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ACCESS QUALITY AND APPROACH FOR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH IN NORTH EAST TENNESSEE 5th Annual Health Care Symposium October 17, 2014 Presenter Randall E. Jessee, Ph.D. Senior Vice President Frontier Health BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE IN NE TN A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE • 1956 - Federal Community Mental Health Act • 1957 – Mental Health Centers Open in Kingsport, Johnson City, and Bristol • 1967 – Kingsport Council on Alcohol and Drug Dependency opens • 1972 - Nolachuckey Mental Health Center Opens in Greeneville • 1972 - First Mental Health Center Alcohol and Drug Treatment Program Begins in Johnson City MENTAL HEALTH CENTERS AND CATCHMENT AREAS 1972 Nolachuckey Mental Health Center Holston Mental Health Center Bristol Mental Health Center . U.S 23 . U.S 23 Watauga Mental Health Center 1 ers Int e tat I 8 te ta rs e nt 26 FREE STANDING SUBSTANCE ABUSE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT SERVICES 1972 Kingsport - KingsportAlcohol & Drug Council Johnson City - Comprehensive Communtity Service . U.S 23 . U.S 23 Elizabethton Crossroads 1 ers Int e tat e8 at st er t In 26 ALONG THE WAY • Assess the needs, fill the gaps in care. • Developmental and Intellectual Disability Programs joined with existing MHCs in Kingsport, Bristol and Johnson City. • Kingsport Alcohol and Drug Council opens school based intervention/education program and the first student assistance program. • All MHCs add various adult and C&Y residential group homes, foster care, court services, special population services (geriatric, women, school based, job placement training and coaching. ALONG THE WAY • First merger between CMHC and Freestanding Alcohol and Drug Treatment in Tennessee – 1989 • Hospital and Hospital Systems – Emergency Rooms become a gateway to behavioral health care • 1981 PD1 Contracts with Holston Services (Kingsport Mental Health) for MH/SA Services in Scott, Lee and Wise counties • First State funded 24/7 Regional Crisis Programs are opened in 1994 • In 1985 Woodridge Psychiatric Hospital is opened by Watauga Mental Health Center CONTINUUM OF CARE By 1990: Developing a Continuum of Care became the leading goal and activity of all the Region One CMHCs: • Attracting resources • Creating opportunities • Developing partnerships in the community CONTINUUM OF CARE COMPONENTS Added: • Prevention and early intervention - (HIV education, screening, case management and support) HOPE, SI TSPN • Ongoing assessment, diagnosis, treatment and referral • Use of Evidence Based Practices in all services (as available) • Service provision to children, youth, adults, geriatric and other special populations (intellectual disabilities) • Medical/Psychiatric Services CONTINUUM OF CARE COMPONENTS • Levels of care: Outpatient Intensive Outpatient Case Management Medication evaluation and management Detoxification and residential treatment Crisis Assessment Emergency Commitment Crisis Stabilization Unit Intensive Case Management Intensive group living (SPMI) Group Homes Independent living Transitional recovery living Psychiatric Hospital Day Treatment . U.S 23 . U.S 23 FRONTIER HEALTH CONTINUUM OF CARE SERVICE AREA 2014 1 ers Int e tat I e8 at st r e nt 26 CONTINUUM OF CARE CO-OCCURING DISORDERS AND INTEGRATED CARE Integrated care requires “one stop” services for Co-Occurring Disorders (COD) which include physical, mental, substance abuse/addiction, intellectual, and behavioral disorders/diseases. One individual with multiple conditions. Treatment occurs within an inter disciplinary-assessment, treatment planning and treatment application team at one single site. This model is replicated at multiple regional sites. PRINCIPLE-DRIVEN ADULT AND CHILDREN SYSTEMS OF CARE All services are: • Hopeful • Person or family centered • Empowering and strength based • Designed to help people achieve their most important and meaningful goals PRINCIPLE DRIVEN ADULT AND CHILD SYSTEMS OF CARE All services are: • Hopeful • Person or family centered • Empowering and strength-based • Designed to help people achieve their most important and meaningful goals Minkoff Zia Partners INTEGRATED SYSTEMS OF CARE • Complexity is an expectation, not an exception • All services are designed to welcome, engage, and provide integrated