1 / 15

Behavioral Healthcare in Rural Settings

Behavioral Healthcare in Rural Settings . Climbing Mountains, Fording Streams. A Brief History of the Public System .

damali
Download Presentation

Behavioral Healthcare in Rural Settings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Behavioral Healthcare in Rural Settings Climbing Mountains, Fording Streams

  2. A Brief History of the Public System • The California Community Mental Health Services Act 1969 “deinstitutionalized” mental health services, serving people with mental disabilities in the community rather than in state hospitals.

  3. A Brief History of the Public System • The mental health system was never conceived as an “entitlement.” • Mental health services were to be provided “to the extent resources are available.” • The Short-Doyle Act was the funding mechanism intended to build the community mental health system. • Adequate funding was never transferred to communities

  4. A Brief History of the Public System • In 1990, California faced a $15 billion state budget shortfall which would have resulted in drastic cuts to mental health • “Realignment” was enacted in 1991 with passage of the Bronzan-McCorquodale Act • It represented a major shift of authority from state to counties for mental health programs • 2004 Prop 63 passage provided dedicated funding for high priority populations

  5. Current System Design • Now managed by each county, which is a mental health plan (or PIHP) unto itself • Services provided either by the county, contracted providers, or some combination • Rural counties served primarily by the county, though starting to change

  6. Current Funding • Realignment Revenues • Medi-Cal Specialty Mental Health Managed Care SGF Allocation • Medi-Cal EPSDT SGF • State Mandate Reimbursement (AB 3632) • Federal Funding (SAMHSA, Medi-Cal FFP) • Mental Health Services Act (Prop. 63)

  7. Healthcare Reform and Parity: Why Do We Care People diagnosed with depression have nearly twice the annual health care costs of those without 49% of Medicaid beneficiaries with disabilities have a psychiatric illness 52% of those who have both Medicare and Medicaid have a psychiatric illness

  8. Healthcare Reform and Parity: Why Do We Care • 11% of Californians in the fee for service Medi-Cal system have a serious mental illness. • Healthcare spending for these individuals is 3.7 times greater than for all Medi-Cal fee-for-service enrollees: $14,365 per person/year compared with $3,914 • Many studies demonstrating cost savings

  9. Healthcare Reform in CA • Medicaid Expansion • 3.3 million plus by 2014 • CA Waiver as Bridge • CEED basic benefit for SPDs includes minimal MH • Healthcare homes as base • Primary Care Integration w/focus on prevention, care coordination, stepped care

  10. Impact of Parity • Applies to Medicaid and Medicare • Most people will be covered • Movement toward managed/coordinated systems • Mental Health and SU needs will have to be included – only way to bend the cost curve

  11. Information Technology • State-level initiatives – Stimulus $$ • EHR Technical Assistance - RECs • Health Information Exchange • Behavioral Health in the mix • Critical to include • Federal legislation to broaden scope • Staying in the game in CA

  12. No Mountain Top • No system is perfect • The process is most important • Prime opportunity to collaborate • Consider the whole person

  13. What We Know* • Behavioral Health is part of health • Prevention works • Treatment is effective • People recover *From Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration

  14. References • “The Business Case for Bidirectional Integrated Care” by Barbara Mauer & Dale Jarvis; 6/30/2010 • “CA Mental Health Funding Evolution & Policy Implications Pre- and Post- MHSA” by Pat Ryan; Sept 2010 • “Behavioral Health/Primary Care Integration: The Four Quadrant Model and Evidence - Based Practices” Revised February 2006; by Barbara Mauer for the National Council of Community Behavioral Healthcare

More Related