Program Description
The Department of Health, Bureau of Family Health, funds the Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) Program through a grant with the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers to engage health centers in improving care to children and youth with special health care needs* (CYSHCN). The goals of the FQHC Program include:
- Increasing access to quality health care for CYSHCN
- Offering services to CYSHCN to prevent illness and injury
- Offering family-centered services to CYSHCN
Mission
The FQHC Program's mission is to increase the number of CYSHCN who receive high quality care coordination services.
Care coordination involves collaborating with non-clinical services to assure that CYSHCN experience a seamless continuum of clinical and non-clinical services that improve their health outcomes and quality of life. The program accomplishes its mission by funding creative projects in health centers that address:
- improving navigation of services for CYSHCN and their family members
- increasing access to a broad range of needed services
- coordinating care with specialists and mental/behavioral health professionals
- targeting services to low-income, rural, and other under-served people in Pennsylvania
Why is the FQHC Program Important?
Nearly 22% of children and youth under age 22 in Pennsylvania have a special health care need. One in five Pennsylvania families has a CYSHCN. CYSHCN and their families often require services from multiple systems: health care, public health, education, mental health, and social services.
Projects
Through the FQHC Program, in 2025 the Department of Health funded seven health centers to develop and implement innovative projects. These health centers had over 31,000 CYSHCN in their client populations, including:
- 27,081 with physical conditions
- 4082 with mental conditions
- 10,213 with developmental conditions
Many of these children and youth had multiple conditions. In 2025 new and continuing projects served 2795CYSHCN. The FQHCs used creative interventions to improve health outcomes and increase quality of life:
- Maximized equitable access to recommended developmental screenings and follow-up services Set up “one-stop-shop” for referrals, screenings, and support that integrated services for clients with behavioral, developmental, and physical conditions
- Screened very young clients for developmental delays
- Integrated clinical services with screenings for social determinants of health, behavioral health services, and a robust referral network
Who to Contact
For more information contact the Bureau’s Division of Community Systems Development and Outreach at RA-DHCSDO@pa.gov.
To learn about FQHCs and their availability by region, contact:
Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers
1035 Mumma Road, Suite 1
Wormleysburg, PA 17043
(717) 761-6443
www.pachc.org
*Children and youth with special health care needs are under age 22 and have chronic physical, mental, or developmental conditions that require health and related services of a type or amount beyond that required by children and youth generally.