louisiana was awarded an additional $2.8 million in Crisis 
Counseling Assistance and Training Program funds for services related 
to Hurricane Gustav, which struck New Orleans in September 2008. 

[B] Dollar amount is amount of Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) 
supplemental funds awarded to Louisiana that the state dedicated to 
health care. In January 2009, nearly $130 million in additional SSBG 
supplemental funds was awarded to Louisiana for continued recovery from 
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Gustav, and Ike (which struck New Orleans in 
September 2008). The Louisiana Department of Social Services issued an 
initial proposal that would allocate nearly $95 million of the 2009 
SSBG supplemental funds to health care services, although not all of 
that would be spent in the greater New Orleans area. 

[C] Dollar amount is for grants awarded to Louisiana for the greater 
New Orleans area. 

[D] CMS's Professional Workforce Supply Grant may end earlier if all 
incentive payments are made prior to September 2009. 

[End of figure] 

Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program Grants: 

The CCP provided funds for crisis counseling services--including stress 
reduction and coping education, community outreach, individual and 
group crisis counseling, and referral for other services--to Louisiana. 
The state subsequently distributed $29 million of these funds in the 
greater New Orleans area.[Footnote 17] The CCP was designed to meet the 
short-term mental health needs of people affected by disasters. State 
officials told us that, generally, the CCP allows a person to have 
three to five counseling visits but does not provide for a traditional 
mental health diagnostic assessment and cannot be used for traditional 
mental health or substance abuse services. CCP grantees may, however, 
provide information to families and individuals about available mental 
health and substance abuse services. Additional assistance may be 
available to certain families through the Louisiana CCP's Specialized 
Crisis Counseling Services. 

Social Services Block Grant: 

ACF administers SSBG funding to assist states in delivering social 
services, which generally do not include health care services. In 2006, 
however, Congress appropriated emergency SSBG supplemental funding that 
could be spent on, among other things, health care services.[Footnote 
18] From this appropriation, ACF awarded more than $220 million to 
Louisiana. The Louisiana Department of Social Services (LDSS) served as 
the state-level administrator and collaborated with LDHH and the Office 
of the Governor to develop a spending plan that dedicated about $168 
million of this amount for resuming and restoring health care services. 
LDHH received $101.7 million, which it divided into two service 
categories. First, LDHH designated $80 million specifically for mental 
health care, including substance abuse and developmental disability 
services, to meet the emerging mental health crisis. Second, LDHH 
designated $21.7 million for primary care, which could include mental 
health care, to restore and resume services to meet the health care 
needs of people affected by the hurricanes. The primary care funds were 
intended to target the southernmost parishes and regions that had 
experienced a devastating blow to their primary care infrastructure. 
Each local parish could develop a proposal for restoring services its 
population needed and for responding to the challenges it faced in 
rebuilding its basic health care system. 

LDSS awarded the remaining health care services funds directly to LSU 
Health Sciences Center and Tulane University Health Sciences Center. 
Louisiana has until September 30, 2009, to spend these funds, which are 
distributed as reimbursements after services are delivered.[Footnote 
19] 

LDHH distributed the mental health funds to various offices in the 
department and to the state's four regional human services 
districts,[Footnote 20] which then contracted with various individuals 
and organizations to provide some of the services. A state official 
told us that the mental health funds were available statewide in part 
because many people from the greater New Orleans area who needed mental 
health services following the hurricanes were dispersed throughout the 
state. 

Professional Workforce Supply Grant: 

The $50 million Professional Workforce Supply Grant was awarded by the 
Secretary of HHS in March 2007.[Footnote 21] The purpose of the grant 
was to reduce shortages in the professional health care workforce 
following Hurricane Katrina, and CMS gave Louisiana flexibility to 
design its program within broad federal guidelines.[Footnote 22] LDHH, 
which administers the grant, used the funds to create and fund the 
Greater New Orleans Health Service Corps, which recruits individual 
health care providers for health care organizations by offering 
incentive payments to the individuals. Incentive amounts are based on 
an individual's medical specialty and range from $10,000 to $110,000. 
To be eligible, a health care provider must, among other things, agree 
to serve Medicare, Medicaid, and uninsured patients; have a sliding fee 
scale; and provide services in a federally designated health 
professional shortage area (HPSA). Health care providers are also 
expected to enter into an agreement with LaCHIP to provide services to 
children enrolled in that program, if appropriate. Financial incentive 
payments can be given to health care providers who remain in their 
qualifying job or to newly hired health care providers; individuals may 
receive only one financial incentive payment. 

Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant: 

In July 2007, CMS awarded the PCASG to LDHH, which selected LPHI as the 
local partner responsible for administering the grant program. The 
PCASG was established by HHS under the authority of the Deficit 
Reduction Act of 2005, which allowed HHS to allocate funds to restore 
access to health care in communities affected by Hurricane Katrina, and 
to provide funds for other services, such as those provided by Medicaid 
and the State Children's Health Insurance Program.[Footnote 23] The 
greater New Orleans area was targeted to receive PCASG funds because of 
the unique impact Hurricane Katrina and its resulting floods had on the 
area. 

LDHH and LPHI determined that 25 organizations met the PCASG 
requirements that CMS established, and they were all awarded funding. 
[Footnote 24] The 25 organizations varied in size and other 
characteristics. For example, some recipients are affiliated with an 
institution such as a university or state or local government, and some 
are grantees of HRSA's Health Center Program. (For more information on 
the characteristics of the PCASG fund recipients, see appendix II). In 
addition to primary care services--medical, mental health, and dental 
care services--PCASG fund recipients could use grant funds to provide 
specialty care, such as cardiology and podiatry services, and ancillary 
services, including supporting services such as translation, health 
education, transportation, and outreach. After being awarded PCASG 
funding, outpatient provider organizations had to meet several CMS 
requirements, including creating referral relationships with local 
specialists and hospitals, establishing a quality assurance or 
improvement program, and providing a long-term sustainability plan. 
[Footnote 25] 

LPHI is responsible for distributing funds to PCASG fund recipients, 
including an initial disbursement and five supplemental disbursements. 
These are lump sum payments and are not reimbursement for individual 
services provided. The 25 recipients received initial disbursements 
totaling $17 million.[Footnote 26] The supplemental disbursements are 
to be made over the grant period.[Footnote 27] CMS requires that more 
of the funds be disbursed during the early part of the grant period and 
that funding decline over the 3 years to ensure that recipients do not 
rely primarily on PCASG funds for their continued operation and 
sustainability. 

LDHH and CMS provide oversight of the PCASG program. LDHH oversees the 
work performed by LPHI, conducts site visits at PCASG fund recipients, 
reviews budgets for LPHI and recipients, reviews and approves payments 
to recipients, and determines whether to approve recipients' requests 
to renovate sites. CMS visits recipients to observe their operations 
and reviews reports from LDHH and LPHI in collaboration with officials 
from other HHS agencies. Although the PCASG does not include a 
requirement for a program evaluation, a private foundation is scheduled 
to evaluate the PCASG program, and CMS officials plan to review and 
approve this evaluation before it is published.[Footnote 28] 

PCASG Fund Recipients Used PCASG Funds to Support Primary Care Services 
by Hiring Health Care Providers and Other Staff and Adding Services and 
Sites: 

PCASG fund recipients reported that they used PCASG funds to hire or 
retain health care providers and other staff, add primary care 
services, and open new sites. Recipients also said that the PCASG funds 
have helped them improve service delivery and access to care. 

Almost All PCASG Fund Recipients That Responded to Our Survey Used 
PCASG Funds to Hire or Retain Health Care Providers and Other Staff: 

Most of the PCASG fund recipients that responded to our survey reported 
they used PCASG funds to hire health care providers or other staff. 
Twenty of the 23 responding recipients reported using PCASG funds to 
hire health care providers. (See figure 2.) 

Figure 2: Number of Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) 
Fund Recipients That Used PCASG Funds to Hire Health Care Providers, as 
of October 28, 2008: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Medical health care providers: 4 recipients reported hiring only 
medical health care providers; 

Mental health care providers: 6 recipients reported hiring only mental 
health care providers; 

Medical and mental health care providers: 10 recipients reported hiring 
both medical and mental health care providers. 

Source: GAO analysis of PCASG fund recipients’ responses to GAO’s Web-
based survey. 

Note: The data in the figure are based on the responses of the 23 
recipients that responded to GAO's Web-based survey. 

