Two years after the pandemic derailed his health care agenda, Governor Charlie Baker on Tuesday unveiled a sweeping new plan to boost primary care and mental health, control drug prices, and better coordinate care.

Baker’s proposal is focused on two unglamorous but essential cornerstones of the health care system. It calls on health care providers and insurers to increase spending on primary care and mental and behavioral health by 30 percent over three years — an investment of $1.4 billion.

To keep total costs in check, providers and insurers would be required to cut spending growth in other areas, such as pricey hospital services.

The bill largely mirrors legislation that Baker proposed in late 2019 but couldn’t get through the Legislature before COVID-19 shifted priorities.

Administration officials said the pandemic has shown the critical importance of primary care and mental health care. Many people who missed regular medical appointments during the pandemic, because of shutdowns and fears of catching COVID, are now sicker and require more intense hospital-level treatment.

The pandemic has also exacerbated the crisis in mental health, with hundreds of patients stuck at Massachusetts hospitals each day, waiting for treatment.

“The pandemic demonstrated that while our health care system does many things very well… we still have a number of significant issues and problems we need to solve,” Baker said during a press conference at the Codman Square Health Center in Dorchester.

The legislation does not tell health systems and insurers how to increase spending in primary care and mental health. They can meet the requirement by increasing payment rates to care providers, extending clinic hours, or adding telehealth services, for example.

“By increasing investments in this part of the health care system, we open access to care and keep people healthier in the long term,” Baker said.

Primary care and mental health combined receive just 15 percent of health care dollars spent in the state, administration officials said. Hospital services and prescription drugs account for most health care spending.

In 2020, a year marked by pandemic-related disruptions in care, total health care spending in Massachusetts declined 2.4 percent from the previous year, to $62.6 billion. But health spending is expected to climb again as more people seek health care.

To target health inequities, Baker’s bill establishes a special line of funding for primary care and mental health providers who serve people on MassHealth, the public program for poor and low-income residents.

Amy Rosenthal, executive director of Health Care For All, said the consumer advocacy group often hears from people who are struggling to find a primary care physician or mental health provider.

“We are encouraged to see the administration prioritize critical investments in primary care and behavioral health services,” she said in a statement. “Access to these vital services could help them stay healthy and avoid higher-cost treatments such as hospitalizations.”

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