Conference focuses on WV's school-based health model

Jun. 16—OAK HILL — West Virginia is at the forefront of the nation's school-based health care movement, a national leader said Thursday.

Robert Boyd, president and CEO of the national School-Based Health Alliance (https://www.sbh4all.org/), was the keynote speaker at the West Virginia Primary Care Association's June 8 conference "Innovation, Opportunity, Impact" at the New River Convention Center.

"My overall theme was for the folks in West Virginia to tell their story, and tell it right," said Boyd. He stressed that over 90 percent of the school-based health centers in West Virginia are operated by Federally Qualified Health Centers (one of which is New River Health, the host of Thursday's event). "That's unique; we don't have that kind of a relationship in other states."

The emphasis on school-based health by the FQHCs in the Mountain State "is a model for the rest of the country," Boyd said. "Those FQHCs have grown the number of school-based health centers by 40 percent over the last five years. West Virginia, in many categories, is a leader across the nation in providing school-based health care. Over 90 percent of those school-based health centers serve the entire community, and that's also an exception."

Boyd said he doesn't have a comparison yet on recently-released data tracking progress nationally, but "I'm willing to bet they're going to be at the top of many of these categories."

That is in relation to the number of students served per capita, said Paula Fields, vice president of consulting and technical services for the School-Based Health Alliance.

Boyd credited West Virginians with "making do with what they have," admitting sometimes they don't have the resources or time to get out and tell their story.

"Your senator, Shelley Moore Capito, is one of our champions on the Hill," Boyd said. "She has been responsible, along with Sen. Stabenow (Michigan), to getting us the first funding from the federal government for new school-based health centers.

"The goal now is to tell the story. That's what has to happen."

Another topic Boyd touched on in his remarks was the Health Sciences and Technology Academy. "We're going to feature it at our national conference in Washington at the end of the month. But our goal ultimately is to take a HSTA-type program and replicate that in every state in the country, but with the focus — unlike HSTA that doesn't give a requirement of what the students do after they graduate — a requirement that, if you get free tuition, you come back and work in a Title I school. You come back and bring that nursing degree and be a school nurse. You come back with that behavioral health degree, that counseling degree, and be a counselor in a school-based health center. That's not done with HSTA."