[End of figure] 

Sixteen recipients hired mental health care providers, including mental 
health counselors and psychiatrists. One recipient reported that by 
hiring one psychiatrist, it could significantly increase clients' 
access to services by cutting down a clinic's waiting list and by 
providing clients with a "same-day" psychiatric consultation or 
evaluation. Fourteen of the recipients responded they used PCASG funds 
to hire medical care providers. One recipient reported that it hired 23 
medical care providers, some of whom were staffed at its new sites. 
Eighteen of the 23 PCASG fund recipients that responded to our survey 
reported they used PCASG funds to hire other staff, such as a medical 
director and a medical office assistant, in addition to hiring health 
care providers. Some recipients reported that the ability to hire 
providers enabled them to expand the hours some of their sites were 
open. 

PCASG fund recipients responded that in addition to hiring health care 
providers and other staff, they also used PCASG funds to retain health 
care providers and other staff. Of the 23 recipients that responded to 
our survey, 17 reported they used PCASG funds to retain health care 
providers, and 15 of these reported that they also used grant funds to 
retain other staff. For example, one recipient reported that PCASG 
funds were used to stabilize positions that were previously supported 
by disaster relief funds and donated services. 

A Large Proportion of PCASG Fund Recipients Used PCASG Funds to Add 
Services and to Add or Renovate Sites: 

Nineteen of the 23 PCASG fund recipients that responded to our survey 
reported using PCASG funds to add or expand medical, mental health, or 
dental care services, and more than half of these added or expanded 
more than one type of service. (See table 2.) 

Table 2: Number of Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) 
Fund Recipients That Used PCASG Funds to Add or Expand Services, by 
Service Type, as of October 28, 2008: 

Service type: Medical care; 
Number of PCASG fund recipients: 11. 

Service type: Mental health care; 
Number of PCASG fund recipients: 15. 

Service type: Dental care; 
Number of PCASG fund recipients: 4. 

Source: GAO analysis of PCASG fund recipients' responses to GAO's Web- 
based survey. 

Notes: The data in the table are based on the responses of the 23 
recipients that responded to GAO's Web-based survey. Recipients may 
have added or expanded more than one type of service. 

[End of table] 

PCASG fund recipients also reported using grant funds to add or expand 
specialty care services or to add ancillary services. Eight recipients 
added or expanded specialty care services. For example, one of these 
recipients reported that it added podiatry services. The ancillary 
services that recipients used grant funds to add included health 
education, transportation, and outreach activities. One recipient 
reported that it used PCASG funds to create a television commercial 
announcing that a clinic was open and that psychiatric services were 
available there, including free care for those who qualified 
financially. 

Almost all of the PCASG fund recipients that responded to our survey 
reported they used PCASG funds for their physical space. Fifteen 
recipients used the funds to open new sites or relocate sites.[Footnote 
29] One of these recipients reported that it relocated to a larger 
site, which allowed providers to have additional examination rooms. Ten 
recipients reported using grant funds to renovate existing 
sites.[Footnote 30] Some of these recipients made renovations--such as 
expanding a waiting room, adding a registration window, and adding 
patient restrooms--to accommodate more patients. 

PCASG Fund Recipients Reported That Program Requirements and Funding 
Have Improved Service Delivery and Access: 

PCASG fund recipients that responded to our survey reported that 
certain program requirements have had a positive effect on their 
delivery of primary care services. Almost three-quarters of responding 
recipients reported a requirement that they develop a network of local 
specialists and hospitals for patient referrals has had a positive 
effect. Similarly, over two-thirds of the responding recipients 
reported that the requirement to establish a quality assurance and 
improvement program, which must include developing clinical guidelines 
or evidence-based standards of care, has had a positive effect on the 
provision of primary care within their organization.[Footnote 31] 

Various PCASG fund recipients have stated that PCASG funds helped them 
improve access to health care services for residents of the greater New 
Orleans area. One recipient reported to LPHI that PCASG funds allowed 
it to expand its services beyond residents in its shelter and housing 
programs to include community residents who were not homeless but 
previously lacked access to health care services. Representatives of 
other recipients have publicly stated that their organization improved 
access to health care by expanding services in medically underserved 
neighborhoods or to people who were uninsured or underinsured. In 
addition, representatives of local organizations told us that the PCASG 
provided an opportunity to rebuild the health care system and shift the 
provision of primary care from hospitals to community-based primary 
care clinics. 

Other Federal Hurricane Relief Funds Helped PCASG Fund Recipients to 
Pay Staff, Purchase Equipment, and Expand Mental Health Services to 
Help Restore Primary Care: 

PCASG fund recipients also used other federal hurricane relief funds to 
provide services. They used SSBG supplemental funds designated by 
Louisiana for primary care to pay for staff salaries and equipment, and 
they used SSBG supplemental funds designated for mental health care to 
provide a range of mental health services. PCASG fund recipients also 
benefited from the Professional Workforce Supply Grant, which provided 
incentives for health care providers, and one used funds from the CCP 
to provide counseling services. 

PCASG Fund Recipients That Received SSBG Supplemental Funds Designated 
for Primary Care Used Them to Pay Salaries and Purchase Equipment: 

Nearly half of PCASG fund recipients received SSBG supplemental funds 
designated for primary care and used them to pay staff salaries, 
purchase medical equipment, and support operations. According to LDHH 
data, 11 PCASG fund recipients expended $12.9 million of the $21.7 
million in SSBG supplemental funds awarded to Louisiana and designated 
by the state for primary care, as of August 2008.[Footnote 32] After a 
competitive process in 2006, LDHH distributed SSBG supplemental funds 
ranging from $209,000 to over $2.6 million each to individual 
recipients.[Footnote 33] (See table 3.) Officials from PCASG fund 
recipient organizations that received these funds told us they had used 
SSBG supplemental funds to pay salaries, purchase supplies and medical 
equipment, and support their operations. For example, one recipient 
used SSBG supplemental funds to hire new medical and support staff and, 
as a result, expanded its services for mammography, cardiology, and 
mental health. It also used SSBG supplemental funds to remodel the 
associated examination rooms and lobby and to purchase operating 
services, such as accounting services and insurance. 

Table 3: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund 
Recipients' Expenditures of Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) 
Supplemental Funds Designated for Primary Care, through August 2008: 

PCASG recipient: Administrators of Tulane Educational Fund; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $998. 

PCASG recipient: City of New Orleans Health Department; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $2,648. 

PCASG recipient: Common Ground Health Clinic; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $263. 

PCASG recipient: Daughters of Charity Services of New Orleans; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $1,188. 

PCASG recipient: EXCELth, Inc.[A]; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $209. 

PCASG recipient: Jefferson Community Health Care Centers, Inc.; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $1,327. 

PCASG recipient: LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans (School Based 
Health Centers); 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $244. 

PCASG recipient: Plaquemines Medical Center; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $1,227. 

PCASG recipient: St. Bernard Health Center, Inc.; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $2,439. 

PCASG recipient: St. Charles Community Health Center - Kenner; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $946. 

PCASG recipient: St. Thomas Community Health Center; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $1,398. 

PCASG recipient: Total; 
SSBG supplemental funds expended for primary care from February 2006 
through August 2008 (dollars in thousands): $12,887. 

Source: GAO analysis of Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals 
data. 

Note: These SSBG supplemental funds were distributed by the Louisiana 
Department of Health and Hospitals. 

[A] EXCELth, Inc. received nearly $873,000 in additional SSBG 
supplemental funds, which were expended at sites at which it did not 
use PCASG funds. 

[End of table] 

In addition to distributing SSBG supplemental funds to LDHH for primary 
care, LDSS distributed SSBG supplemental funds directly to one PCASG 
recipient to support, in part, primary health care services. 
Specifically, LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans[Footnote 34]-- 
which also received SSBG supplemental funds for primary care from LDHH--
used $173,000 of the $33.5 million it received directly from LDSS to 
pay for staff salaries and benefits at its PCASG sites.[Footnote 35] 

Two PCASG Fund Recipients Used SSBG Supplemental Funds Designated for 
Mental Health Care to Provide a Range of Services, Including Crisis 
Intervention and Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment: 

The two PCASG fund recipients that received SSBG supplemental funds 
designated for mental health care used them to provide crisis 
intervention, substance abuse, and other mental health services. LDHH 
distributed almost $12 million of the $80 million in SSBG supplemental 
funds designated for mental health care to the two PCASG fund 
recipients that are state regional human services districts--$4.3 
million to Metropolitan Human Services District (MHSD) and $7.6 million 
to Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority (JPHSA).[Footnote 36] MHSD 
and JPHSA in turn distributed most of these funds through contracts to 
other organizations and providers.[Footnote 37] They also retained a 
portion of these funds to spend on the direct provision of mental 
health care services or other expenses that were necessary for the 
restoration of these services, such as minor repairs or replacement of 
equipment and supplies. MHSD obligated $3.3 million under 30 contracts 
and retained $1 million for direct expenses; JPHSA obligated $4.3 
million under 80 contracts and retained nearly $3.4 million. Except for 
just over $88,000 of JPHSA's funds, all $12 million had been expended 
as of March 3, 2009. 

