Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawaiʻi, Alaska, Indiana, and Kentucky (PPGNHAIK) is a 501(c)3 organization serving Indiana, Kentucky, Alaska, Idaho, Washington, and Hawaiʻi. PPGNHAIK runs community health education programs throughout Alaska and operates health centers in Soldotna – located in the Kenai Peninsula Borough; Fairbanks – located in the Fairbanks North Star Borough; Juneau; and Anchorage. PPGNHAIK had a Title X grant to serve the boroughs where its health centers are located until a rule change forced the organization to leave the program in 2019. PPGNHAIK is seeking funding to restart Title X programming and services in these communities – all four of which continue to experience high incidences of poverty, unintended pregnancy, and sexually transmitted infections. PPGNHAIK will provide affordable, voluntary, high-quality, evidence-based clinical family planning and related preventive health services; information, education, and counseling related to family planning; and referral services. Grant funds will also be used to support community participation, education, and project promotion activities.
PPGNHAIK’s main goals in Year 1 (4/1/2022-3/31/2023) of the five-year project period (4/1/2022-3/31/2027) are as follows:
1) Deliver equitable, accessible, client-centered, and affordable clinical family planning and related preventive health services to 5,000 unduplicated people, including adolescents aged 19 or younger, with priority for services going to those of low-income families – 3,140 (63%) people at the Anchorage Health Center through 6,280 encounters; 839 (17%) people at the Fairbanks Health Center through 1,678 encounters; 477 (9%) people at the Juneau Health Center through 954 encounters; and 544 (11%) people at the Soldotna Health Center through 1,088 encounters.
2) Provide effective, high-quality, voluntary, and client-centered health services in accordance with PPGNHAIK’s clinical protocols and Title X program requirements that will help patients achieve their family planning and reproductive health goals and achieve optimal health.
3) Operate in full compliance with state laws, legislative mandates, and Title X requirements regarding mandatory reporting and adolescent counseling.
4) Deliver education and outreach programs so people in service-area communities have increased knowledge and information about PPGNHAIK’s Title X program and receive education, skills, and support to address their family planning and reproductive health needs.
All startup activities and systems will be completed in Year 1, thus patient volume in Year 2 will reflect a full 12-months of Title X service provision. Years 3-5 will continue to build on activities, efforts, and progress from the first years of implementation. PPGNHAIK anticipates a 2% increase in total patient volume year-over-year because of outreach strategies and increased health center capacity. The project will specifically target low-income people. PPGNHAIK will serve at least 2,500 (50%) patients with annual family incomes at or below 100% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL), and others at high-risk for family-planning-related health issues (e.g., youth, racial minority groups, LGBTQ+ people, etc.). PPGNHAIK is an excellent candidate for Title X funding given its unique position of being a recent Title X grantee in the service-area communities, and a nationally recognized leader in family planning/reproductive health program development and implementation.
PPGNHAIK’s Service Delivery Plan and budget reflect community needs, and its goals/objectives are based on the Office of Population Affairs’ most current priorities and legislative mandates. Compliance with Title X regulations and program requirements will be the responsibility of PPGNHAIK’s federal programs manager, who will work with executive, clinical, and operations leadership, health center staff, and the education team to successfully operate the Title X program.