services to individuals and families with multiple complex issues (MH, SUD, DD, BI, health, trauma, housing, legal, parenting, etc.) Minkoff Zia Partners WHAT IS A SYSTEM? Sets of nesting dolls that are not quite so nesting: Systems within systems sitting next to other systems within systems Minkoff Zia Partners TRANSFORMATION • Involves EVERY system, subsystem, and sub-sub-system in a common process to achieve a common vision, with EVERY dollar spent and EVERY policy, procedure, and practice • In a provider agency, that means the agency as a whole, every program in the agency, and every person delivering care is working toward a common vision. Minkoff Zia Partners COMPREHENSIVE, CONTINUOUS INTEGRATED SYSTEM OF CARE CCISC • All programs in the system become welcoming, hopeful, strength-based (recovery- or resiliency-oriented), traumainformed, and complexity-capable • All persons delivering care become welcoming, hopeful, strength-based, trauma-informed, and complexity-capable • 12- Step Program of Recovery for Systems Minkoff Zia Partners PERSON-CENTERED, RESILIENCY/RECOVERY-ORIENTED COMPLEXITY CAPABILITY Each program organizes itself, within its mission and resources, to deliver integrated, matched, hopeful, strengthbased, best-practice interventions for multiple issues to individuals and families with complex needs who are coming to the door. Minkoff Zia Partners PERSON-CENTERED, RESILIENCY/RECOVERY-ORIENTED COMPLEXITY COMPETENCY Each person providing clinical care is helped to develop core competency, within their job and level of training, licensure or certification, to become an inspiring and helpful partner with the people and families with complex needs that are likely to already be in their caseloads. Minkoff Zia Partners PERSON-CENTERED, RESILIENCY/RECOVERY-ORIENTED COMPLEXITY CAPABILITY • CCISC Program Self-Assessment Tools COMPASS-EZTM COMPASS-IDTM COMPASS-PH/BHTM COMPASS-PreventionTM 12 Steps for programs developing Complexity Capability % SUCCESS RATE 100.0% PERCENTAGE OF C&Y RESIDENTIAL CONTINUUM YOUTH SUCCESSFULLY DISCHARGED TO A PERMANENT EXIT* 20.0% 0.0% GOAL** 70% 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 91.3% 79.2% 76.3% 40.0% 84.9% 84.0% 60.0% 87.6% 80.0% 2014 * Goal of 70% based on State Contract expectation. **Includes Traces, Level I, II, & III placements. SUCCESSFUL COMPLETIONS OF A&D RESIDENTIAL SERVICES NATIONAL 0.0% BENCHMARK 57% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 84.2% 81.5% 66.7% 20.0% 56.3% 40.0% 63.2% 60.0% 75.6% 80.0% 63.5% SUCCESS RATE 100.0% 2014 * Treatment Episode data set (TEDS) published by the Office Of Applied Studies, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services (SAMHSA) TOTAL OPENED CASES SERVED IN OUTPATIENT SERVICES 40,000 30,000 29,968 27,450 29,198 33,467 32,262 31,456 30,825 33,321 34,111 33,719 33,281 33,744 32,595 30,130 20,000 10,000 0 FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY 2000- 2001- 2002- 2003- 2004- 2005- 2006- 2007- 2008- 2009- 2010- 2011- 2012- 201301 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 TOTAL SESSIONS COMPLETED BY FRONTIER HEALTH CASE MANAGERS, THERAPISTS, AND MEDICAL STAFF 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 313,825 311,906 319,773 318,392 303,017 284,965 269,409 279,631 283,050 292,523 301,094 285,997 259,543 250,183 FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY 2000- 2001- 2002- 2003- 2004- 2005- 2006- 2007- 2008- 2009- 2010- 2011- 2012- 201301 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 10,000 NUMBER OF FACE-TO-FACE CRISIS CONTACTS IN TN AND PD1 SERVICES 8,932 8,910 9,031 8,630 6,955 7,040 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 8,325 1,742 1,780 1,774 1,368 7,661 7,591 5,980 5,817 6,958 7,101 3,783 3,486 3,182 3,074 2,822 3,392 * 2,630 2,201 2,139 0 FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY 2001- 2002- 2003- 2004- 2005- 2006- 2007- 2008- 2009- 2010- 2011- 2012- 201302 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 PD1 TN DAYS OF SERVICE - ADULT SUBSTANCE ABUSE RESIDENTIAL 15,000 10,275 10,121 9,406 9,334 9,881 8,718 8,892 6,267 3,000 6,094 6,000 6,559 9,000 6,256 # OF DAYS 12,000 0 FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 99.1% 99.1% 99.2% 99.3% 99.4% 99.2% 100.0% 80.0% 60.0% 40.0% 20.0% 0.0% 99.0% PERCENTAGE OF CASE MANAGEMENT CONSUMERS* REMAINING STABLE FUNCTIONING IN A HOME