LDHH identified five mental health care service categories for the use 
of the SSBG supplemental funds. (See table 4.) Through March 3, 2009, 
the largest portion of funds that MHSD expended was for the category 
"substance abuse treatment and prevention." The largest portion of 
funds that JPHSA expended was for the category "immediate intervention-
-crisis response," with the second largest portion expended for the 
category "behavioral health services for children and adolescents." 
[Footnote 38] 

Table 4: Amounts and Percentages of Social Services Block Grant 
Supplemental Funds Designated for Mental Health Care That Were Expended 
by Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant Fund Recipients, by Type 
of Service, as of March 3, 2009: 

Mental health care service areas: Immediate intervention - crisis 
response; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Dollars in millions: 
$0.8; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Percentage: 18; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Dollars in 
millions: $2.9; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Percentage: 39. 

Mental health care service areas: Substance abuse treatment and 
prevention; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Dollars in millions: 
$1.9; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Percentage: 43; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Dollars in 
millions: $0.6; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Percentage: 9. 

Mental health care service areas: Behavioral health services for 
children and adolescents[A]; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Dollars in millions: 
$0.6; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Percentage: 14; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Dollars in 
millions: $2.4; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Percentage: 31. 

Mental health care service areas: Behavioral health program restoration 
and resumption[A]; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Dollars in millions: 
$0.6; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Percentage: 14; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Dollars in 
millions: $0.8; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Percentage: 11. 

Mental health care service areas: Prevention or reduction of 
inappropriate institutional care; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Dollars in millions: 
$0.5; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Percentage: 12; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Dollars in 
millions: $0.8; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Percentage: 10. 

Mental health care service areas: Total; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Dollars in millions: 
$4.4[B]; 
Metropolitan Human Services District expenditures: Percentage: 101[C]; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Dollars in 
millions: $7.5[D]; 
Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority expenditures: Percentage: 
100. 

Source: GAO analysis of Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals 
data. 

Note: The funds in this table were expended either through contracts to 
other organizations and providers or through direct services and 
related expenses. 

[A] Behavioral health is a term often used to refer to mental health 
and substance abuse services. 

[B] The total does not equal Metropolitan Human Services District's 
expenditures of $4.3 million because of rounding. 

[C] The total does not equal 100 percent because of rounding. 

[D] As of March 3, 2009, Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority had 
not expended about $88,000 of its total distribution of $7.6 million. 

[End of table] 

MHSD officials told us they used the SSBG supplemental funds to help 
maintain staff and relocate them to community-based mental health 
centers, where clients could be assessed and treated for mental health 
and addiction problems. In addition, MHSD placed an addiction counselor 
in a school-based health center to provide early intervention and 
treatment for substance abuse. MHSD officials also reported that they 
used funds to support crisis and addiction counseling for adults and 
children in churches, grief counseling for children in elementary 
schools, a summer camp that included mental health counseling, and 
community outreach services. 

JPHSA officials told us they used SSBG supplemental funds to provide 
services such as assertive community treatment,[Footnote 39] crisis 
intervention teams,[Footnote 40] mobile crisis services,[Footnote 41] 
suicide prevention services, group and individual therapy, and 
psychiatric evaluation. For example, JPHSA expanded its assertive 
community treatment program, in which services are provided at home or 
in community-based locations and include help with medication 
administration and monitoring. JPHSA officials reported that this 
program focused on patients who had a history of noncompliance with 
mental health treatment and were generally considered to be the persons 
most in need of mental health services. JPHSA also used the funds to 
support a program of community-based services for patients who were no 
longer in need of inpatient services or who were in crisis but not in 
need of an inpatient psychiatric hospital stay. Patients were given 24- 
hour care and supervision and attended group and individual counseling 
designed to provide crisis resolution skills and coping strategies; 
they were also linked to community-based resources such as community 
mental health clinics and supportive or independent housing. This 
program also served to alleviate the burden on inpatient psychiatric 
hospitals. 

About Two-Thirds of the PCASG Fund Recipients Employed a Health Care 
Provider Who Received a Professional Workforce Supply Grant Incentive 
Payment, and More Incentives Were Used for Retention Than for Hiring: 

As of August 2008, 17 of the 25 PCASG fund recipients had retained or 
hired a health care provider who had received a Professional Workforce 
Supply Grant incentive payment to continue or begin working in the 
greater New Orleans area.[Footnote 42] Among the health care providers 
working for PCASG fund recipients, 69 received incentives that totaled 
$4.5 million. (See table 5.) The number of those health care providers 
who were employed by individual PCASG fund recipients ranged from 1 or 
2 at 7 recipient organizations to 10 at 2 recipient organizations. 
These one-time, lump sum incentive payments, which could be used for 
purposes such as student loan repayment or relocation expenses, ranged 
from $10,000 to $110,000 each; the largest percentages of incentive 
payments and of funds went to primary care providers.[Footnote 43] In a 
2008 survey conducted by LDHH, 88 percent of all incentive recipients 
reported that the availability of an incentive payment affected their 
decision to remain or practice in the greater New Orleans area. 
[Footnote 44] 

Table 5: Health Care Providers Who Received Professional Workforce 
Supply Grant Incentive Payments and Were Employed by Primary Care 
Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund Recipients, by Provider 
Type, through August 2008: 

Provider type[A]: Primary care; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Number of health care providers who received an incentive: 29; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Percentage of health care providers who received an incentive: 42; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Dollars (in thousands): 
$2,806; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Percentage of funding: 
63. 

Provider type[A]: Mental health; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Number of health care providers who received an incentive: 16; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Percentage of health care providers who received an incentive: 23; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Dollars (in thousands): 
$1,030; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Percentage of funding: 
23. 

Provider type[A]: Registered nurses; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Number of health care providers who received an incentive: 14; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Percentage of health care providers who received an incentive: 20; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Dollars (in thousands): 
$225; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Percentage of funding: 5. 

Provider type[A]: Allied health[B]; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Number of health care providers who received an incentive: 7; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Percentage of health care providers who received an incentive: 10; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Dollars (in thousands): 
$85; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Percentage of funding: 2. 

Provider type[A]: Dental health; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Number of health care providers who received an incentive: 3; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Percentage of health care providers who received an incentive: 4; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Dollars (in thousands): 
$330; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Percentage of funding: 7. 

Provider type[A]: Total; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Number of health care providers who received an incentive: 69; 
Health care providers who received a Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant incentive payment and were employed by a PCASG fund recipient: 
Percentage of health care providers who received an incentive: 99[C]; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Dollars (in thousands): 
$4,476; 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentive payments to health care 
providers employed by a PCASG fund recipient: Percentage of funding: 
100. 

Source: GAO analysis of data provided by Louisiana Department of Health 
and Hospitals. 

Note: Additional health care providers who received incentive payments 
may be employed by the PCASG fund recipients, but not at sites eligible 
to use PCASG funds. 

[A] The Professional Workforce Supply Grant also provides incentive 
payments to faculty and specialists; however, none were employed by a 
PCASG fund recipient. 

[B] Allied health includes therapists, such as registered respiratory 
therapists, occupational therapists, and physical therapists, and 
specialists, such as clinical laboratory personnel, licensed addiction 
counselors, and licensed practical nurses. 

[C] The total does not equal 100 percent because of rounding. 

[End of table] 

Three-quarters of recipients of incentive payments were existing 
employees who were retained, while one-quarter were newly hired. This 
pattern is consistent with the incentive payments that were made 
overall, regardless of employing organization. In addition, no PCASG 
fund recipient hired more than two new staff who had received an 
incentive payment. In discussing these payments, a state official 
commented that retaining an existing employee is generally easier than 
hiring a new one. 

One PCASG Fund Recipient Provided Counseling Services through the CCP: 

One PCASG fund recipient provided counseling services with CCP funds. 
In 2005, immediately following Hurricane Katrina, the Louisiana Office 
of Mental Health contracted with Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New 
Orleans to be the sole CCP service provider in the four area parishes. 
This recipient expended $7.9 million of the $29 million in CCP funds 
awarded to Louisiana. In addition to providing counseling services, 
Catholic Charities' counselors provided information about available 
services such as primary care; mental health services; substance abuse 
treatment; and food, clothing, and housing assistance. Catholic 
Charities terminated its CCP role in May 2007, and the Louisiana Office 
of Mental Health took over its role.[Footnote 45] 

PCASG Fund Recipients Face Multiple Challenges and Have Various Plans 
for Sustainability: 

PCASG fund recipients face significant challenges in hiring and 
retaining staff, as well as in referring patients outside of their 
organizations, and these challenges have grown since Hurricane Katrina. 
Recipients are taking actions to address the challenge of 
sustainability, but it is too early to know whether they will be 
successful. 

