Marshall Health Expands Community Health Worker Program

A new investment in community health workers could help West Virginians with chronic diseases better manage their conditions through the community health worker model.

A new investment in community health workers could help West Virginians with chronic diseases better manage their conditions through the community health worker model.

Marshall Health received a $750,000 grant from Aetna Better Health of West Virginia, which will be used to integrate community health workers at 10 new sites to support patients with chronic conditions, including hypertension, diabetes, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cancer and metabolic syndrome.

“The Marshall model is unique to Marshall, because it is a medical model. And so the community health worker becomes a member of the chronic care management team,” Deb Koester, an assistant professor and director of the Division of Community Health at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, said. “Their purpose is to really support the providers plan of care and serve as a linkage between clinical community linkage. So, when they are doing weekly visits in the home, they see many things we don’t see in the clinic.”

Community health workers work closely with local health care providers, regularly follow up with patients in their homes and communities to help them navigate clinical services and facilitate linkages to other non-clinical, community-based services.

This model has shown improved health outcomes in the more than 25 counties in West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky where it has been used because community health workers help remove barriers to transportation, food instability, financial instability and other barriers to health.

“This will directly add it’s really a workforce development opportunity to expand the number and sites that have community health workers that can be serving,” Koester said. “It really reinforces the physician’s plan of care. And so it reduces hospitalizations, it reduces the emergency department visits, it addresses those social determinants of health that can be barriers to following that plan of care. And it helps them follow the physician’s plan.”

The Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine’s Department of Family and Community Health initiated the community health worker model nearly a decade ago with support from the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation.

Federal Grant Funds To Help Address ‘Forever Chemicals’ In State Waterways

The money comes as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act through the EPA’s Emerging Contaminants in Small or Disadvantaged Communities grant program.

Federal money from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is being sent to West Virginia to address drinking water contaminants in state waterways.

The money comes as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act through the EPA’s Emerging Contaminants in Small or Disadvantaged Communities grant program. Nearly $19 million is going to state agencies to address PFAS, known widely as harmful “forever chemicals” that have been found in 130 raw water supplies statewide.

These water supplies have been identified throughout the state, with localized “hot spots” identified by the West Virginia Rivers Coalition in the Eastern Panhandle and Ohio River Valley.

“We cannot wait any longer to address water quality and the health impacts of PFAS in our neighborhoods,” Adam Ortiz, EPA Mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator said in a statement announcing the grant. “This federal funding will help West Virginia communities impacted by PFAS to get access to clean, safe drinking water.”

State and local agencies are expected to submit their proposals for grant money this month, according to the EPA’s website. The grant is expected to create programs for local household water testing and local contractor training, among other programs that would address PFAS in disadvantaged communities. 

Two bills were introduced in the West Virginia House and Senate this legislative session to regulate PFAS: House Bill 3189 and Senate Bill 489. Both bills are in committee, though the House bill has been recommended to move to floor discussion.

Federal Infrastructure Funding Granted To Coalfields Expressway Project

Grant funding totaling $25 million is going towards the Coalfields Expressway in the southern part of the state.

Grant funding totaling $25 million is going towards the Coalfields Expressway in the southern part of the state.

The money comes from the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and will go towards the construction of a new segment of road connecting the north end of Mullens in Wyoming County to the segment of West Virginia Route 16 east of New Richmond.

The proposed four-lane highway has been in development on-and-off since 1998. When completed, it will connect Interstates 64 and 77, also known as the West Virginia Turnpike, in Beckley with U.S. Route 23 near Slate, Virginia.

Work started on another segment of the highway connecting it to the town of Welch in August, which is expected to be finished in 2026.

“This highway will make our state more accessible, connect workers to jobs, and help drive tourism and other economic activity,” U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., said in a joint statement alongside fellow Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va. “Today marks an important step for the future of this key highway project, and I’m looking forward to seeing the impact it will have on all West Virginians.”

“Our Bipartisan Infrastructure Law continues to bring historic investments to West Virginia — creating long-term, good-paying jobs while also addressing the state’s infrastructure needs,” Manchin echoed. “The funding announced today will help construct the Coalfields Expressway to better connect our southern West Virginia communities, and I look forward to seeing the positive impacts of this project for years to come.”

The governor’s office announced last week that $548 million from the same federal grant will go to help maintain bridges across the state.

Millions Announced For Crime Victims Support

Gov. Jim Justice announced millions of dollars in grants for Victims of Crime Act Assistance programs.

Gov. Jim Justice announced Monday evening close to $17 million in grants for Victims of Crime Assistance programs. The funding will go towards more than 80 public and private non-profit entities throughout the state.

The Victims of Crime Act or VOCA Fund was created by Congress in 1984 to provide federal support to state and local programs that assist victims of crime.

VOCA funds provide direct services like counseling, court advocacy and support services to victims of crimes including domestic violence, child abuse and elder abuse.

These funds from the U.S. Department of Justice are administered by the West Virginia Division of Administrative Services.

In recent years, reduced deposits in the fund threatened victim support programs nationwide, but the passage of the VOCA Fix Act in 2021 ensured funding returned to pre-pandemic levels.

More Money For Broadband Expansion Announced

Gov. Jim Justice announced a third round of grants for broadband expansion Monday, the largest investment yet in his Billion-Dollar Broadband Strategy.

Gov. Jim Justice announced a third round of grants for broadband expansion Monday, the largest investment yet in his Billion-Dollar Broadband Strategy.

More than $20 million will go to broadband projects across the state and will result in more than 600 miles of new fiber infrastructure through several projects.

The state’s investment in this round makes an additional $13 million available from other funding sources, for a total broadband infrastructure investment of more than $34 million.

This is the first round of grants awarded through the Major Broadband Project Strategies (MBPS) program.

Grants were previously announced in January and March totaling more than $17 million and almost $4 million, respectively.

According to the governor’s office, in total, more than $60 million has been committed to 16 major broadband infrastructure projects across West Virginia.

Additional approvals will be announced soon.

W.Va. Grant Hunter To Work Out Of Washington D.C.

Gov. Jim Justice announced during his Monday COVID-19 briefing he will soon add a staff member who will do nothing but scour Washington, D.C., for any grant money or other funding available.

West Virginia will soon have a grant seeking specialist working exclusively out of Washington, D.C.

Gov. Jim Justice announced during his Monday COVID-19 briefing he will soon add a staff member who will do nothing but scour Washington, D.C., for any grant money or other funding available.

The governor said his staff has gone through the interview process, traveled to Washington, and hired the right person for the job.

He said this hire should have been made a long time ago.

“There are 381 possible grants that West Virginians could tag on to,” Justice said. “If you have somebody that’s really qualified, on point and they’re digging all the time, there’s so much stuff that’s available out there. That person should, in multiple ways, pay for their salary.”

Justice said the last time West Virginia had a similar full-time employee in the nation’s capital was during the Bob Wise administration.

He said he will announce who his new D.C. staff member is – in the near future.

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