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2 years agoon
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News ReleaseGovernor Mark Gordon’s Health Task Force has done great work to make recommendations on strengthening Wyoming’s healthcare workforce and examining ways to improve access for the state’s residents. The Governor is now focused on implementing some of those recommendations and addressing the state’s mental health crisis, while continuing to collaborate with private sector partners.
“We have made progress and taken some positive steps towards addressing some of Wyoming’s healthcare challenges over the past year, but it is clear that there is more work to be done,” Governor Gordon said. “My administration will continue to focus on developing Wyoming-led solutions to some of our most significant challenges. We know that our state’s future depends on having reliable, affordable healthcare options for our residents.”
The Health Task Force has already brought forward proposals to help stabilize the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) system and to pilot projects that regionalize the service to reduce costs. The Department of Health recently awarded the $10 million in 2022 ARPA funds to develop regional pilot programs. During the 2023 legislative session, the legislature passed the establishment of EMS districts to offer support at the local level. The Governor is now asking the legislature to consider an interim topic to further discuss a permanent funding solution to stabilize EMS services. The task force has also considered options for improving outcomes for individuals suffering from mental health and addiction issues. This led to the development of several bills that have moved through the legislative process this session.
During the 2023 Legislative session, Governor Gordon has signed bills establishing the 988 system for suicide prevention, strengthening the state’s drug treatment courts and specifying insurance reimbursement requirements for mental health and substance use disorders – a bill that emerged from the work of the task force.
As Governor Gordon’s Health Task Force examines ways to bolster the state’s healthcare workforce, it will explore additional incentives to improve recruitment and retention of primary care physicians. The Governor’s Wyoming Innovation Partnership will provide support for these efforts through the state’s community colleges. Phase 1 funding of the WIP includes development of a new Echocardiography program and expanded opportunities for Certified Nursing Assistants.
The task force will continue working to address costs and access to healthcare in Wyoming, and will develop additional recommendations to address the challenges facing EMS in the state. These efforts will include working to develop sustainable funding models and infrastructure by integrating state, local and private resources and assets. The task force will also seek to identify cost-efficient ways to deliver programs, alternative payment models and further opportunities for improving access to a variety of healthcare needs.
Finally, the task force will continue to further identify barriers, opportunities, and gaps in the network of mental health and substance abuse care in the state. This will include options for addressing mental health crisis services in Wyoming.
Dennis Fox
March 21, 2023 at 3:27 pm
Healthcare, like Education, always improves with more competition; not more gov’t control. America is the world’s economic leader, because of free-market competition and constant innovation. Build a better mouse-trap and people will flock to your door. Adam Smith’s “Enlightened self-interest” has been raising the world’s standard of living for 250 years, and will continue to do so, if we allow the free-market to work.
Mark Steingass
March 21, 2023 at 3:39 pm
Bolstering the Wyoming’s medical workforce should be given serious consideration soon especially since many states that have established restrictive abortion laws are driving medical professionals to seek employment elsewhere in other states. In Idaho for example, Bonner General Health in Sandpoint has eliminated the obstetrics unit because of the adverse political climate associated with liability and restrictive state abortion law…In Idaho because of far right ultra conservative anti-abortion legislation “highly respected talented physicians are leaving”
Dennis Fox
March 22, 2023 at 4:35 pm
Better than the ” adverse political climate of the far-left, ultra liberal, pro-murder laws.” Guess two can play the hyperbole game.
Ray Olson
March 22, 2023 at 5:05 pm
That’s not hyperbole- that’s the I’m rubber you’re glue game
from 3rd grade recess- and it wasn’t clever then.
Ray Olson
March 22, 2023 at 12:14 pm
So do what Montana did. Expand Medicaid and include a prenup that sayes if the Feds cut the funding we’ll divorce them. More people covered, millions saved in uncompensated care, broader base to fund medical facilities what’s not to like? And before you start anecdotal quotes from a disgruntled few- look at the polling in Montana.
Dennis Fox
March 24, 2023 at 3:55 pm
Healthcare will not get better with more gov’t, it will only get worse. Witness the devastation caused by Obamacare. Prices went up and availability went down. Doctors used to make house calls before Gov’t got involved by creating Medicare. The free market works, if we’ll only let it. The American free-market and competition created the World’s best healthcare and it’s been getting more expensive with every gov’t intrusion.