SB264: Ensuring Primary Care Sustainability

  • Primary care saves lives, improves population health and enables thriving, healthy communities.
  • Primary care accounts for 35% of all health care visits annually, but receives only 4 to 6% of total health care spending.
  • Investing more in preventive, long-term care delivered across the lifespan improves patient health and reduces health system costs.
  • Arkansas has repeatedly been ranked the 48th healthiest state out of 50 states.
  • The Arkansas primary care workforce is diminishing, with demand exceeding supply.
  • Health care access and quality are declining in Arkansas, especially in areas of highest need.

Convene primary care clinicians, health plans, and other partners

Define primary care, including services and providers, for measurement

Measure and report current primary care spending in Arkansas

Determine a target for future primary care spending

These talking points were prepared to guide members when discussing the Arkansas Primary Care Investment Bill with legislators, media, community leaders, patients, or other stakeholders.

  • Primary care is fundamental to the health of Arkansas communities – it saves lives, improves population health and enables thriving, healthy communities.
  • Investing in primary care also saves us money – primary care is the only part of the health system proven to reduce costs, while also extending lives, increasing access to care and improving community health.
  • Primary care accounts for 35% of all annual health care visits, but receives only 4-6% of total health care spending.
  • Without needed investment, primary care practices in our state are struggling to keep their doors open and continue serving patients, facing financial hardship and workforce shortages.
  • Arkansas communities are feeling those effects, with the state repeatedly being ranked the 48th healthiest out of 50 states and access to and quality of care consistently declining.
  • Directing more funding towards primary care means that clinics can hire additional staff, provide more services and spend more time with their patients, resulting in Arkansas patients living longer, healthier lives.

SB264 will establish the Arkansas Primary Care Payment Improvement Working Group, convening primary care clinicians, health plans and other statewide partners to collaborate, specifically to:

  • Define primary care, including services and providers, for measurement;
  • Measure and report current primary care spending in Arkansas; and
  • Determine a target for future investment.

This bill is the result of a multi-year collaboration between statewide partners and will create a sustainable path forward to ensure our investments in the Arkansas health system go where they matter most: our patients.