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June 12, 2026
Quarterly Article
Amy Belflower Thomas
Reena Chudgar
Whitney Magendie
Megan McClaire
Joneigh S. Khaldun
Jun 1, 2026
Apr 28, 2026
Back to The Milbank Quarterly
Policy Points:
Context: The US public health system is facing an inflection point characterized by chronic underinvestment, workforce and service delivery challenges, outdated data infrastructure, growing health inequities, and increasing instability within the broader health care safety net including projected Medicaid coverage changes and continued rural hospital closures. Fragmentation across public health, health care, social services, and financing systems limits the nation’s ability to address complex population health challenges and invest in prevention.
Methods: This paper examines opportunities for state-led alignment of the public health system through a systems-oriented framework. Drawing on current policy developments, emerging evidence, national frameworks, and state-based examples, we identify and analyze five strategies through which states can strengthen population health: (1) aligning Medicaid and public health around shared population health goals; (2) developing more sustainable and flexible financing mechanisms; (3) expanding regional service delivery and shared-service models; (4) strengthening public-private partnerships; and (5) aligning technology and data modernization efforts with critical infrastructure needs.
Findings: The analysis highlights how state governments can serve as system integrators and stewards of shared infrastructure by aligning governance, financing, service delivery, partnerships, and technology across traditionally siloed sectors. Examples from multiple states demonstrate the potential for Medicaid-public health integration, blended and braided financing approaches, regional service delivery models, public-private collaborations, and interoperable data systems to improve efficiency, expand access to services, strengthen workforce capacity, support population health outcomes, and increase system sustainability. These approaches are particularly important in rural and underserved communities, where workforce shortages, hospital closures, and limited resources threaten access to essential services.
Conclusions: Addressing today’s public health challenges requires moving beyond fragmented, program-specific approaches toward a more integrated, prevention-focused health system. States are uniquely positioned to lead this transformation by aligning public health with innovations in Medicaid, financing, service delivery, private-sector partnerships, and technology infrastructure. Strategic state leadership can improve efficiency, sustainability, and responsiveness while strengthening foundational public health capacity. In an era of resource constraints and rising health threats, state-led systems alignment positions states as integrators of shared infrastructure and represents a critical opportunity to improve population health and build a more resilient public health system.