Can Neighborhood Outreach Boost Obamacare Enrollment?

Bridgette Richardson Hempstead knows almost nothing about football, but she recently found herself standing on the sidelines of the Seattle Seahawks' CenturyLink Field, with microphone in hand and a large TV camera projecting her image on a Jumbotron to 70,000 excited fans as she belted the national anthem. She said some on the field were crying.

"It was pretty incredible. They said they had never ever had anyone sing the anthem like that and have a reaction from the community like that," Hempstead says. "Too bad they lost."

Passions run high in electrically charged communities united in a single cause. That cause might be beating the Cowboys—or, in Hempstead's day job, making sure that women of color have access to appropriate health care. A breast-cancer survivor and head of the trusted health advocacy group Cierra Sisters, Hempstead gives assurance and advice to those who are afraid to go to the doctor or flummoxed by the world of health insurance.

Hempstead is just one of the roughly two dozen community leaders that make up Daphne Pie's insurance-enrollment army. Pie is the manager of access and outreach at the public health department for Seattle and King County. Others in her army include organizers from the Open Arms Perinatal Doula Program—which is deeply rooted in Seattle's Latina and Somali communities; the Gay City health project; and the Asian Counseling and Referral Service.

The County Council adopted an "equity and social justice" strategic plan four years ago that directs all its municipal departments to target the areas of greatest inequity in whatever they are doing. For a transit agency, that means expanding bus services to poor neighborhoods. For the health department, it means digging into the county's insurance-enrollment statistics to ferret out the populations that are under-covered.

But while the county's bureaucrats can identify the types of residents who lag behind, they can't always reach out to them on their own. "We need to have strong community organizations that can actually move their agenda, have a voice, and really kind of drive the change," says Matias Valenzuela, King County's Equity and Social Justice Manager. (Yes, that's an actual title.)

So for every niche population that shows higher-than-average uninsured rates, Pie and Venezuela have identified a trusted leader within that community to carry their message: You can have health insurance for free or at very low cost. There is no mention of political lightning rods like "Obamacare" or Medicaid. The community leaders are free to highlight their groups' unique concerns about health coverage in order to pique interest. For Latina women, it might be natural childbirth. For the gay, lesbian, and transgender community, it might be HIV treatment or even the unresolved question of whether insurance companies should cover sex-change hormone therapy.