PCASG Fund Recipients Face Significant Staffing and Referral 
Challenges, and These Challenges Have Grown Since Hurricane Katrina: 

Although most of the 23 PCASG fund recipients that responded to our 
survey hired or retained staff with grant funds, most have continued to 
face significant challenges in hiring and retaining staff. Hiring has 
been especially challenging. For example, 11 of the 23 recipients 
reported the hiring of health care providers to be a great challenge, 
and 9 reported it was a moderate challenge. (For detailed information 
on recipients' responses to the questions in our Web-based survey 
regarding challenges, see figure 3.) Among those that reported hiring 
providers was a great or moderate challenge, over three-quarters 
responded that this challenge had grown since Hurricane 
Katrina.[Footnote 46] In discussing challenges, officials from one 
recipient organization told us that after Hurricane Katrina they had 
greater difficulty hiring licensed nurses than before the hurricane. 
They also told us that most of the nurses who were available to be 
hired were recruited by hospitals, where the pay was higher. Moreover, 
officials we interviewed from several recipient organizations said that 
the problems with housing, schools, and overall community 
infrastructure that developed after Hurricane Katrina made it difficult 
to attract health care providers and other staff. An additional 
indication of limited availability of primary care providers in the 
area is HRSA's designation of all of Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. 
Bernard parishes and much of Jefferson Parish as HPSAs for primary 
care.[Footnote 47] While some portions of the greater New Orleans area 
had this HPSA designation before Hurricane Katrina, additional portions 
of the area received that designation after the hurricane. 

Figure 3: Ratings by Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant 
(PCASG) Fund Recipients of Challenges to Providing Primary Care 
Services, and Comparison with Period Prior to Hurricane Katrina: 

[Refer to PDF for image: two illustrated tables] 

Ratings of Current Challenges: 

To what extent do the items listed below present challenges for your 
organization in providing primary health care services to the greater 
New Orleans area? 

Hiring of health care providers: 
Great extent: 11; 
Moderate extent: 9; 
Minor extent or not at all: 3; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 0. 

Hiring of staff other than health care providers: 
Great extent: 9; 
Moderate extent: 8; 
Minor extent or not at all: 6; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 0. 

Retention of health care providers: 
Great extent: 7; 
Moderate extent: 9; 
Minor extent or not at all: 7; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 0. 

Retention of staff other than health care providers: 
Great extent: 5; 
Moderate extent: 9; 
Minor extent or not at all: 9; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 0. 

Availability of mental health providers willing to accept referrals: 
Great extent: 9; 
Moderate extent: 5; 
Minor extent or not at all: 8; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 1. 

Availability of dentists willing to accept dental care: 
Great extent: 6; 
Moderate extent: 4; 
Minor extent or not at all: 6; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 7. 

Availability of health care providers willing to accept specialty care 
referrals: 
Great extent: 9; 
Moderate extent: 4; 
Minor extent or not at all: 7; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 3. 

For those who rated the challenges to be great or moderate, we further 
analyzed their answers to the question below. 

Current challenges compared to those prior to Katrina: 

How do the current challenges your organization faces compare to those 
it faced prior to Hurricane Katrina? 

Hiring of health care providers: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 13; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 3; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 4. 

Hiring of staff other than health care providers: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 11; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 4; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 2. 

Retention of health care providers: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 10; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 3; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 3. 

Retention of staff other than health care providers: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 9; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 4; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 1. 

Availability of mental health providers willing to accept referrals: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 10; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 1; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 3. 

Availability of dentists willing to accept dental care referrals: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 6; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 2; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 2. 

Availability of health care providers willing to accept specialty care 
referrals: 
Greater now than before Katrina: 9; 
Equal to or less now than before Katrina: 1; 
No basis to judge/not applicable: 3. 

Source: GAO analysis of responses by PCASG fund recipients to GAO’s Web-
based survey. 

Note: Twenty-three of the 25 PCASG fund recipients responded to the 
survey. 

[End of figure] 

Retention of staff has also been a challenge for the PCASG fund 
recipients. (See figure 3.) For example, 16 of the 23 recipients 
reported that retaining health care providers was a great or moderate 
challenge. Among those that reported retaining health care providers 
was a great or moderate challenge, about three-quarters also reported 
that this challenge had grown since Hurricane Katrina. Retaining other 
staff has also been a challenge, with 14 of the 23 recipients reporting 
it to be a great or moderate challenge. About two-thirds of those 
reporting that retaining other staff was a moderate or great challenge 
also said this challenge had grown since Hurricane Katrina. 

The PCASG fund recipients that primarily provide mental health services 
in particular faced challenges both in hiring providers and in 
retaining providers.[Footnote 48] Six of the seven that responded to 
our survey reported that both hiring and retaining providers were 
either a great or moderate challenge. Six recipients reported that 
hiring was a great challenge, and five of these reported that the 
challenge was greater than before Hurricane Katrina. Three recipients 
reported that retention was a great challenge, and two of these also 
reported that the challenge had grown since Hurricane Katrina. An 
indication of more limited availability of mental health care providers 
is HRSA's designation of the four parishes of the greater New Orleans 
area as HPSAs for mental health in late 2005 and early 2006; before 
Hurricane Katrina, none of the parishes had this designation for mental 
health.[Footnote 49] Officials we interviewed from one recipient with 
multiple sites told us that while the Greater New Orleans Health 
Service Corps, which was funded through the Professional Workforce 
Supply Grant, had been helpful for recruiting and retaining physicians, 
it had not helped fill the need for social workers. Furthermore, 
officials we interviewed from two recipients with multiple sites told 
us that some staff had experienced depression and trauma themselves and 
found it difficult to work in mental health settings. 

Beyond challenges in hiring and retaining their own providers and other 
staff, PCASG fund recipients that responded to our survey reported 
significant challenges in referring their patients to other 
organizations for mental health, dental, and specialty care services. 
(See figure 3.) Specifically, 14 of the 23 recipients reported that the 
availability of mental health providers willing to accept referrals was 
a great or moderate challenge, and over two-thirds of those reporting 
that level of challenge responded that this challenge had grown since 
Hurricane Katrina. In addition, 10 of the 16 recipients that indicated 
that the question on dental service referrals was applicable to them 
reported that the availability of dentists willing to accept referrals 
was a great or moderate challenge, and about two-thirds of those 
reporting that level of challenge also reported that this challenge was 
greater than before Hurricane Katrina. An additional indication of 
limited availability of dental care is that HRSA has designated all of 
Orleans, St. Bernard, and Plaquemines parishes and part of Jefferson 
Parish as HPSAs for dental care; before Katrina, only part of Orleans 
Parish and part of Jefferson Parish had this designation.[Footnote 50] 
Finally, 13 of the 20 recipients that indicated that the question on 
specialty care referrals was applicable to them reported that the 
availability of providers willing to accept referrals for specialty 
care was a great or moderate challenge,[Footnote 51] and two-thirds of 
those reported that this challenge had grown since Hurricane Katrina. 

PCASG Fund Recipients Are Taking Actions to Address the Challenge of 
Sustainability, but It Is Too Early to Know Whether They Will Be 
Successful: 

An additional challenge that the PCASG fund recipients face is to be 
sustainable after PCASG funds are no longer available. All 23 
recipients that responded to our survey reported that they had taken or 
planned to take at least one type of action to increase their ability 
to be sustainable--that is, to be able to serve patients regardless of 
their ability to pay after PCASG funds are no longer available. For 
example, all responding recipients reported that they had taken action-
-such as screening patients for eligibility--to facilitate their 
ability to receive reimbursement for services they provided to Medicaid 
or LaCHIP beneficiaries. Furthermore, 16 recipients reported that they 
were billing private insurance, with an additional 5 recipients 
reporting they planned to do so. However, obtaining reimbursement for 
all patients who are insured may not be sufficient to ensure a 
recipient's sustainability, because at about half of the PCASG fund 
recipients, over 50 percent of the patients are uninsured. 

Many PCASG fund recipients reported that they intended to use Health 
Center Program funding or FQHC Look-Alike designation--which allows for 
enhanced Medicare and Medicaid payment rates--as one of their 
sustainability strategies. Four recipients were participating in the 
Health Center Program at the time they received the initial 
disbursement of PCASG funds. One of these recipients had received a 
Health Center New Access Point grant to open an additional site after 
Hurricane Katrina and had also received an Expanded Medical Capacity 
grant to increase service capacity, which it used in part to hire 
additional staff and buy equipment. Another of these recipients 
received a New Access Point grant to open an additional site after 
receiving PCASG funds. Beyond these four recipients, one additional 
recipient received an FQHC Look-Alike designation in July 2008 and a 
New Access Point grant in March 2009. Of the remaining 18 recipients 
that responded to our survey, 6 said they planned to apply for both a 
Health Center Program grant and an FQHC Look-Alike designation. In 
addition, 1 planned to apply for a grant only and another planned to 
apply for an FQHC Look-Alike designation only. Although many recipients 
indicated that they intended to use Health Center Program funding as a 
sustainability strategy, they may not all be successful in obtaining a 
grant. For example, in fiscal year 2008 only about 16 percent of all 
applications for New Access Point grants resulted in grant awards. 
[Footnote 52] 

About three-quarters of PCASG fund recipients reported that as one of 
their sustainability strategies they had applied or planned to apply 
for additional federal funding, such as Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program 
grants,[Footnote 53] or for state funding. In addition, a few reported 
that they had applied or planned to apply for private grants, such as 
from foundations. 

