TURLOCK, Calif. 鈥 For much of his young life, Jorge Sanchez regularly gasped for air, at times coughing so violently that he鈥檇 almost throw up. His mother whisked him to the emergency room late at night and slept with him to make sure he didn鈥檛 stop breathing.
鈥淗e鈥檚 had these problems since he was born, and I couldn鈥檛 figure out what was triggering his asthma,鈥 Fabiola Sandoval said of her son, Jorge, now 4. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so hard when your child is hurting. I was willing to try anything.鈥
In January, community health workers visited Sandoval鈥檚 home in Turlock, a city in California鈥檚 Central Valley where dust from fruit and nut orchards billows through the air. They scoured Sandoval鈥檚 home for hazards and explained that harsh cleaning products, air fresheners, and airborne dust and pesticides can trigger an asthma attack.
The team also provided Sandoval with air purifiers, a special vacuum cleaner that can suck dust out of the air, hypoallergenic mattress covers, and a humidity sensor 鈥 goods that retail for hundreds of dollars. Within a few months, Jorge was breathing easier and was able to run and play outside.

The in-home consultation and supplies were paid for by Medi-Cal, California鈥檚 Medicaid health insurance program for low-income residents. Gov. Gavin Newsom is spearheading an ambitious to transform Medi-Cal into both a health insurer and a social services provider, one that relies not only on doctors and nurses, but also community health workers and nonprofit groups that offer dozens of services, including delivering healthy meals and helping homeless people pay for housing.
These groups are redefining health care in California as they compete with businesses for a share of the money, and become a new arm of the sprawling Medi-Cal bureaucracy that serves low-income residents on an annual budget of $158 billion.
But worker shortages, negotiations with health insurance companies, and learning to navigate complex billing and technology systems have hamstrung the community groups鈥 ability to deliver the new services: Now into the third year of the ambitious five-year experiment, only a small fraction of eligible patients have received benefits.
鈥淭his is still so new, and everyone is just overwhelmed at this point, so it鈥檚 slow-going,鈥 said Kevin Hamilton, a senior director at the Central California Asthma Collaborative.

The collaborative has served about 3,650 patients, including Sandoval, in eight counties since early 2022, he said. It has years of experience with Medi-Cal patients in the Central Valley and has received about $1.5 million of the new initiative鈥檚 money.
By contrast, CalOptima Health, Orange County鈥檚 primary Medi-Cal insurer, is new to offering asthma benefits and has signed up 58 patients so far.
鈥淎sthma services are so difficult to get going鈥 because the nonprofit infrastructure for these services is virtually nonexistent, said Kelly Bruno-Nelson, CalOptima鈥檚 executive director for Medi-Cal. 鈥淲e need more community-based organizations on board because they鈥檙e the ones who can serve a population that nobody wants to deal with.鈥
Newsom, a Democrat in his second term, says his signature health care initiative, , seeks to reduce the cost of caring for the state鈥檚 sickest and most vulnerable patients, including homeless Californians, foster children, former inmates, and people battling addiction disorders.
In addition to in-home asthma remediation, CalAIM offers of social services, plus a benefit connecting eligible patients with one-on-one care managers to help them obtain anything they need to get healthier, from grocery shopping to finding a job.
The 25 managed-care insurance companies participating in Medi-Cal can choose which services they offer, and contract with community groups to provide them. Insurers have hammered out about 4,300 large and small contracts with nonprofits and businesses.
So far, about 103,000 Medi-Cal patients have received CalAIM services and roughly 160,000 have been assigned personal care managers, , a sliver of the hundreds of thousands of patients who likely qualify.
鈥淲e鈥檙e all new to health care, and a lot of this is such a foreign concept,鈥 said Helena Lopez, executive director of , a nonprofit organization providing social services in Riverside and San Bernardino counties, such as handing out baseball cleats to children to help them be active.
Tiffany Sickler runs , which offers California foster children mental health and other types of care, and even helped a patient pay off parking tickets. But the program is struggling on a shoestring budget.
鈥淚f you want to do this, you have to learn all these new systems. It鈥檚 been a huge learning curve, and very time-consuming and frustrating, especially without adequate funding,鈥 she said.


Brandon Richards, a Newsom spokesperson, defended CalAIM, saying that it was 鈥渙n the cutting edge of health care鈥 and that the state was working to increase 鈥渁wareness of these new services and support.鈥
For nonprofits and businesses, CalAIM is a money-making opportunity 鈥 one that top state health officials hope to make permanent. Health insurers, which receive hefty payments from the state to serve more people and offer new services, share a portion with service providers.
In some places, community groups are competing with national corporations for the new funding, such as Mom鈥檚 Meals, an Iowa-based company that delivers prepared meals across the United States.
Mom鈥檚 Meals has an advantage over neighborhood nonprofit groups because it has long served seniors on Medicare and was able to immediately start offering the CalAIM benefit of home-delivered meals for patients with chronic diseases. But even Mom鈥檚 Meals isn鈥檛 reaching everyone who qualifies, because doctors and patients don鈥檛 always know it鈥檚 an option, said Catherine Macpherson, the company鈥檚 chief nutrition officer.
鈥淯tilization is not as high as it should be yet,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut we were well positioned, because we already had departments to do billing and contracting with health care.鈥
Middleman companies also have their eye on the billions of CalAIM dollars and are popping up to assist small organizations to go up against established ones like Mom鈥檚 Meals. For instance, the New York-based is advising homeless service providers how to get more contracts and expand benefits.
, with 70 member organizations, is helping smaller nonprofit groups develop and deliver services primarily for families and foster children. Full Circle has signed a deal with Kaiser Permanente, allowing the health care giant to access its network of community groups.
鈥淲e鈥檙e allowing organizations to launch these benefits much faster than they鈥檝e been able to do and to reach more vulnerable people,鈥 said Camille Schraeder, chief executive of Full Circle. 鈥淢any of these are grassroots organizations that have the trust and expertise on the ground, but they鈥檙e new to health care.鈥
One of the biggest challenges community groups face is hiring workers, who are key to finding eligible patients and persuading them to participate.
Kathryn Phillips, a workforce expert at the California Health Care Foundation, said there isn鈥檛 enough seed money for community groups to hire workers and pay for new technology platforms. 鈥淭hey bring the trust that is needed, the cultural competency, the diversity of languages,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut there needs to be more funding and reimbursement to build this workforce.鈥
Health insurers say they are trying to increase the workforce. For instance, L.A. Care Health Plan, the largest Medi-Cal insurer in California, has given $66 million to community organizations for hiring and other CalAIM needs, said Sameer Amin, the group鈥檚 chief medical officer.
鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have the staffing to do all this stuff, so we鈥檙e helping with that all while teaching them how to build up their health care infrastructure,鈥 he said. 鈥淓veryone wants a win, but this isn鈥檛 going to be successful overnight.鈥

In the Central Valley, Jorge Sanchez is one of the lucky early beneficiaries of CalAIM.
His mother credits the trust she established with community health workers, who spent many hours over multiple visits to teach her how to control her son鈥檚 asthma.
鈥淚 used to love cleaning with bleach鈥 but learned it can trigger breathing problems, Sandoval said.
Since she implemented the health workers鈥 recommendations, Sandoval has been able to let Jorge sleep alone at night for the first time in four years.
鈥淗aving this program and all the things available is amazing,鈥 said Sandoval, as she pointed to the dirty dust cup in her new vacuum cleaner. 鈥淣ow my son doesn鈥檛 have as many asthma attacks and he can run around and be a normal kid.鈥
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