SETTING, WITHOUT PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITILIZATION 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 *Includes adults and children in standard case management services. TN MENTAL HEALTH RESIDENTIAL SERVICES IMPROVEMENT IN HOSPITALIZATION RATE 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 1/10/10 6/30/10 FY 20102011 FY 20112012 FY 20122013 FY 20132014 HOSPITALIZATION % BEFORE ADM 6.4% 5.9% 9.1% 10.3% 10.4% HOSPITALIZATION % AFTER ADM 0.2% 1.1% 1.0% 0.8% 1.1% MEDIAN DAYS MEDIAN ACCESS TIME TO OUTPATIENT SERVICES 20 15 10 5 4.5 0 BENCHMARK* 10.5 Days 2008 4.5 3.9 4.5 4.3 2009 2010 2012 2013 4.5 2014 5.0 CONSUMER REPORT OF “DEGREE TO WHICH TREATMENT HELPED YOU DEAL WITH YOUR PROBLEM/COMPLAINT** 4.0 4.0 3.9 3.9 4.0 4.0 2.0 4.0 4.0 3.0 3.9 3.9 4.0 3.9 3.9 1-5 LIKERT SCALE *Mental Health Corporations of America Benchmark 1.0 2009 2010 2011 NATIONAL BENCHMARK* 2012 2013 FRONTIER HEALTH *Mental Health Corporations of America. ** Rated on 1-5 Likert Scale 2014 THE NOW CHALLENGE • Innovation in health care is now • The focus is on vulnerable populations with little or no access to healthcare • Strategies promote public and private collaborations • Integration of Behavioral Health Care and Primary Health Care THE BASIS FOR CHANGE • Virginia cites data indicating that 50% of intensive users of health care have a behavioral health diagnosis • Medical providers are often ill equipped to effectively respond to individuals with behavioral health conditions • More than 45% of SMI individual also have a substance use disorder which further complicates the treatment response Healthy VA (Virginia) THE BASIS FOR CHANGE • The cost of treatment for individuals with a chronic physical health disease and a co-occurring behavioral health diagnosis is 75% higher than those without the behavioral health diagnosis Healthy VA (Virginia) PREVALENCE OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN PRIMARY CARE No Mental Disorder 61.4% Somatoform 14.6% Major Depression Dysthymia 11.5% 7.8% Minor Depression 6.4% Major Depression (partial remission) 7.0% Generalize Anxiety 6.3% Panic Disorder Other Anxiety Disorder Alcohol Disorder Binge Eating 3.6% 9.0% 5.1% 3.0% National Council PREVALENCE OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN LOW INCOME PRIMARY CARE PATIENTS • 35% of low income patents with a psychiatric diagnosis saw their PCP in the past 3 months. • 90% of patients preferred integrated care. • Based on Findings, authors argue for system change 7.0% 10.0% Eating Disorder 7.0% Alcohol Abuse 17.0% 11.0% Anxiety Disorder 36.0% 16.0% Mood Disorder 33.0% 28.0% At Least One Psychiatric Dx 0.0% 10.0% General PC Population 20.0% 30.0% 51.0% 40.0% 50.0% Low Income Patients National Council 60.0% PRIMARY CARE AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH • Most PCPs do a good job of diagnosing and beginning treatment for depression(Annals of Internal Medicine, 9/07) 1,131 patients in primary care practices across 13 states • PCPs did less well following up with treatment over time – less than half of patients completed a minimal course of medications or psychotherapy • Lowest quality of care occurred among those with the most serious symptoms, including those with evidence of suicide or substance use • “right now PCPs don’t have the tools necessary to decide which patients to treat and which to refer on to specialized MH care” CO-MORBIDITY AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE • Almost 25% of general healthcare patients report they have a co-morbid substance use conditions likely related to the physical sequelae that result from untreated substance misuse and dependency (NSDUH, 2005) • Substance use conditions often complicate management and treatment of other chronic diseases in primary care such as diabetes, hypertension, asthma and others (PRISM, 2008) National Council TREATMENT IMPACT CONSUMER OUTCOMES - MISSOURI • Independent living increased by 33% • Vocational activity increased by 44% • Legal involvement decreased by 68% • Psychiatric hospitalization decreased by 52% • Illegal substance use decreased by 52% • IN ADDITION – study shows CMHCs services substantially decrease overall medical costs National Council HEALTH HOMES The Virginia Behavioral Health Home: Pilot Project • Behavioral Health Care and Primary Health Care coordinated/integrated to meet