Although PCASG fund recipients have completed or planned actions to 
increase their ability to be sustainable, it is too early to know 
whether their various sustainability strategies will be successful. One 
factor that may affect the degree of challenge in achieving 
sustainability is whether a recipient is part of a larger institution, 
such as a university or government body, that could potentially provide 
additional funds after PCASG funds are no longer available. Similarly, 
sustainability may be a less difficult challenge for organizations that 
are already grantees of HRSA's Health Center Program. 

Agency Comments: 

HHS reviewed a draft of this report and provided technical comments, 
which we incorporated as appropriate. 

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to the Secretary of Health and Human Services and other interested 
parties. In addition, the report will be available at no charge on the 
GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-7114 or bascettac@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions 
to this report are listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Cynthia A. Bascetta: 
Director, Health Care: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

We focused our review on the 25 outpatient provider organizations that 
in September 2007 received funding through the Primary Care Access and 
Stabilization Grant (PCASG), which the Department of Health and Human 
Services (HHS) awarded to the Louisiana Department of Health and 
Hospitals (LDHH). The PCASG funds were targeted to the greater New 
Orleans area--specifically, Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. 
Bernard parishes--because of the impact Hurricane Katrina had on this 
area. In this report we examine (1) how PCASG fund recipients used the 
PCASG funds to support the provision of primary care services in the 
greater New Orleans area, (2) how PCASG fund recipients used and 
benefited from other federal hurricane relief funds that support the 
restoration of primary care services in the greater New Orleans area, 
and (3) challenges the PCASG fund recipients continued to face in 
providing primary care services, and recipients' plans for sustaining 
services after PCASG funds are no longer available. 

In conducting our work, we reviewed relevant literature. We also 
interviewed officials at various agencies within HHS, including the 
Administration for Children and Families, Centers for Medicare & 
Medicaid Services (CMS), Health Resources and Services Administration 
(HRSA), and Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. 

To determine how the PCASG fund recipients used PCASG funds to support 
the provision of primary care services in the greater New Orleans 
area,[Footnote 54] we conducted site visits and developed and 
implemented a Web-based survey. We also reviewed the recipients' grant 
applications and interviewed officials at the LDHH and Louisiana Public 
Health Institute (LPHI) about how the recipients used PCASG funds. LPHI 
administers the PCASG program and distributes the grant funds as the 
local partner of LDHH. 

We conducted site visits at 8 of the 25 PCASG fund recipients during 
April 2008. During these visits we collected documents and interviewed 
PCASG fund recipient, state, and local officials. To identify the 
locations for our site visits, we chose a selective sample of the 
recipients to include at least 1 from each of the area's four parishes. 
We also selected recipients so that our sample would include some that 
offered mental health care services and some that offered dental care 
services, and we included 2 recipients that were grant recipients of 
HRSA's Health Center Program. 

We developed a Web-based survey that focused on how PCASG fund 
recipients used PCASG funds, the challenges they continued to face, and 
their plans for sustainability. To develop our survey questions, we 
analyzed our interviews with officials from PCASG fund recipients, CMS, 
and state and local agencies; reviewed the recipients' applications for 
funding; and reviewed the PCASG Notice of Award. In addition, before we 
disseminated the survey to the 25 recipients, the content of the survey 
questions was peer-reviewed by LPHI because of its expertise on the 
grant program. We received responses from 23 of the 25 recipients, a 
response rate of 92 percent. To assess the reliability of the survey 
data, we performed quality checks, such as reviewing survey data for 
inconsistencies and completeness and, when necessary, followed up with 
survey respondents via the telephone to resolve any inconsistencies and 
obtain missing information. Based on these efforts, we determined that 
the survey data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of this 
report. 

To answer our question on how the PCASG fund recipients used and 
benefited from other federal funds for hurricane relief, we reviewed 
and analyzed data collected by LDHH on expenditures related to the 
supplemental Social Services Block Grant (SSBG). Where possible, we 
used documents from and interviews with state and PCASG fund recipient 
officials to identify SSBG supplemental funds expended at PCASG sites. 
In addition, we reviewed and analyzed data gathered by LDHH related to 
the incentive payments made under the Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant and expenditures under the Crisis Counseling Assistance and 
Training Program (CCP). For the incentive payments made using the 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant, LDHH provided us with information 
about health care providers working at PCASG sites. They used the 
employment address, rather than recipient name, to identify which 
providers to include. They provided data about the amount of payment, 
payment type (retention or hiring), and provider type (for example, 
internist or nurse). For the CCP, we obtained data from LDHH on program 
expenditures at PCASG sites. We also interviewed officials from LDHH 
and PCASG fund recipients about the implementation of these programs in 
the greater New Orleans area. To assess the reliability of the data we 
received from LDHH related to the SSBG, Professional Workforce Supply 
Grant, and CCP, we performed checks of internal consistency and 
verified information with state and local officials where possible. 
Based on these efforts, we determined that the data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of this report. 

To answer our questions on challenges PCASG fund recipients continued 
to face in providing primary care services and how PCASG fund 
recipients plan to sustain primary care services after funds are no 
longer available, we used information collected from our Web-based 
survey. We also analyzed interviews we conducted with 10 recipients, 
including the 8 we visited, and from federal, state, and local 
agencies. In addition, to determine how recipients planned to sustain 
primary care services, we reviewed sustainability plans that the 
recipients included in their applications for PCASG funding. We also 
analyzed information provided by HRSA on Health Center Program grants 
awarded to PCASG fund recipients and on overall program grants awarded 
in fiscal years 2007 and 2008. 

To provide additional information on the PCASG fund recipients, we used 
data collected by LPHI about the recipients. We analyzed data that LPHI 
provided to us on each PCASG fund recipient for the period September 
21, 2007, through March 20, 2008, regarding (1) patients and 
encounters,[Footnote 55] and (2) types of services that recipients 
offered.[Footnote 56] We obtained these data for this period because at 
the time of our request, this was the only period for which LPHI had 
completed its data accuracy and reliability checks on the patient and 
encounter data. We requested that LPHI summarize for us at the 
recipient level both the number of patients and the number of 
encounters, by age and insurance status.[Footnote 57] 

To assess the reliability of data we received from LPHI on patient and 
encounter data and on types of services offered, we did the following: 
(1) reviewed relevant documentation, (2) discussed with knowledgeable 
agency officials the data and the processes they used to establish the 
accuracy and reliability of the data provided, and (3) where possible, 
compared data to published sources. Based on these activities, we 
determined that these data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes 
of our report. 

We conducted our work from February 2008 through June 2009 in 
accordance with all sections of GAO's Quality Assurance Framework that 
are relevant to our objectives. The framework requires that we plan and 
perform the engagement to obtain sufficient and appropriate evidence to 
meet our stated objectives and to discuss any limitations in our work. 
We believe that the information and data obtained, and the analysis 
conducted, provide a reasonable basis for any findings and conclusions 
in this product. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant Fund 
Recipients: Characteristics, Patients, and Services: 

In July 2007, HHS awarded the $100 million PCASG to LDHH,[Footnote 58] 
which in turn provided funds to 25 outpatient provider organizations in 
the greater New Orleans area in September 2007.[Footnote 59] CMS is 
responsible for administering the program at the federal level. LPHI is 
LDHH's local partner for administering the grant program. 

The 25 organizations that are PCASG fund recipients vary in size and in 
the geographical area they serve. (See table 6.) Furthermore, some 
recipients are affiliated with an institution such as a university or 
state or local government, and some receive funding from the Health 
Center Program of HHS's HRSA.[Footnote 60] 

Table 6: Selected Characteristics of Primary Care Access and 
Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund Recipients, September 21, 2007, 
through March 20, 2008: 

Recipient: Administrators of Tulane Educational Fund[C]; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 5; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New Orleans; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans and Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 3; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Children's Hospital Medical Practice Corporation; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans and Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 11; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Check]. 

Recipient: City of New Orleans Health Department; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 4[D]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Check]. 

Recipient: Common Ground Health Clinic; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 2; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Check]. 

