The Consumer and Community Voices (CCV) Work Group of the King County Accountable Community of Health (ACH), including NoHLA senior staff attorney Daniel Gross, created an equity assessment tool for the ACH to use in developing Medicaid demonstration projects. The tool – which the ACH will use in designing its Medicaid Transformation Demonstration projects – requires the ACH to show how it considered the populations affected by potential projects, and how those projects may be structured to remedy societal disparities in health outcomes and access to care. In our 2016 report on consumer engagement best practices for ACHs, co-authored with Washington CAN!, we encouraged ACHs to use health equity tools like this one.