individual where they are • Features of this pilot program will include: A focus on prevention and early intervention Facilitation of joint treatment planning sessions among providers Strategies to close gaps in care and address societal factors that discourage individuals from seeking medical services Robust use of care management, outreach and community services Carefully managed transitions in care and medications Peer support specialists for assistance with social and lifestyle changes Coordination of care through use of technology to share critical health information Use of data to better understand health care needs Healthy VA (Virginia) CONTINUUM OF INTEGRATION Key Element: Communication CO-LOCATED INTEGRATED Key Element: Physical Proximity Key Element: Practice Change Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Level 6 Minimal Collaboration Basic Collaboration at a distance Basic Collaboration OnSite Close Collaboration OnSite with Some System Integration Close Collaboration Approaching an Integrated Practice Full Collaboration in a Transformed/Merged Integrated Practice Behavioral Health, Primary Care and Other Healthcare Providers Work: In separate facilities, where they: In separate facilities where they: In same facility not necessarily same offices, where they: In same space within the same facility, where they: In same space within the same facility (some shared space) where they: In same space within the same facility sharing all practice space where they: • Have separate systems • Have separate systems • Have separate systems • Share some systems like scheduling or medical records • Actively seek system solutions together or develop work-arounds • Have resolved most or all system issues, functioning as one integrated system • Communicate about cases only rarely and under compelling circumstances • Communicate periodically about shared patients • Communicate regularly about shared patients, by phone or mail • Communicate in person as needed • Communicate frequently in person • Communicate consistently at the system, team, and individual levels • May never meet in person • Communicate driven by specific patient issues • Collaborate driven by need for each others services and more reliable referral • Collaborate driven by need for consultation and coordinated plans for difficult patients • Collaborate driven by desire to be a member of the care team • Collaborate driven by shared concept of team care • Have limited understanding of each other’s notes • May meet as part of larger community • Meet occasionally to discuss cases due to close proximity • Have regular faceto-face interactions about some patients • Have regular team meetings to discuss overall patient care and specific patient issues • Have formal and informal meetings to support integrated model of care • Appreciates each other’s roles as resources • Feel part of a larger yet ill-defined team • Have a basic understanding of roles and culture • Have an in-depth understanding of roles and culture • Have roles and cultures that blur or blend National Council THE FUTURE: HEALTH HOMES Patient care access and quality improves at the expense of professional and organizational agendas. • Who are your partners? • Building new relationships, trust and success REFERENCES 1. 2. Frontier Health, Access and Quality Data. 2000-2014. National Alliance for Mentally Ill (NAMI), Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in America 2012. 3. Managed Care Mental Health Substance Use and Wellness, Association of Behavioral Health and Wellness, 2011 (www.abhw.org). 4. Programs and Tools to Improve the Quality of Mental Health Services, Research in Action.16.2013. 5. Health Care Reform, Monitor on Psychology, American Psychological Association, 2009. 6. Priority Goals – Health Care Reform, American Psychological Association, 2014 (www.apa.org). 7. Access to Care: Tools for Hospital Emergency Departments (MBHP Network Providers), Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership, 2014 (www.mbhp.org). 8. A Healthy Virginia, Inovation Report, 2014 (www.vahealthinnovation.org) 9. The National and State Context for Integrated Care: Developing New Opportunities, 2013 (www.the national council.org). 10. Changing the World: Inspiring Hope, Health and Recovery, Christine Cline, M.D., MBA; Kenneth Minkoff, M.D., Zia Partners 2014 (www.ziapartners.com)