Recipient: Covenant House New Orleans; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Daughters of Charity Services of New Orleans; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans and Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 5; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: EXCELth, Inc.; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 2; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Jefferson Community Health Care Centers, Inc.; 
Parish where services provided: Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 3; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority; 
Parish where services provided: Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 4; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Leading Edge Services International (also known as Family 
Health Center); 
Parish where services provided: Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: LSU Healthcare Network Behavioral Science Center; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans (School Based Health 
Centers); 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 2; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Lower 9th Ward Health Clinic; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Medical Center of Louisiana at New Orleans; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 9; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Check]. 

Recipient: Metropolitan Human Services District[E]; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard; 
Number of sites[B]: 7; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: New Orleans Adolescent Hospital and Community Services; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 4; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: New Orleans Musicians' Assistance Foundation; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 2; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: NO/AIDS Task Force; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Odyssey House Louisiana, Inc.[F]; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 2; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Plaquemines Medical Center; 
Parish where services provided: Plaquemines; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: Sisters of Mercy Ministries (also known as Mercy Family 
Center); 
Parish where services provided: Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: St. Bernard Health Center, Inc.; 
Parish where services provided: St. Bernard; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Empty]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: St. Charles Community Health Center - Kenner; 
Parish where services provided: Jefferson; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Recipient: St. Thomas Community Health Center; 
Parish where services provided: Orleans; 
Number of sites[B]: 1; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Medical: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Mental: [Check]; 
Type of primary health care services offered[A]: Dental: [Empty]. 

Source: GAO analysis of the Louisiana Public Health Institute's (LPHI) 
summary of data reported by PCASG fund recipients. 

Notes: The Department of Health and Human Services awarded the PCASG to 
the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals in July 2007 to 
restore and expand access to primary care services, including mental 
health care services and dental care services, in the greater New 
Orleans area; 25 outpatient provider organizations that applied and met 
the requirements established by CMS were awarded PCASG funding. 
September 21, 2007, through March 20, 2008, was the first period for 
which PCASG fund recipients reported data on their activities to LPHI. 

[A] The primary health care services offered represent those that were 
offered at sites eligible to use PCASG funds; health care services that 
were provided through referral are not included in the table. 

[B] The number of sites is the number eligible to use PCASG funds and 
operating during the period September 21, 2007, through March 20, 2008. 
Some of the PCASG fund recipients had other sites that were not 
eligible to use PCASG funds. 

[C] The Administrators of Tulane Educational Fund is part of Tulane 
University. 

[D] Although the City of New Orleans Health Department operated 4 sites 
during the period September 21, 2007, through March 20, 2008, the 
department provided data for only 2 of these sites. 

[E] The Metropolitan Human Services District primarily provides mental 
health care services. At the patient's request, it also provides 
pregnancy testing. 

[F] Odyssey House Louisiana, Inc. primarily provides mental health care 
services. However, it hosts with other organizations a clinic that 
offers medical care services. 

[End of table] 

For the period September 21, 2007, through March 20, 2008,[Footnote 61] 
the PCASG fund recipients provided primary care services to a 
population that was largely uninsured or enrolled in Medicaid.[Footnote 
62] The recipients reported to LPHI that they used PCASG funds to 
support services provided to about 82,400 patients. The recipients also 
used other funds, such as other federal grants or Medicaid 
reimbursement, to support these services. Almost three-quarters of the 
recipients' patients were either uninsured or enrolled in Medicaid or 
the Louisiana Children's Health Insurance Program (LaCHIP).[Footnote 
63] (See figure 4.) At more than half of the PCASG fund recipients, at 
least 50 percent of their patient population was uninsured, and for 
most of these recipients the uninsured patient population was greater 
than 70 percent. Overall, 18 percent of patients served by the 
recipients were privately insured, although three recipients served a 
privately insured population of over 40 percent. 

Figure 4: Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant (PCASG) Fund 
Recipients' Patient Population, by Health Insurance Status, September 
21, 2007, through March 20, 2008: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

Uninsured (35,650): 43%; 
Medicaid or LaCHIP (23,572): 29%; 
Private (14,896): 18%; 
Medicare (3,916): 5%; 
Other[A] (2,211): 3%; 
Missing and unknown (2,155): 3%. 

Source: GAO analysis of Louisiana Public Health Institute’s (LPHI) 
summary of data reported by PCASG fund recipients. 

Notes: The patient population equals 82,401. The percentages do not 
total to 100 percent due to rounding. These data were collected by LPHI 
from the 25 PCASG fund recipients. 

[A] "Other" includes patients who were in different insurance 
categories for two or more encounters, such as patients who were 
uninsured at the time of the first encounter and were covered by 
Medicaid at the time of the second encounter. 

[End of figure] 

The 25 PCASG fund recipients varied in the mix of primary care services 
they offered. During the reporting period, 19 of the recipients 
reported to LPHI that they offered medical care services, either solely 
or in combination with mental health care services.[Footnote 64] Of 
these 19 recipients, 4 also offered dental care services. A total of 22 
recipients offered mental health care services, such as counseling, 
psychiatry, and services related to substance abuse. The recipients 
also offered certain specialty care services and ancillary services. 
Eleven recipients either directly offered the specialty care services 
of podiatry, optometry, and tuberculosis therapy[Footnote 65] or 
provided referrals to organizations that provided these services. 
Almost all of the recipients offered ancillary services in addition to 
providing primary care services. For example, translation and 
interpretation, health education, and outreach services were each 
offered at over half of the recipients. 

The PCASG fund recipients reported to LPHI that they provided nearly 
194,000 health care encounters during the period September 21, 2007, 
through March 20, 2008.[Footnote 66] Sixty percent of encounters were 
for medical or dental care,[Footnote 67] 38 percent for mental health 
care, and 1 percent for specialty care. (See figure 5.) For medical and 
dental care encounters and for mental health care encounters, adults 
represented about two-thirds of the encounters and children about one- 
third. Almost half of the medical and dental care encounters were with 
patients who were uninsured, and more than one-third of the mental 
health encounters were provided to uninsured patients. About one-third 
of both medical and dental care encounters and mental health care 
encounters were with Medicaid or LaCHIP beneficiaries. 

Figure 5: Encounters at Primary Care Access and Stabilization Grant 
(PCASG) Fund Recipients, by Service Type, September 21, 2007, through 
March 20, 2008: 

[Refer to PDF for image: series of related pie-charts] 

Total encounters[A] (N=193,745): 

* Medical and dental care[B] (N = 116,820 - 60%): 

By age: 
0-4: 17,654 (15%); 
5-17: 22,391 (19%); 
18-64: 69,558 (60%); 
65+: 7,168 (6%); 
Missing: 49 (<1%). 

By insurance status: 
Medicaid or LaCHIP: 34,818 (30%); 
Medicare: 6,944 (6%); 
Private: 20,996 (18%); 
Uninsured: 53,277 (46%); 
Other[C]: 28 (<1%); 
Missing: 757 (<1%). 

* Mental health care (N = 73,412 - 38%): 

By age: 
0-4: 240 (<1%); 
5-17: 23,194 (32%); 
18-64: 47,977 (65%); 
65+: 1,920 (3%); 
Missing: 81 (<1%). 

By insurance status: 
Medicaid or LaCHIP: 26,156 (36%); 
Medicare: 5,050 (7%); 
Private: 6,110 (8%); 
Uninsured: 27,660 (38%); 
Other[C]: 1,250 (2%); 
Missing: 7,186 (10%). 

* Specialty care (N = 2,273 - 1%): 

By age: 
0-4: 5 (<1%); 
l5-17: 25 (1%); 
18-64: 2,002 (88%); 
65+: 240 (11%); 
Missing: 2 (<1%). 

By insurance status: 
Medicaid or LaCHIP: 263 (12%); 
Medicare: 161 (7%); 
Private: 145 (6%); 
Uninsured: 1,702 (75%); 
Other[C]: 1 (<1%); 
Missing: 1 (<1%). 

Source: GAO analysis of Louisiana Public Health Institute’s (LPHI) 
summary of data reported by PCASG fund recipients. 

Notes: These data were collected by LPHI from the 25 PCASG fund 
recipients. Percentages do not total to 100 percent due to rounding. In 
addition to the PCASG funds, all of these recipients have used other 
funds to provide services. 

[A] An encounter is an interaction between a patient and a provider for 
the purpose of meeting a health care need. It can occur by telephone or 
in person. 

[B] The data on medical and dental encounters are combined; the number 
of dental encounters was small. 

[C] "Other" includes patients who were in different insurance 
categories for two or more encounters, such as patients who were 
uninsured at the time of the first encounter and were Medicaid 
beneficiaries at the time of the second encounter. 

