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| Questions and Answers We
are often asked about the particulars of how we function. So here is a quick guide to the
whos, the hows, and the whens of Project Access/Wichita:
How did you get started?
- Summer 1998. Paul Uhlig, M.D., led initial discussions with health care
and government leaders.
- September 1998. A select group of key local leaders in health care and
government were flown to Asheville, NC to learn firsthand about Project Access.
- February 1999. Dr. Uhlig set up Operations Council, comprised of
hospital CEOs, physicians, indigent care clinic directors, local government officials, and
other key community people.
- April 15th 1999. 75 keys leaders physicians, funders, business
leaders, media, etc. attend community forum during which Dr. Paul Uhlig introduces
Project Access.
- June 1st 1999. Dr. Uhlig led a team that formally presented Project
Access to city and county government officials. Received support of $250,000 each from the
City of Wichita (CSBG) and Sedgwick County for prescription drugs and medicines.
- May 1999. Dr. Uhlig presented Project Access to the membership of the
Medical Society of Sedgwick County.
- August 1999. Michael Bates, M.D., takes over leadership of the Central
Plains Regional Health Care Foundation and Project Access.
- August 1st 1999. First permanent staff members hired.
- September 1st 1999. Official opening. Project Access/Wichita enrolls
first patient.
- July 2002. Christopher Moeller, MD., becomes president of the Central
Plains Regional Health Care Foundation board of directors, leading Project Access into the
future.
A monthly newsletter was published and disseminated from the very beginning, well
before any patients were enrolled, to keep all the disparate entities and organizations
informed. Today, a quarterly newsletter is still produced.
How did you recruit the physicians?
- Sent out direct mail packages with business reply enrollment cards to the entire
membership of the Medical Society of Sedgwick County (MSSC).
- Offered choice of support: volunteer 24 hours of time in a clinic each year, or accept
referrals of either 10 primary care or 20 specialized care Project Access patients
As a way of thanking the community on our first anniversary, physicians were also
included in a listing of all Project Access participants, published in a 2-page
advertisement in the Wichita Eagle.
How do you determine eligibility?
Patients must be U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents, have a household income
at or below 150% of the federal poverty level, live in Sedgwick County, have no insurance,
and not qualify for other programs like Medicare or Medicaid.
How are patients enrolled?
- By visiting one of the areas six primary care clinics. The Social and
Rehabilitation Services (SRS) area office has a full-time eligibility specialist in each
clinic who verifies patients income, assesses their eligibility for other medical
benefit programs like Medicaid and S-CHIP (known as Healthwave in Kansas), and can enroll
them in Project Access.
- Patients may also be enrolled at the request of a participating physician who is already
treating other eligible patients, or
- At the request of a number of primary care residency programs.
Patients are enrolled for three months (for specialty care) or six months (for primary
care) and, upon enrollment, receive a Project Access ID Card and a Prescription Card to
purchase their medications (with a $4 co-pay).
How are you funded?
- Sustainable funding provided through United Way, which pays for some administrative
costs.
- Annual financial support for prescription drugs and medications from the City of Wichita (CSBG) and Sedgwick County
governments.
- January 2000. Received a one-year $150,000 Phase 1 planning grant from the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundations Communities in Charge program.
- January 2000. Received a grant of $100,000 for outreach and interpreter services from
the Kansas Health Foundation.
- December 2000. Awarded gift of $50,000 from Kansas Health Foundation.
- January 2001. Received a three-year $700,000 Phase 2 expansion grant from the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundations Communities in Charge program.
- September 2001. Awarded a one-year, $1 million HRSA Community Access Program grant from
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
- September 2002. Received a 2nd year, $700,000 HRSA grant.
- Private donors contribute annually.
- Significant in-kind donations annually.
How do you evaluate the program?
Using a contracted evaluator, Project Access conducts ongoing comprehensive evaluations
to assess patient and program outcomes. Results are used for further planning and for
fine-tuning processes.
What kind of documents do patients get?
Upon enrollment, all Project Access patients receive:
- An Identification Card
- A Prescription Card
- A list of participating pharmacies
- Information about expectations for patients
- A release form allowing Project Access to confirm the patients information and
coordinate their care across participating providers.
What do physicians receive?
All participating physicians get a packet comprised of:
- A description of the program.
- A reply postcard upon which physicians note their commitments, sign, and return.
- A follow-up packet of information, which includes a fax referral form for physicians to
fill out, sign, and fax back. Project Access then contacts the patient to process the
enrollment.
What information is needed for
participation?
A manual, covering all the policies and procedures that were established to ensure the
programs accountability and fairness, is available to all Project Access and SRS
staff.
How does Project Access track patients?
Project Access uses special software to track patients and physician commitments. All
donated services (administrative data provided on billing forms from hospitals and
physicians) are tracked with a Microsoft Access database. To see this software, click
Project Access prescription program is managed through a contracted service with
a prescription benefit management company called the Prescription Network of Kansas (PNK).
PNK utilizes a computerized database accessible to all participating pharmacies. New
patients are entered into this database by Project Access staff the same day that the
patients are enrolled.
What is Project Access enrollment
history?
Our enrollment trends are as follows:
- 201 patients from 9/1/99 through 12/31/99.
- 1,079 patients in year 2000.
- 1,214 patients in year 2001.
- 1,182 patients in year 2002.
Although there was a 3% decrease in new patient enrollments in 2002, Project Access has
enrolled people with more chronic conditions requiring more medical services, more
prescription drug support, and more case management services.
What kind of staffing does Project Access
have?
There are seven staff members who work at the Project Access office:
- On September 1, 1999, the day Project Access opened its doors, two people were on staff:
the program director and the administrative assistant.
- In November 1999, the first patient service coordinator was hired.
- Two additional service coordinators were employed one in August, 2000, and the
other in April of 2001.
- A secretary was hired in November 2001.
- The 7th staff position, our prescription service coordinator, was brought on board in
November of 2002.
How was Project Access set up?
Dr. Paul Uhlig established a board for the Central Plains Regional Health Care
Foundation, which was then brought into the Medical Society of Sedgwick County. At that
time a new board was established, consisting of 11 members, most of whom were physicians.
Other representatives were from the hospitals and the United Way. An Operations Council
consisting of 26 members provides day-to-day direction and makes formal recommendations
for policies and procedures to the board for final approval.
How is Project Access structured?

What did Project Access do to publicize
itself?
Early on, Project Access made many public presentations and attempted to get as much
media coverage as possible. In 2001, a television ad aired on cable stations (which
targeted low-income, uninsured people) and on Univision (in Spanish). Brochures were also
printed in English, Spanish and Vietnamese and were distributed around the
community. Project Access continually pursues media coverage and has developed a rapport
with media contacts to pitch stories.
Mostly, however, Project Access outreach occurs in the six clinics, the residency
programs, and physician offices.
To learn more about Project Access/Wichita, go to www.projectaccess.net or call program director
Anne Nelson at 1-316-688-0600.
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