B0447419
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Maternal and Child Health Services - The Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Program serves a key role in the provision of maternal and child health services in Kansas. The program’s mission is to improve the health and well-being of the nation’s mothers, infants, children, and youth, including those with special health care needs.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) is responsible for the administration of programs carried out with allotments under Title V. The Title V MCH Services Block Grant is administered by the Bureau of Family Health (BFH) in the Division of Public Health. The mission of the bureau is to "provide leadership to enhance the health of Kansas women and children through partnerships with families and communities."
In addition to the MCH conceptual framework and public health essential services, the Title V program depends on many strengths—translated through core values and guiding principles—to promote a strong culture of continuous quality improvement, innovation and growth, and a sustained focus on what matters.
Kansas continuously assesses the needs of MCH populations through an ongoing needs assessment, and the state action plan is reviewed during interim years. With a goal to maximize the input of internal and external partners, the Title V five-year needs assessment process utilizes a mixed methods approach relying on input from a diverse network of key informants, partners, and community members including families and consumers. The State Systems Development Initiative (SSDI) staff provide data capacity for informed decision-making. This comprehensive process and broad approach assist with identifying key priorities used to develop an action plan that addresses and improves MCH in Kansas while leveraging resources and partnerships across the state.
Local MCH agencies implement work plans that align with the needs of the target area/community and the most current MCH state plan priorities and performance measures.
Title V MCH Priorities (FFY 2023)
Kansas identified seven priorities with the Title V mission, purpose, legislation, and measurement framework in mind.
1. Women have access to and receive coordinated, comprehensive services before, during, and after pregnancy.
2. All infants and families have support from strong community systems to optimize infant health and well-being.
3. Children and families have access to and utilize developmentally appropriate services and supports through collaborative and integrated communities.
4. Adolescents and young adults have access to and utilize integrated, holistic, patient-centered care to support physical, social, and emotional health.
5. Communities, families, and providers have the knowledge, skills, and comfort to support transitions and empowerment opportunities.
6. Professionals have the knowledge, skills, and comfort to address the needs of maternal and child health populations.
7. Strengths-based supports and services are available to promote healthy families and relationships.
Title V National Performance Measures (NPMS) (FFY 2023)
Kansas selected five NPMS that most closely align with the state priorities.
- NPM1: Well-Woman Visit (Women 18-44 years)
- NPM5: Safe Sleep
- NPM6: Developmental Screening
- NPM10: Adolescent Preventive Medical Visit
- NPM12: Transition to Adulthood
Title V State Performance Measures (SPMS) (FFY 2023)
Kansas identified four SPMS to monitor progress with priority needs not addressed by NPMS.
- SPM1: Postpartum Depression
- SPM2: Breastfeeding Exclusivity
- SPM3: Workforce Development
- SPM4: Strengths-based Family Supports
The Title V plan reflects coordination of MCH activities across funding sources, agencies, and local providers. It relies on partnerships, high-quality shared measurement, and data to track the impact and effectiveness of services, activities, and strategies. To learn more about these and other activities, visit https://www.kdhe.ks.gov/626/maternal-child-health-block-grant.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) is responsible for the administration of programs carried out with allotments under Title V. The Title V MCH Services Block Grant is administered by the Bureau of Family Health (BFH) in the Division of Public Health. The mission of the bureau is to "provide leadership to enhance the health of Kansas women and children through partnerships with families and communities."
In addition to the MCH conceptual framework and public health essential services, the Title V program depends on many strengths—translated through core values and guiding principles—to promote a strong culture of continuous quality improvement, innovation and growth, and a sustained focus on what matters.
Kansas continuously assesses the needs of MCH populations through an ongoing needs assessment, and the state action plan is reviewed during interim years. With a goal to maximize the input of internal and external partners, the Title V five-year needs assessment process utilizes a mixed methods approach relying on input from a diverse network of key informants, partners, and community members including families and consumers. The State Systems Development Initiative (SSDI) staff provide data capacity for informed decision-making. This comprehensive process and broad approach assist with identifying key priorities used to develop an action plan that addresses and improves MCH in Kansas while leveraging resources and partnerships across the state.
Local MCH agencies implement work plans that align with the needs of the target area/community and the most current MCH state plan priorities and performance measures.
Title V MCH Priorities (FFY 2023)
Kansas identified seven priorities with the Title V mission, purpose, legislation, and measurement framework in mind.
1. Women have access to and receive coordinated, comprehensive services before, during, and after pregnancy.
2. All infants and families have support from strong community systems to optimize infant health and well-being.
3. Children and families have access to and utilize developmentally appropriate services and supports through collaborative and integrated communities.
4. Adolescents and young adults have access to and utilize integrated, holistic, patient-centered care to support physical, social, and emotional health.
5. Communities, families, and providers have the knowledge, skills, and comfort to support transitions and empowerment opportunities.
6. Professionals have the knowledge, skills, and comfort to address the needs of maternal and child health populations.
7. Strengths-based supports and services are available to promote healthy families and relationships.
Title V National Performance Measures (NPMS) (FFY 2023)
Kansas selected five NPMS that most closely align with the state priorities.
- NPM1: Well-Woman Visit (Women 18-44 years)
- NPM5: Safe Sleep
- NPM6: Developmental Screening
- NPM10: Adolescent Preventive Medical Visit
- NPM12: Transition to Adulthood
Title V State Performance Measures (SPMS) (FFY 2023)
Kansas identified four SPMS to monitor progress with priority needs not addressed by NPMS.
- SPM1: Postpartum Depression
- SPM2: Breastfeeding Exclusivity
- SPM3: Workforce Development
- SPM4: Strengths-based Family Supports
The Title V plan reflects coordination of MCH activities across funding sources, agencies, and local providers. It relies on partnerships, high-quality shared measurement, and data to track the impact and effectiveness of services, activities, and strategies. To learn more about these and other activities, visit https://www.kdhe.ks.gov/626/maternal-child-health-block-grant.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Kansas
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
HRSA-23-001
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 370% from $1,018,090 to $4,785,381.
Kansas Department Of Health And Environment was awarded
Enhancing Maternal Child Health Services in Kansas: Title V MCH
Project Grant B0447419
worth $4,785,381
from Maternal and Child Health Bureau in October 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Kansas United States.
The grant
has a duration of 2 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.994 Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant to the States.
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 4/25/25
Period of Performance
10/1/22
Start Date
9/30/24
End Date
Funding Split
$4.8M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.8M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for B0447419
Transaction History
Modifications to B0447419
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
B0447419
SAI Number
B0447419-2719271176
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Other
Awarding Office
75RJ00 HRSA Office of Federal Assistance Management
Funding Office
75RM00 HRSA MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH BUREAU
Awardee UEI
CGSTLVM57LM5
Awardee CAGE
1NNW8
Performance District
KS-90
Senators
Jerry Moran
Roger Marshall
Roger Marshall
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal and Child Health, Health Resources and Services Administration, Health and Human Services (075-0354) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $4,785,381 | 100% |
Modified: 4/25/25