[End of figure] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Cynthia A. Bascetta, 202-512-7114 or bascettac@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the person named above, Helene F. Toiv, Assistant 
Director; Martha R. W. Kelly; Carolyn Feis Korman; Deitra Lee; Roseanne 
Price; Dan Ries; Jennifer Whitworth; Rasanjali Wickrema; and Malissa 
Winograd made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Hurricane Katrina: Barriers to Mental Health Services for Children 
Persist in Greater New Orleans, Although Federal Grants Are Helping to 
Address Them. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-563]. 
Washington, D.C.: July 13, 2009. 

Disaster Assistance: Greater Coordination and an Evaluation of 
Programs' Outcomes Could Improve Disaster Case Management. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-561]. Washington, D.C.: July 8, 
2009. 

Catastrophic Disasters: Federal Efforts Help States Prepare for and 
Respond to Psychological Consequences, but FEMA's Crisis Counseling 
Program Needs Improvements. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-22]. Washington, D.C.: February 29, 
2008. 

Hurricane Katrina: Allocation and Use of $2 Billion for Medicaid and 
Other Health Care Needs. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-67]. Washington D.C.: February 28, 
2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Status of Hospital Inpatient and Emergency 
Departments in the Greater New Orleans Area. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-1003]. Washington, D.C.: September 
29, 2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: Status of the Health Care System in New Orleans and 
Difficult Decisions Related to Efforts to Rebuild It Approximately 6 
Months after Hurricane Katrina. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-576R]. Washington, D.C.: March 28, 
2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: GAO's Preliminary Observations Regarding 
Preparedness, Response, and Recovery. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-442T]. Washington, D.C.: March 8, 
2006. 

Mental Health Services: Effectiveness of Insurance Coverage and Federal 
Programs for Children Who Have Experienced Trauma Largely Unknown. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-813]. Washington, D.C.: 
August 22, 2002. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Hurricane Katrina made landfall on August 29, 2005. Hurricane Rita 
made landfall on September 24, 2005, and caused additional damage to 
the greater New Orleans area. 

[2] In this report, we define primary care as basic medical care that 
is generally provided in an outpatient setting such as a clinic or 
general practitioner's office, as opposed to in a hospital. 

[3] Medicaid is a federal-state health insurance program for certain 
low-income individuals. 

[4] Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, New Orleans Three Years after 
the Storm: The Second Kaiser Post-Katrina Survey, 2008 (August 2008); 
and David Abramson, et al., "Prevalence and Predictors of Mental Health 
Distress Post-Katrina: Findings from the Gulf Coast Child and Family 
Health Study," Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, vol. 
2, no. 2 (2008), 77-86. 

[5] This grant was made under a provision of the Deficit Reduction Act 
of 2005 authorizing payments to restore access to health care in 
communities affected by Hurricane Katrina. Pub. L. No. 109-171, § 
6201(a)(4), 120 Stat. 4, 133 (2006). Notice of Single Source Grant 
Award, 72 Fed. Reg. 51,230 (Sept. 9, 2007). 

[6] In this report, we define mental health care services to include 
substance abuse prevention and treatment services. 

[7] March 20, 2008, was the end date of the first period for which 
recipients of PCASG funds reported data on their activities to LPHI. In 
this report, we describe the data for this period at the recipient 
level. As of December 2008, the 25 PCASG fund recipients were operating 
91 sites that were eligible to use those funds. 

[8] For the PCASG, CMS defines sustainability as the ability to 
continue to provide primary care to all patients (regardless of their 
ability to pay) through some funding mechanism other than the PCASG 
funds, such as enrolling as a provider in Medicaid or another public or 
private insurer. PCASG funds, which were given only to the state of 
Louisiana, were made available to Louisiana for a 3-year period, from 
July 23, 2007, through September 30, 2010. 

[9] FEMA administers the CCP through an annual interagency agreement 
with SAMHSA. 

[10] In this report, we define the greater New Orleans area in the same 
way CMS does for PCASG purposes--Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and 
St. Bernard parishes. 

[11] An encounter is an interaction between a patient and provider for 
the purpose of meeting a health care need. An encounter can occur in 
person or by telephone. 

[12] We have previously reported on HRSA's Health Center Program. See 
GAO, Health Centers: Competition for Grants and Efforts to Measure 
Performance Have Increased, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-645] (Washington, D.C.: July 13, 
2005), and Health Resources and Services Administration: Many 
Underserved Areas Lack a Health Center Site, and the Health Center 
Program Needs More Oversight, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-723] (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 8, 
2008). 

[13] 2007 La. Acts 243, codified at LA. REV. STAT. ANN. §§ 46.978 - 979 
(2009). 

[14] Louisiana Health Care Redesign Collaborative, Concept Paper for a 
Redesigned Health Care System for Region 1 (Baton Rouge, La.: 2006). 

[15] LaCHIP is the name of Louisiana's State Children's Health 
Insurance Program. The State Children's Health Insurance Program is a 
federal-state health insurance program that offers insurance to certain 
children under age 19 whose family income is too high for Medicaid 
eligibility and who are not enrolled under other health insurance. 

[16] States operate and administer their Medicaid programs 
independently within federal requirements established in statute and 
regulations, and the federal government shares in the cost of each 
state's program by paying an established share of states' reported 
expenditures. Section 1115 of the Social Security Act, however, 
authorizes HHS to waive compliance with certain federal statutory 
requirements, as well as to authorize costs that would not otherwise be 
included as Medicaid expenditures, for demonstrations HHS determines 
are likely to promote Medicaid objectives, allowing states to apply to 
test and evaluate new approaches for delivering Medicaid services. 

[17] Additional CCP funds were distributed elsewhere in Louisiana. In 
December 2008, Louisiana was awarded an additional $2.8 million in CCP 
funds to cover the costs of services provided in the 2 months following 
Hurricane Gustav, which made landfall in Louisiana on September 1, 
2008. 

[18] SSBG supplemental funds were appropriated to HHS for expenses 
related to the 2005 hurricanes under the Department of Defense, 
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations to Address Hurricanes in the Gulf 
of Mexico, and Pandemic Influenza Act, 2006 (Pub. L. No. 109-148, div. 
B, title I, ch. 6, 119 Stat. 2680, 2768 (2005)), which specified that 
the funds could be used for health services, including mental health, 
as well as for repairs, renovations, and construction of health 
facilities. Additional SSBG supplemental funds were appropriated to HHS 
in the Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing 
Appropriations Act, 2009 (Pub. L. No. 110-329, div. B, title I, ch. 7, 
122 Stat. 3574, 3594-95 (2008)), for expenses related to the 2008 
natural disasters and Hurricanes Rita and Katrina. In January 2009, 
Louisiana was awarded an additional $129.7 million from these funds. 

[19] The period of time these funds are available for expenditure by 
states was extended through the end of fiscal year 2009 by the U.S. 
Troop Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq 
Accountability Appropriations Act, 2007. Pub. L. No. 110-28, § 4702, 
121 Stat.112, 160. 

[20] LDHH's Office of Mental Health, Office of Addictive Disorders, and 
Office for Citizens with Developmental Disabilities provide services in 
some parts of the state through regional human services districts. An 
LDHH official told us that the human services districts allow for local 
control, involvement, and plans based on the unique needs in each 
region. 

[21] The Secretary of HHS initially awarded the state of Louisiana $15 
million for the Hurricane Katrina Healthcare Related Professional 
Workforce Supply Grant in March 2007. A supplement of $35 million was 
awarded in June 2007. These awards were made under the authority of the 
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. Pub. L. No. 109-171, § 6201(a)(4), 120 
Stat. 4, 133 (2006). 

[22] According to CMS, health care professionals whose services could 
be supported with grant funds could include pediatricians, internists, 
family practitioners, obstetricians, psychiatrists, dentists, 
registered nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and other 
licensed health care providers and professionals. 

[23] The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 appropriated $2 billion for 
these Hurricane Katrina-related activities. We have previously reported 
on the allocation of funds under the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. See 
GAO, Hurricane Katrina: Allocation and Use of $2 Billion for Medicaid 
and Other Health Care Needs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-67] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 28, 
2007). 

[24] CMS, in collaboration with officials from other HHS agencies, 
including HRSA and SAMSHA, had developed guidance that helped LDHH and 
LPHI to identify potential applicants for funds from Louisiana; 35 
provider organizations in the greater New Orleans area applied for 
PCASG funds. 

[25] Other requirements were that the organization must establish a 
system to collect and organize patient and encounter data and report 
the data to LDHH through LPHI, and provide plans if the organization 
intends to relocate or renovate health care sites. 

