Common use of Supportive Housing Clause in Contracts

Supportive Housing. The CONTRACTOR shall have a full-time Supportive Housing Specialist dedicated to this Agreement to work with Members to assess housing needs and identify appropriate resources in order to help them attain and maintain housing. 4.4.1.7.1 The Supportive Housing Specialist shall serve as the internal resource to provide training and technical assistance to the CONTRACTOR’s care coordinators. 4.4.1.7.2 Supportive Housing specifically targets the following populations: • Individuals who are chronically homeless, as defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) or precariously housed; • Individuals with frequent or lengthy institutional care; • Individuals with serious mental illness or chronic substance use disorders, crisis stabilization, high emergency department or inpatient utilization; • Individuals with frequent or lengthy adult residential care or treatment stays; • Individuals with LTSS and frequent turnover of in-home caregivers or Providers; and • Individuals at highest levels of risk for expensive care and negative outcomes, defined by a Predictive Risk Intelligence System (PRISM) risk score of 1.5 or higher or similar risk measures.

Appears in 12 contracts

Samples: Medicaid Managed Care Services Agreement, Medicaid Managed Care Services Agreement, Medicaid Managed Care Services Agreement

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Supportive Housing. The CONTRACTOR shall have a full-time Supportive Housing Specialist dedicated to this Agreement to work with Members to assess housing needs and identify appropriate resources in order to help them attain and maintain housing. 4.4.1.7.1 The Supportive Housing Specialist shall serve as the internal resource to provide training and technical assistance to the CONTRACTOR’s care coordinators. 4.4.1.7.2 Supportive Housing specifically targets the following populations: Individuals who are chronically homeless, as defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) or precariously housed; Individuals with frequent or lengthy institutional care; Individuals with serious mental illness or chronic substance use disorders, crisis stabilization, high emergency department or inpatient utilization; Individuals with frequent or lengthy adult residential care or treatment stays; Individuals with LTSS and frequent turnover of in-home caregivers or Providers; and Individuals at highest levels of risk for expensive care and negative outcomes, defined by a Predictive Risk Intelligence System (PRISM) risk score of 1.5 or higher or similar risk measures.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Medicaid Managed Care Services Agreement, Medicaid Managed Care Services Agreement

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