The Washington Health Corps was established in 2019 to encourage healthcare professionals to work in critical shortage areas. In exchange for service, healthcare professionals receive assistance with higher education in the form of loan repayment or conditional scholarships. The Washington Health Corps (Corps) is an umbrella program under which four programs exist:
The programs provide licensed professionals with repayment on all or a portion of participants' outstanding student loans in exchange for service at an eligible site. Eligible sites are healthcare facilities that provide comprehensive outpatient, ambulatory, and primary healthcare services. The Office of Student Financial Assistance (Office), created within and under the direction of the Washington Student Achievement Council, administers these programs in collaboration with the Department of Health (DOH) under the same structure and application process. Each program differs in the type of eligible licensed health professionals and eligible geographic shortage areas of service.
The Office, in consultation with the DOH and the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), establishes annual conditional scholarship award amounts and required service obligations, and determines eligible education and training programs. The DOH, in consultation with the Office and the DSHS, determines eligible credentialed healthcare professions and identifies underserved behavioral health areas for conditional scholarships based on whether there is a shortage or insufficient availability of a credentialed profession so as to jeopardize patient care and pose a threat to the public health and safety, and based on the relative degree of shortages among professions.
In administering conditional scholarships, the Office selects participants, adopts rules and guidelines, and collects and manages repayments from participants who do not meet their service obligations. Should a participant fail to complete their service obligations, the participant must pay the unsatisfied portion of the principal and interest, which includes an equalization fee. The loan interest rate and repayment interest rate for conditional scholarships is limited to 2 percent.
The Office is required to make exceptions to the conditions for participation and repayment obligations should substantial circumstances beyond the control of a participant warrant such exceptions. Such substantial circumstances include: (1) a participant experiencing unforeseen emergencies or hardships that substantially affect the participant's ability to complete their service obligations; or (2) the participant is a service member of the armed forces, or is a spouse or dependent of a service member, who receives permanent change of station or deployment orders to move out-of-state or to a location that would create a hardship to complete the participant's service obligations. The Office is also required to reduce, or help to reduce, barriers that threaten a conditional scholarship participant's ability to complete their service obligations by offering wraparound services such as navigation support for public benefits, financial coaching, and access to food, housing, and childcare resources and referrals.
The Behavioral Health Scholarship Program (Scholarship) is created under the Corps for credentialed health professionals serving in underserved behavioral health areas. In administering and operating the Scholarship, the Office, the DOH, and the DSHS retain their respective duties granted under the Health Professional Scholarship Program, including:
The Office must annually consider the best utilization of funding in determining awards for loan repayments and scholarships under the Behavioral Health Loan Repayment and Scholarship Program. The Office may use funds appropriated for the Behavioral Health Loan Repayment and Scholarship Program for loan repayment or scholarships, or both.
(In support) While there are other scholarships in the medical field, there is nothing to the extent this bill creates. Behavioral health professionals across the state report ongoing issues of staff turnover and the importance of a well-trained workforce. We cannot just focus on recruitment but must also emphasize retention. In addition to improving both, this bill also helps diversify the workforce. Less than 20 percent of psychologists and just over 10 percent of psychiatrists are Black, Indigenous, or people of color. Further, behavioral health professionals are widely inaccessible to marginalized communities, which leads to increased inequities in the healthcare system. This bill will increase accessibility to disadvantaged communities because it requires recipients to serve in rural and underserved areas.
(Opposed) This bill should be amended to encourage scholarships be offered to behavioral health practitioners who support and intend on practicing human rights?based mental health treatment that does not focus on coercion or force, or psychiatric drugs as a primary effort. The bill should encompass a broad range of candidates, taking into account a treatment approach that individuals want to receive.
(In support) Representative Carolyn Eslick, prime sponsor; Vaughnetta J. Barton, University of Washington School of Social Work; Laurie Lippold, Partners for Our Children; Anna Nepomuceno, NAMI Washington and Patients Coalition of Washington; David Sullivan; Breck Lebegue and Kika Kaui, Washington State Psychiatric Association; and Becky Thompson, Washington Student Achievement Council.
No new changes were recommended.
(In support) Shortage and underserved areas could benefit from giving practitioners choices for either conditional scholarships or loan repayment. Addressing entry into behavioral health professions has been a priority, and this bill would be a step toward better access for marginalized communities.
Many individuals do not have access to mental health practitioners that look like them, and this change would increase the pipeline and diversity of health care workers. The state behavioral health system needs this investment in order to serve every resident in the state.
While retention is important, conditional scholarships will assist in recruiting a more diverse workforce not worried about repaying student loan debt. Conditional scholarships can bring clinicians into community behavioral health centers.
(Opposed) None.
Erica Munsey; Laurie Lippold, Partners for Our Children; Breck Lebegue, Washington State Psychiatric Association; Bob Cooper, National Association of Social Workers Washington Chapter; Anna Nepomuceno, National Alliance on Mental Illness Washington and Patients Coalition of Washington; and Christina Minor.