Speak Out: Everyone Deserves A Health Care Home
If you're on Medicaid and don't have the benefit of a Health Care Home, or if you're an Ohio voter who feels strongly that care coordination is the right approach for Medicaid in Ohio, let your Ohio Senator, Representative and State leadership know how you feel.
We make it easy to find your legislators and send a message.
> Click here
if you are on Medicaid and don't have the benefit of a Health Care Home.
> Click here if you're an Ohio voter who feels strongly that care coordination is the right approach for Medicaid.
Most people who receive Medicaid benefits get to have a Health Care Home to depend on. But some—and often the people who could benefit most from having a Health Care Home, like disabled children and seniors on Medicare—are left out.
What's a Health Care Home?
Medicaid Care Coordination plans provide a Health Care Home for their members. When you are eligible for a Health Care Home, you select the Care Coordination plan you prefer. Find out what Care Coordination plans are available in your area.
The Care Coordination plan provides all these extra services for their members:
- Care Coordination: oversight to make sure recommendations and prescriptions from different health care professionals really works together.
- A Personal Case Manager: someone who regularly checks on you and helps you get what you need to stay your healthiest and follow medical recommendations—and even non-medical services that affect your health, like food or warm clothing.
- A nurse hotline to call, any time of day or night
- Transportation to appointments when necessary













