The Arizona Republic

After grant loss, Nevada invests in family planning clinic services

- ALISON NOON

TONOPAH, Nev. - Misused grant funds, sloppy record-keeping and undertrain­ed staff at staterun rural reproducti­ve health clinics led Nevada to lose hundreds of thousands of federal dollars over the past two years.

As a result, services and staff hours have been slashed and low-income women seeking contracept­ives and pregnancy consultati­on have been turned away.

The clinics described as being in a state of disarray in a scathing 2015 federal audit have since seen only deeper cuts — until this week.

After public health profession­als in rural Nevada pleaded for help, Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval agreed on Thursday to replace lost funding.

Health advocates say state aid for the vast northern half of Nevada could remedy what they described as a potential contracept­ion desert for women without health insurance.

With Sandoval’s approval, Nevada is setting aside $1 million over the next two years for family planning services. Nonprofits like Planned Parenthood and metropolit­an health centers can apply, but the money is geared toward small-town providers under the state’s jurisdicti­on.

“They’re on life support,” community health advocate Shaun Griffin said. “I don’t think people were aware of the acuity of the situation.”

Each of Nevada’s 13 Community Health Nursing clinics offers the only location within a minimum 100-mile radius for anyone without coverage or afraid to ask their parents to get affordable birth control, health screenings and pregnancy consultati­on. In some places, insured residents also rely on the clinics.

“The reality is that there are no private providers for this care in some of the rural areas, Tonopah being an example,” the program’s only Advanced Practice Registered Nurse and head of the Tonopah clinic, Beth Ennis, wrote to the governor’s office.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services denied the state’s applicatio­n for nearly $600,000 annually from the Title X grant program that funds family planning in April 2016, citing the same administra­tive, financial and clinical disorganiz­ation the agency detailed in the audit eight months earlier. Nevada was later able to secure a fraction of the aid.

Both the federal and state funds legally cannot be used for abortion services or medication­s.

The audit report specified 22 points on which the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health was failing to properly make use of the grant.

It repeatedly criticized a lack of protocols and said the clinics did not conduct services within nationally recognized standards of medical care.

Among other things, it said the state shortchang­ed certain activities and geographic areas the grant was supposed to cover, staff loosely tracked clinic activities and costs in violation of federal regulation­s, and administra­tors failed to monitor services and financial compliance.

For instance, billing formulas may have been “legally inappropri­ate,” the report said, and staff was unaware of any expectatio­ns to check prescripti­on drug inventorie­s. “They did goof up, badly, unquestion­ably, the revenue just evaporated,” Griffin said.

Tina Gerber-Winn, the division’s clinical program manager, argues the funding decline has not affected rural clinics because the loss coincided with diminished demand. Some 300,000 Nevadans have gained health insurance since Sandoval opted to expand Medicaid in 2012.

After the state’s 2016 applicatio­n was denied, Gerber-Winn said her office was able to obtain an annual $200,000 Title X grant by showing that the state had begun to address some of the program’s organizati­onal issues and by downsizing the population the rural clinics will serve from 3,800 to 1,400 people.

Gerber-Winn said her office directed clinic staff to turn away patients with insurance.

 ?? ALISON NOON/AP ?? A car is parked on May 21 near a Community Health Nursing clinic in Tonopah, Nev., where no other family planning services are available for uninsured residents within 100 miles.
ALISON NOON/AP A car is parked on May 21 near a Community Health Nursing clinic in Tonopah, Nev., where no other family planning services are available for uninsured residents within 100 miles.
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