[26] Initial disbursements for 24 PCASG fund recipients were calculated 
on the basis of operating costs resulting from the number of full-time- 
equivalent health care providers working for the organization at the 
time it applied for PCASG funds. These PCASG fund recipients received 
disbursements that ranged from a minimum of $239,950 to a maximum of 
$719,849, which was the funding cap. The other recipient, the New 
Orleans Health Department, received $4 million to be used to increase 
clinical services; recruit physicians, dentists, registered nurses, and 
other licensed professional health care staff for two new sites; and 
staff dental and vision care mobile vans. The initial disbursement 
awarded to the New Orleans Health Department was not calculated using 
the formula used to determine the initial disbursements for the other 
PCASG fund recipients because the grant specifically included $4 
million for the City of New Orleans Health Department. 

[27] Each supplemental disbursement is calculated on the basis of the 
recipient's patient count for the relevant time period. The patient 
count is weighted on the basis of the patient's age and insurance 
status and the type of services provided. The 25 PCASG fund recipients 
received supplemental disbursements in December 2007, June 2008, and 
December 2008. As of December 2008, the total amount of PCASG funds 
disbursed to recipients was more than $62 million. 

[28] The evaluation will assess the progress made in creating a network 
of primary care "medical homes" at the neighborhood level, evaluate 
improvements in access to primary care, and estimate health system 
costs (in a medical home model, a patient's care is managed and 
coordinated by a personal physician). The expected date of publication 
was not available as of June 2009. 

[29] According to a CMS official, PCASG funding could be used to open 
new sites in existing buildings or structures but could not be used for 
construction of a new building. 

[30] Proposals for renovation are generally reviewed by LPHI and LDHH. 
CMS must approve renovation plans that cost more than $150,000. 

[31] Evidence-based standards of care incorporate treatments and 
services for which effectiveness is well documented. 

[32] The SSBG supplemental funds were distributed before organizations 
received PCASG funds. Dollar amounts reflect funds expended by PCASG 
fund recipients at sites where they later used PCASG funds. 

[33] SSBG supplemental grant funds are available to recipients until 
September 2009. 

[34] LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans includes the school of 
medicine and provides direct health care as part of its educational 
mission. 

[35] LDSS gave additional funds to LSU Health Care Services Division 
and to Tulane University; however, these funds were not spent at sites 
where these PCASG fund recipients used PCASG funds. 

[36] MHSD serves Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard parishes, and 
JPHSA serves Jefferson Parish. 

[37] None of the contracts were awarded to other PCASG fund recipients. 

[38] Behavioral health is a term often used to refer to mental health 
and substance abuse services. 

[39] Assertive community treatment is a team treatment approach 
designed to provide comprehensive, community-based psychiatric 
treatment, rehabilitation, and support to persons with serious and 
persistent mental illness, such as schizophrenia. 

[40] Crisis intervention is immediate, short-term help to individuals 
who experienced an event that produced emotional, mental, physical, and 
behavioral distress or problems. It aims to reduce the intensity of an 
individual's emotional, mental, physical, and behavioral reactions to a 
crisis or to help individuals return to their level of functioning 
before the crisis. 

[41] Mobile crisis intervention is help that is available 24 hours a 
day to adults and children with mental illness, an addictive disorder, 
or a developmental disability. 

[42] In discussing the incentive payments made from Professional 
Workforce Supply Grant funds, the information we provide about the 25 
PCASG fund recipients is based on the more than 80 sites that were also 
eligible to use PCASG funds as of August 2008. Additional health care 
providers who have received incentives may be employed by PCASG fund 
recipients, but not at sites eligible to use PCASG funds. 

[43] Incentive payments were distributed to individual health care 
providers as one-time, lump sum payments based on the incentive option 
chosen by the provider, including student loan repayment, 1 year's 
malpractice insurance premium, sign-on bonus, income guarantee for 1 
year, continuing education expenses, and relocation expenses. The 
maximum allowable amounts varied by type of provider and incentive 
option. 

[44] The survey was conducted with all individuals receiving 
Professional Workforce Supply Grant incentives and did not present 
results separately for those individuals employed at PCASG recipient 
organizations. 

[45] According to program officials, Catholic Charities terminated this 
relationship because indirect costs were not reimbursable. We 
previously reported on the challenges associated with this limitation 
and recommended that FEMA revise CCP policy to allow for reimbursement 
of indirect costs. See GAO, Catastrophic Disasters: Federal Efforts 
Help States Prepare for and Respond to Psychological Consequences, but 
FEMA's Crisis Counseling Program Needs Improvements, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-22] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 29, 
2008). 

[46] Each time we calculated the proportion of survey respondents that 
said a challenge had grown since Hurricane Katrina, we excluded from 
the analysis respondents whose response was "no basis to judge/not 
applicable." 

[47] HPSAs are used to identify geographic areas, population groups, or 
facilities facing a shortage of primary care, dental, or mental health 
providers. 

[48] For additional discussion of the limited availability of mental 
health providers, see GAO, Hurricane Katrina: Barriers to Mental Health 
Services for Children Persist in Greater New Orleans, Although Federal 
Grants Are Helping to Address Them, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-563] (Washington, D.C.: July 13, 
2009). 

[49] HPSA geographic designation for mental health is based on the 
ratio of population to mental health professionals, as well as other 
factors, including an unusually high need for mental health services. 

[50] The availability of dentists is a problem in general for 
underserved populations in the United States. See, for example, A. 
Snyder, Increasing Access to Dental Care in Medicaid: Targeted Programs 
for Four Populations, a report prepared for the National Academy for 
State Health Policy (March 2009); and L.E. Mentasti and E.A. Thibodeau, 
"Dental School Applicants by State Compared to Population and Dentist 
Workforce Distribution," Journal of Dental Education, vol. 72, no. 11 
(2008). 

[51] Specialty care referrals are a problem in general for underserved 
populations. See, for example, GAO, Health Centers: Competition for 
Grants and Efforts to Measure Performance Have Increased, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-645] (Washington, D.C.: July 13, 
2005), 28; and J. S. Weissman, et al., "Limits to the Safety Net: 
Teaching Hospital Faculty Report on Their Patients' Access to Care," 
Health Affairs, vol. 22, no. 6 (2003). 

[52] The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 provided HRSA 
with $2 billion for the Health Center Program. Pub. L. No. 111-5, div. 
A, title VIII, 123 Stat. 115, 175. However, $155 million was used for 
New Access Point grants in March 2009, and HRSA plans to use the 
remainder to provide various types of grants to existing Health Center 
Program grantees. 

[53] Through the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act 
of 1990 and subsequent legislation, HRSA provides federal funds to 
metropolitan areas, states, and others to assist with the cost of core 
medical and support services for individuals and families infected and 
affected by HIV/AIDS. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 300ff through 300ff-121. 

[54] In this report, we define the greater New Orleans area in the same 
way CMS does for PCASG purposes--Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and 
St. Bernard parishes. 

[55] An encounter is an interaction between a patient and a provider 
for the purpose of meeting a health care need. An encounter can occur 
in person or by telephone. 

[56] PCASG fund recipients provided data to LPHI for 73 of the 75 sites 
eligible to receive PCASG funds during this period. PCASG funds were 
not the only funds used to provide the services these data describe. 
Although the City of New Orleans Health Department had 4 PCASG-eligible 
sites, the department provided data for only 2 of these sites. 

[57] To collect uniform data, LPHI provided the recipients with forms 
and guidance on completing these forms. 

[58] This grant was made under a provision of the Deficit Reduction Act 
of 2005 authorizing payments to restore access to health care in 
affected communities. Pub. L. No. 109-171, § 6201(a)(4), 120 Stat. 4, 
133 (2006). Notice of Single Source Grant Award, 72 Fed. Reg. 51,230 
(Sept. 9, 2007). 

[59] For PCASG purposes, CMS defined the greater New Orleans area as 
Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard parishes. 

[60] Under Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act, HRSA provides 
grants to health centers nationwide to increase access to primary care. 

[61] September 21, 2007, through March 20, 2008, was the first period 
for which PCASG fund recipients reported data on their activities to 
LPHI. 

[62] Medicaid is a federal-state health insurance program for certain 
low-income individuals. 

[63] LaCHIP is the name of Louisiana's State Children's Health 
Insurance Program. The State Children's Health Insurance Program is a 
federal-state health insurance program that offers insurance to certain 
children under age 19 whose family income is too high for Medicaid 
eligibility and who are not enrolled under other health insurance. 

[64] All recipients have used funds other than the PCASG funds to offer 
the health care services. 

[65] For the period September 21, 2007, through March 20, 2008, PCASG 
fund recipients were required by LPHI to provide data about podiatry, 
optometry, and tuberculosis therapy specialty care services only. 

[66] An encounter is an interaction between a patient and a provider 
for the purpose of meeting a health care need. It can occur by 
telephone or in person. 

[67] LPHI combined the data on medical and dental encounters because 
the number of dental care encounters was small. 

[End of section] 

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