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The DMHC Help Center provides direct assistance in all languages to health care consumers through the Department’s website, www.HealthHelp.ca.gov, and a toll-free phone number, 1-888-466-2219. Mary Watanabe is currently the director of the DMHC. The DMHC is part of the California Health and Human Services Agency. It was established in 2000 ...
As of 2018, about one-third of California was covered by Medi-Cal. It is administered by the California Department of Health Care Services, which operates it in accordance with California's Medicaid State Plan and Title XIX of the Social Security Act. [7] California relies on Affordable Care Act (ACA) funding to support the Covered California ...
Partnership HealthPlan of California, is an independent, public/private organization serving over 950,000 Medi-Cal beneficiaries in 24 northern California counties: Butte County, Colusa County, Del Norte County, Humboldt County, Glenn County, Lake County, Lassen County, Marin County, Mendocino County, Modoc County, Napa County, Nevada County, Placer County, Plumas County, Shasta County, Sierra ...
a geographic managed care model with multiple plans per county, a regional managed care model with 1-2 commercial health plans in many counties, and unique one-county models in San Benito, Imperial counties and the bi-county plan "CenCal Health" in San Luís Obispo and Santa Barbara. In Denti-Cal, the majority of beneficiaries are covered ...
Mar. 18—All plans under the state's new managed care plan for most Medicaid patients include the following: Doctor visits, medical supplies, hospital visits, lab tests and X-rays, behavioral ...
Proposition 35 would spell out how the tax on health insurance providers like Anthem Blue Cross and L.A. Care, known as managed care organizations, can be used.
the California Major Risk Medical Insurance Program; the California Healthy Families Program; the Access for Infants and Mothers Program (AIM) which provides comprehensive coverage for children who do not have employer-sponsored insurance and do not qualify for no-cost Medi-Cal
AIM was first introduced in 1992, and provided for 3,000-4,000 women annually initially. It is difficult to assess the impact of AIM as it was introduced alongside many other maternal healthcare improvement policies including increasing the eligibility limit for Medi-Cal from 110% to 200% of the federal poverty line, and extending Medi-Cal to undocumented foreign-born women.