B0455474
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Maternal and child health services - it is the goal of Title V to assure availability of a comprehensive quality, accessible maternal and child health system that will positively affect pregnancy outcomes and promote positive health status for infants, children, adolescents, and children with (and without) special health care needs by involving multiple stakeholders across West Virginia (WV).
The Title V needs assessment identifies needs based on data/outcomes and partners with community and stakeholders to develop systems-level interventions that will achieve positive results.
Other goals of the needs assessment are to: collaborate around data collection activities that support the evaluation of care availability, service utilization and the quality of health services for maternal and child health populations; administer population-based health surveillance activities; and collaborate with community resources, government agencies, families, and other stakeholders to identify resources essential for healthy families such as childcare services, healthcare, and economic support.
The vision of the WV Office of Maternal, Child, and Family Health (OMCFH) is to provide leadership to support state and community efforts to build systems of care that assure the health and well-being of all West Virginians throughout the life cycle.
WV uses a systematic method in developing a working framework for carrying out the required five-year needs assessment using epidemiological and qualitative approaches to determine priorities incorporating data, clinical, cost-effectiveness, and patient, provider, and stakeholder perspectives.
WV also looks at available capacity in determining health interventions and attempts to make explicit what health benefits are being pursued.
This approach tries to balance the clinical, ethical, and economic considerations of need—what should be done, what can be done, and what can be afforded when determining evidence-based health interventions.
The OMCFH engages multiple stakeholders across WV to develop and support interventions with the greatest potential to achieve optimal results.
These partnerships work together to support data collection activities and assess the availability of care, service utilization, and quality of health services for the maternal and child health populations.
The OMCFH strives to maximize state and federal funding streams to administer population-based surveillance and service systems, coordinate with other agencies to eliminate duplicate services, provide safety-net services to address gaps in the delivery system, support home visitation services that strengthen families, and provide capacity for data collection and analysis.
Allocation of resources is based on need that takes into consideration other available resources, populations served, and desired outcomes.
Historically, the OMCFH has engaged multiple stakeholders, leveraged longstanding relationships and braided federal and non-federal funds to accomplish objectives outlined in its state action plan.
Key partnerships include the WV Perinatal Partnership, academic institutions, medical facilities, advisory boards, health care providers, the WV Department of Education, and families.
The Title V needs assessment identifies needs based on data/outcomes and partners with community and stakeholders to develop systems-level interventions that will achieve positive results.
Other goals of the needs assessment are to: collaborate around data collection activities that support the evaluation of care availability, service utilization and the quality of health services for maternal and child health populations; administer population-based health surveillance activities; and collaborate with community resources, government agencies, families, and other stakeholders to identify resources essential for healthy families such as childcare services, healthcare, and economic support.
The vision of the WV Office of Maternal, Child, and Family Health (OMCFH) is to provide leadership to support state and community efforts to build systems of care that assure the health and well-being of all West Virginians throughout the life cycle.
WV uses a systematic method in developing a working framework for carrying out the required five-year needs assessment using epidemiological and qualitative approaches to determine priorities incorporating data, clinical, cost-effectiveness, and patient, provider, and stakeholder perspectives.
WV also looks at available capacity in determining health interventions and attempts to make explicit what health benefits are being pursued.
This approach tries to balance the clinical, ethical, and economic considerations of need—what should be done, what can be done, and what can be afforded when determining evidence-based health interventions.
The OMCFH engages multiple stakeholders across WV to develop and support interventions with the greatest potential to achieve optimal results.
These partnerships work together to support data collection activities and assess the availability of care, service utilization, and quality of health services for the maternal and child health populations.
The OMCFH strives to maximize state and federal funding streams to administer population-based surveillance and service systems, coordinate with other agencies to eliminate duplicate services, provide safety-net services to address gaps in the delivery system, support home visitation services that strengthen families, and provide capacity for data collection and analysis.
Allocation of resources is based on need that takes into consideration other available resources, populations served, and desired outcomes.
Historically, the OMCFH has engaged multiple stakeholders, leveraged longstanding relationships and braided federal and non-federal funds to accomplish objectives outlined in its state action plan.
Key partnerships include the WV Perinatal Partnership, academic institutions, medical facilities, advisory boards, health care providers, the WV Department of Education, and families.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
West Virginia
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
HRSA-26-001
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 121% from $2,110,602 to $4,661,288.
West Virginia State Health Department was awarded
Title V Maternal & Child Health Services in WV
Project Grant B0455474
worth $4,661,288
from Maternal and Child Health Bureau in October 2025 with work to be completed primarily in West Virginia 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
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 5/5/26
Period of Performance
10/1/25
Start Date
9/30/27
End Date
Funding Split
$4.7M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.7M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to B0455474
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
B0455474
SAI Number
B0455474-2326542461
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
UB8BRMRKAHY3
Awardee CAGE
9RNM1
Performance District
WV-90
Senators
Joe Manchin
Shelley Capito
Shelley Capito
Modified: 5/5/26