“Behavioral health conditions are not uniformly distributed across the population.” It’s a statement that most executives in the field would find unsurprising. And the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted our health care systems’ socially determined disparities in interventions and outcomes—these undoubtedly correspond with disparities in the lived experience of the populations who bear the brunt of these inequalities (see Black & Hispanic Consumers Receive Shorter Duration Of Buprenorphine Treatment For Opioid Use Disorder and Black Children Without I/DD Are 30% Less Likely To Be Identified With Autism Compared With White Children).

Behavioral health conditions vary widely in prevalence . . .

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Social Services

The social service market is defined as supports and services related to the social determinants of health such as poverty, food insecurity, lack of education, racism, discrimination, environment, and community conditions. Addressing social determinants of health has become a common strategic conversation in a market focused on whole person care and the value equation. Payers and health plans are taking a more structured approach to addressing social support needs and this opens new possibilities for managers of organizations that provide social support programs that have typically been excluded from health care financing arrangements.


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Employment at firms with significant shares of workers over age 55 has increased over the past 16 years, according to a new federal report. Between 2006 and 2022, total employment at firms where at least 25% of workers were over age 55 grew from 12.8 million to 35.5 million. The report presented data for nine sectors, including Health Care and Social Assistance. In the Health Care and Social Assistance sector, the share of total sector… Read