Changeflow GovPing Healthcare Michigan Launches New Sickle Cell Disease Strat...
Routine Guidance Added Final

Michigan Launches New Sickle Cell Disease Strategic Plan

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Published March 23rd, 2026
Detected March 24th, 2026
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Summary

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services has released a new strategic plan for 2026-2030 to improve care and services for individuals with sickle cell disease (SCD). The plan focuses on reducing barriers to care for adults and builds upon previous initiatives, incorporating community input to expand access and strengthen public health surveillance.

What changed

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) has issued a new strategic plan for 2026-2030 aimed at improving care and services for the approximately 4,000 individuals in Michigan living with sickle cell disease (SCD). This plan, developed with community input, outlines six strategic goals including implementing system changes, ensuring access to high-quality integrated treatment, providing continuous education, utilizing standards of care, improving prescription adherence to disease-modifying therapies, and enhancing health outcomes through data.

The plan represents a continuation of MDHHS's work in this area, with a specific focus on reducing barriers for adults with SCD. The MDHHS Lifecourse Epidemiology & Genomics Division will lead implementation, with a strategy team meeting biannually to review updates. While this is a strategic plan and not a rule with immediate compliance deadlines, healthcare providers and organizations serving individuals with SCD in Michigan should familiarize themselves with the plan's goals and strategies to align their services and support initiatives.

What to do next

  1. Review the 2026-2030 Strategic Plan to understand goals and strategies.
  2. Identify opportunities to align current services with the plan's six strategic goals.
  3. Participate in community partner updates regarding plan implementation.

Source document (simplified)

MDHHS announces new plan to address sickle cell disease



March 23, 2026

LANSING, Mich. – The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) announces the release of a new sickle cell disease (SCD) strategic plan that continues more than a decade of work to improve care and services to individuals with SCD, with a heightened focus on reducing barriers for adults who live with the disease.

The 2026–2030 Strategic Plan is guided by community input, amplifies the voices of those most affected by the disease and outlines strategies to raise awareness, expand access to care and therapies, and strengthen public health surveillance. The plan builds on the foundation laid by Michigan’s first SCD strategic plan, launched in 2015, which materialized into a decade of multi-faceted initiatives to improve care and services.

“MDHHS is committed to improving care, support, education and health outcomes for individuals living with sickle cell disease,” said Elizabeth Hertel, MDHHS director. “This strategic plan reflects the voices of the sickle cell community and outlines actions to expand access to care, strengthen data and continue advancing support for those impacted across Michigan.”

SCD is an inherited blood disorder that causes red blood cells to form a sickle or crescent shape. The misshapen cells can block blood flow, causing complications such as pain crises, serious infections, strokes and organ damage. Approximately 4,000 individuals in Michigan currently live with SCD.

Lived experience remains a guiding principle throughout the department’s work connected to SCD. By collaborating with individuals living with SCD, caregivers, health care providers, advocacy organizations and community partners, MDHHS identified six strategic goals to guide continued progress:

  1. Implement system changes that center the needs of the SCD community through collaboration.
  2. Ensure access to high-quality, integrated treatment and support services statewide.
  3. Provide continuous education to increase awareness of best practices, resources and information for SCD.
  4. Utilize standards of care and protocols that improve patient outcomes.
  5. Improve prescription of and adherence to disease-modifying therapies.
  6. Use data to establish metrics that enhance health outcomes. The MDHHS Lifecourse Epidemiology & Genomics Division will continue to lead implementation of the plan, with participation and collaboration from internal programs and external partners. A SCD strategy team will meet at least twice per year to review plan updates. During the first year, the strategy team will develop communication, project management and evaluation plans. These plans will be used to keep community partners informed, track efforts and monitor progress, improvements, and decision making.

“For years, addressing the needs of adults with SCD has been a major challenge,” said Sarah Lyon-Callo, state epidemiologist and senior deputy director of MDHHS’ Public Health Administration. “Through our partnership in expanding Children's Special Health Care Services age eligibility for people with sickle cell disease across their lifespan, innovative efforts are underway to enhance the capacity of the health care system to better serve this community.” [SD4] [LS5]

Using data to guide improvements to the strategic plan, the Michigan Sickle Cell Data Collection (MiSCDC) Program tracks progress, identifies gaps and informs solutions.

“Data is vital to closing gaps, improving outcomes and supporting individuals with sickle cell disease throughout their lives,” said Dr. Sarah Reeves, principal investigator of the MiSCDC Program. “MiSCDC leverages data and partnerships to inform policy to ensure that people with SCD get the care they need, when they need it.”

SCD represents significant public health concerns due to its high disease prevalence, elevated rates of morbidity and mortality, and its disproportionate impact on certain populations. While the disease most commonly affects individuals of African descent, it also impacts people of Middle Eastern, South Asian, Hispanic and Mediterranean backgrounds.

To learn more about SCD and statewide efforts to improve care and outcomes, visit Michigan.gov/SickleCell.

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Department of Health & Human Services MI Newswire Department of Health & Human Services 03 - March Press Release Media Contact:

Laina Stebbins

517-241-2112


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Named provisions

six strategic goals

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Health
Published
March 23rd, 2026
Instrument
Guidance
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Supersedes
Michigan's first SCD strategic plan, launched in 2015

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Patients
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers 6221 Hospitals & Health Systems
Activity scope
Chronic Disease Management Healthcare Access
Geographic scope
US-MI US-MI

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Healthcare Access Chronic Disease Management

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