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The Civil Legal Aid Toolkit for HRSA-Funded Health Centers: Understanding & Optimizing the Public Interest Legal Community www.medical-legalpartnership.org About this toolkit Using these slides Acknowledgements This presentation is intended to help civil legal aid practitioners highlight the composition, role, limitations, and impact of civil legal aid to their health center partners. This presentation is intended to be used alongside the two-page messaging guide that was downloaded with these slides. The Advisory Board Company contributed significant pro bono technical support and expertise to the development of this toolkit. Special thanks to contributing consultant Laura Datz. Practitioners are welcome to use slides 3-20 in their trainings and presentations. If you have questions about how to use this resource, please contact Ellen Lawton at [email protected]. This project is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under National Training and Technical Assistance Cooperative Agreement number U30CS26936 in the amount of $300,000 with 0% of the total NCA project financed with non-federal sources. This information or content and conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be inferred by HRSA, HHS, or the U.S. Government. Understanding & Optimizing the Public Interest Legal Community www.medical-legalpartnership.org Understanding the Goals of Civil Legal Aid Promoting Equal Access to Justice and High-quality Legal Services For Low-income People Remove Economic Barriers to Legal Representation Improve Opportunities for Low-Income People Provide Quality Legal Services An Overview of the Industry Funding Sources Legal Aid Providers • Federal and state government • Attorneys and non-attorney staff (paralegals) • Legal community contributions • Law school legal clinics • Academia • Private foundations and philanthropy • Pro bono volunteers Clientele • Individuals with incomes at or below 125% of the poverty level Classifying Civil Legal Aid: By Funding No Unified Delivery System or Funding Source in the U.S. Federally Funded Legal Aid Services State & Locally Funded Legal Services • Funding: $425M • Funding: $600M (estimate) Private Pro Bono Resources • Funding: $180M Academia: Law School Clinic • Funding: $75M (estimate) Leading National Providers of Civil Legal Aid Key Legal Aid Sectors Federally Funded Legal Aid Services ) State & Locally Funded Legal Services Private Pro Bono Resources Academia: Law School Clinic Case Priorities Scope Basic needs: housing, income, safety 134 organizations +4,000 attorneys Basic needs: housing, income, safety, but with a broader range & greater focus on policy 800+ civil legal services offices Vary widely; also supports self-help service centers 1,200+ pro bono programs Vary widely 200+ law school clinics Civil Legal Aid: Key Staff Roles Legal Allies for Medical-Legal Partnerships 1 2 Civil Legal Aid Executives 3 Civil Legal Aid Frontline Staff Law School • Board of Directors • Staff attorneys • Dean • Deputy Director • Paralegals • Legal Clinic Faculty • Executive Director • Managing Attorney 4 Pro Bono Programs • Law Firms • Corporate Law Departments • Bar Associations • Individual Attorneys Who Needs Civil Legal Aid? Huge Population of Low-Income People With Unmet Civil Legal Needs Legal Aid Provides Otherwise Unaffordable Legal Services The Need • 1 in 6 live people live in poverty The Services • Legal aid primarily serves people who live in households with annual incomes at or below 125% of the federal poverty guidelines • 65M+ qualified for legal aid in 2013 • Every low income person has 2-3 unmet civil legal needs that negatively affect their health • There is no guarantee to legal services in civil matters Legal Need Legal Aid Why Do People Need Civil Legal Aid? Civil Legal Aid Helps People Solve Legal Problems of Every Day Life Legal Needs That Impact Health (I-HELP Model) Income & Insurance Insurance access & benefits Food stamps Housing & Energy Shelter access Access to housing Education & Employment Americans with Disabilities Act compliance Discrimination Disability benefits Social Security benefits Sanitary housing conditions Utilities access Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act compliance Debt relief Unlawful termination Legal Status Personal & Family Stability Immigration asylum, Violence Against Women Act) Guardianship, custody, divorce Criminal record issues Domestic violence Child abuse & neglect Advance directives, estate planning Even When Need is Acute, No Guarantee to Aid No Clear Access Path to Civil Legal Aid, No Right to Representation Even Compared to Health Care’s Complex Model, Legal Aid is Challenged to Serve A Patient’s Path to Emergency Health Care Patient suffers • Patient can selfidentify what constitutes medical need, requiring medical attention Patient presents • Patient knows to goes to ED in case of acute medical need • ED still not a source for primary care, but a viable last resort With or Without Payment, Treatment provided • Patient is required to be treated regardless of ability to pay ! Early intervention improves outcomes, and lowers costs in both settings Even When Need is Acute, No Guarantee to Aid No Clear Access Path to Civil Legal Aid, No Right to Representation A Client’s Path to Civil Legal Aid Client Struggles • Client struggling with issue may or may not understand it is legal in nature (ex: housing issues, benefits, access to education) Client Seeks Legal Aid No Payment, No Requirement to Help • Even if client recognizes problem requires legal support, there is no one, clear provider of civil legal aid services • No matter how acute the need, there is no entitlement to free legal services in civil legal matters, unlike in criminal legal matters • Scarcity of civil legal aid attorneys to support vast need; many turned away ! Early intervention improves outcomes, and lowers costs in both settings Need for Legal Services Far Surpasses Resources >50% Qualifying for legal aid turned away because of limited resources 80% Legal needs of low and moderate income individuals unmet by current resources 