Download Achieving the Promise: Mental Health Transformation and

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Transforming the
Mental Health System
COSIG States Meeting
Bethesda, MD
December 16, 2004
A. Kathryn Power, M.Ed., Director
Center for Mental Health Services
·
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Center for Mental Health Services
www.samhsa.gov
COSIG States:
Transforming the Way Our Nation
Addresses Co-occurring Disorders
2
Defining Transformation
Transformation: \n (15c) from the Latin roots
to change TRANS (across) and FORMA
(shape).
1: a change in form, appearance, nature or
character
2: the process of doing so.
3
The SAMHSA Matrix
4
The Goals of a Transformed System
Goal 1 Americans understand that mental
health is essential to overall health
Goal 2 Mental health care is consumer and
family driven
Goal 3 Disparities in mental health services are
eliminated
Goal 4 Early mental health screening,
assessment, and referral to services are
common practice
Goal 5 Excellent mental health care is delivered
and research is accelerated
Goal 6 Technology is used to access mental
health care and information
5
Goal 4: Early Mental Health
Screening, Assessment, and Referral
to Services Are Common Practice
Recommendations
4.1—Promote the mental health of young children
4.2—Schools should have the ability to play a larger
role in mental health care for children
4.3—Screen for co-occurring mental and substance
abuse disorders and link with integrated
treatment strategies
4.4—Screen for mental disorders in primary health
care, across the lifespan, and connect to
treatment and support
6
The Public Health Model
A community approach to preventing
and treating illnesses. Its premise is
that caring for the health of an
individual protects the community,
while—in turn—caring for the health of
a community protects the individual—
with society at large reaping the overall
rewards.
7
Estimated Prevalence of
Co-occurring Disorders



Fifty percent of homeless adults with
serious mental illnesses have a cooccurring substance abuse disorder
Sixteen percent of incarcerated individuals
have severe mental and substance abuse
disorders
Among detainees with mental disorders, 72
percent also have a co-occurring substance
abuse disorder
8
Mental Illnesses and Substance
Use Disorders
Percent of persons with mental illnesses
who also will develop a substance use disorder
Persons
with
mental
illnesses
Co-occurring
disorder
Up to
50%
9
Substance Use Disorders and
Mental Illnesses
Adults with
mental illnesses
Adults with
mental illnesses
20.4%
Persons with a
substance use
disorder
7%
All persons
Source: Serious Mental Illness and Its Co-Occurrence
With Substance Use Disorders, Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration (2004).
10
COSIG Data and Performance
Measures


Percentage of clients in mental health and
substance use programs with symptoms of the
corresponding co-occurring problem
Percent of treatment programs that—




Screen for co-occurring disorders
Assess for co-occurring disorders
Provide treatment to clients through collaborative,
consultative, and integrated models
Percentage of clients who experience reduced
impairment from their co-occurring disorders
following treatment
11
Hope…is a search for freedom, both a freedom
of the body shackled by disease and a freedom
of the spirit to assert its dignity, of having
some level of control over one’s life. . . . To
hope under the most extreme circumstances is
an act of defiance that permits a person to live
his life on his own terms. It is part of the
human spirit to endure and give a miracle a
chance to happen.
Jerome Groopman, M.D.
The Anatomy of Hope
12