800,000 Low income people whose civil legal aid needs were met by only 8,000 federally funded attorneys Classifying Civil Legal Aid: By Types of Services A Range of Offerings, Not Just Full Representation by an Attorney Self-Help Plus Advice: Paralegals, lay advisors, phone services, advice paired with web-based services Self- Representation Self-Help & Community Education: Court-based self-help, workshops, informational websites, downloadable court forms, libraries Formal Representation Pro Bono Representation From Non-legal Aid Organizations: volunteer attorneys, law students, paralegals Representation From Legal Aid Organizations: attorneys, law students, paralegals Patient-Centered Health Care Model Includes an MLP Pilot Medical Legal Partnership Targets High-Need, High-Use Patients Lancaster General Hospital’s Pilot Program Embeds Attorney in the Health Care Team Attorney Social workers Nurses Patientnavigators Physicians Psychologists Pharmacists Targets highest utilizing patients 95% of high use patients enrolled in program had 2 or more legal needs Source: “Embedding Civil Legal Aid Services in Care for High-Utilizing Patients Using Medical-Legal Partnership”; Health Affairs, April 22, 2015. Patient-Centered Health Care Model Includes an MLP (cont.) Pilot Medical Legal Partnership Targets High-Need, High-Use Patients One Patient’s Story Shows Positive Impacts From Program Participation • Chronically ill • Patient incurs debt due to patient heavily co-pays and uncovered utilizes ED services and medications • Patient has unmet legal needs: difficulty enrolling in Medicaid, Social Security benefits are being unlawfully garnished • Through program, patient receives health care with patient navigator and social worker • Patient receives legal aid services to enroll in Medicaid and restore SS benefits • 0 Visits to ED since program • Saved costs for patient and hospital Source: “Embedding Civil Legal Aid Services in Care for High-Utilizing Patients Using Medical-Legal Partnership”; Health Affairs, April 22, 2015. Patient-Centered Health Care Model Includes an MLP (cont.) Pilot Medical Legal Partnership Targets High Need, High Use Patients Case in Brief: Lancaster General Hospital • A 630 bed not-for-profit health system located in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, developed pilot program to address high use, high need patients, that embedded a lawyer within an interprofessional care team • Goal of the pilot was to deliver on the patient-centered model of care, and to determine what effect integrating civil legal aid services into the care of high use, high need patients would have on health care costs • During the pilot year, 55 patients were enrolled in the program, with 95% of those patients having 2 or more unmet civil legal aid needs, the most prevalent being housing issues and lack of access to public benefits • Lawyer provided direct legal services for minor issues, referred more complex issues to external lawyers, and trained other members of the care team to identify and document civil legal aid needs • By addressing patients’ civil legal problems, the pilot reduced health care utilization and costs. Results include: decrease in both 30-day and 7-day readmission rates among participating patients, upward of 50% reduction in utilization of inpatient and ED services and overall costs (as defined by charges) dropping by 45% Source: “Embedding Civil Legal Aid Services in Care for High-Utilizing • Source: Partnership”; “Embedding CivilHealth Legal Aid ServicesApril in Care for2015. High-Utilizing Patients Using Medical-Legal Affairs, 22, Patients Using Medical-Legal Partnership”; Health Affairs, April 22, Patient-Centered Health Care Model Includes an MLP (cont.) Pilot Medical Legal Partnership Targets Health Center Patients Case in Brief: Erie Health Center, Chicago IL • A multi-site urban health center on the West side of Chicago developed an MLP to address legal needs for health center patients, working with Loyola Law School and Legal Aid Foundation of Chicago • The health center detailed a VISTA volunteer to help the legal team screen, refer and conduct trainings for the providers. • The MLP conducts focus groups with staff across all locations to raise awareness about health-harming civil legal needs • The law school also helps develop policy strategies for health-harming legal needs that have a population health impact, such as lead poison rates at Chicago Public Housing. • Erie Health Center now funds a full-time legal aid attorney on site at the health center, citing it as a key strategy to address patient needs and boost health center team capacity. • Source: “Embedding Civil Legal Aid Services in Care for High-Utilizing Patients Using Medical-Legal Partnership”; Health Affairs, April 22, MLPs Strengthen Value-Based Strategy Partnerships Essential Component of Higher Quality, Lower Cost Care Performance Category Utilization Accountable Care Imperatives • Proactively manage chronic illness to avoid low-margin inpatient utilization Role of Medical-Legal Partnership • Improves at-risk patient management and ongoing wellness, reducing unnecessary hospitalizations • Reduce inappropriate or duplicative care delivery Expense Management Clinical Outcomes • Manage total cost of care for a defined patient population • Target avoidable spending across health system • Minimize preventable admissions, readmissions • Promote community wellness for at-risk populations • Minimizes overall costs by addressing the social determinants driving downstream spending • Supports better population health by targeting the environmental risk factors influencing clinical outcomes Source: The Advisory Board Company interviews and analysis. Health Care Equivalents of Legal Services Federal Legal Aid State & Local Legal Aid Private Pro Bono Resources Academia: Law School Clinics Healthcare Federally Qualified equivalent Health Centers Look-alike CHC Free Clinic Medical student rotation Scope 138 offices 8,000 attys 700+ civil legal aid offices 900+ pro bono programs 125+ law school clinics Funding $600 million $500 million est $180 million est $75 million est