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Transforming Children

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Title: Transforming Children


1
Transforming Childrens Mental Health Services
  • Presentation to OMHSAS Childrens Advisory
    Council
  • May 1, 2006

2
Historical Overview
  • Prior to the 1960s, childrens mental health
    services were very limited in Pennsylvania, as
    they were throughout the country.
  • There were childrens units in State Mental
    Hospitals, with limited publicly funded services
    in communities.
  • In 1965, Eastern State School and Hospital, a
    state facility exclusively for children under 18
    years of age, opened.
  • There were some child guidance centers and
    regional diagnostic and evaluation centers
    beginning to appear.

3
Community Mental Health Movement
  • Following the passage of federal community mental
    health legislation in 1963, Pennsylvania embarked
    on a process for developing community mental
    health and mental retardation service
    legislation.
  • In 1966, the Mental Health and Mental Retardation
    Act was passed, which provided the foundation for
    the development of services throughout
    Pennsylvania, in a partnership where the State
    provides most of the funding, and County
    government serves as the local authority,
    responsible for managing the program.

4
Still, little for children
  • community mental health movement was largely
    focused on adults.
  • There continued to be limited community services
    for children and adolescents.
  • This was true throughout the country, not just
    Pennsylvania.

5
Unclaimed Children
  • In 1982, Unclaimed Children The Failure of
    Public Policy by Jane Knitzer was published,
    describing the appalling lack of appropriate
    services for children with emotional and behavior
    disorders.
  • The publication of this book galvanized the
    field, spurring efforts at reform.
  • In 1984, Congress created the Federal National
    Institute of Mental Health Child and Adolescent
    Service System Program (CASSP) Initiative.

6
Pennsylvania Reaction
  • Connie Dellmuth took over what functioned as the
    Childrens Bureau.
  • 1985, Pennsylvania was awarded a federal grant
    for CASSP systems development.
  • A state structure was established, and the
    process was begun to provide funding for CASSP
    coordinators to be established in each county
    MH/MR Program.

7
Student Assistance Program
  • 1985 saw the beginning of the Student Assistance
    Program, a collaborative effort involving mental
    health, drug and alcohol, and education, to
    provide screening and assessment in all 501
    school districts in the Commonwealth.

8
Service Development
  • Intensive Case Management (but development for
    children was slow).
  • In the late 1980s, Pennsylvania established Host
    Home and residential treatment facilities.
  • In addition, funds were provided for counties to
    establish Family Based Mental Health services.
    This was one of the earliest standardized
    programs.

9
CASSP Institute
  • The CASSP Training Technical Assistance Institute
    Program was established in the early 1990s to
    provide ongoing statewide training and technical
    assistance.
  • The CASSP Institute is managed through a contract
    with Penn State University.

10
Role of Parents and Family Advocates
  • The role of parents in the childrens mental
    health system has been a central focus of the
    childrens service system development.
  • For more than a decade, there was a CASSP
    Advisory Committee that served in an Advisory
    role to Childrens Bureau and to the Deputy
    Secretary for the Office of Mental Health and
    Substance Abuse.

11
BHRS
  • In the early 1990s, Pennsylvania attempted to
    implement the highly acclaimed Wraparound
    approach to serving children with serious
    emotional disturbance.
  • However, Wraparound was funded primarily by
    Medicaid as BHRS. A complex set of requirements
    were developed, many of which obfuscated the true
    essence of the wraparound philosophy.

12
Medicaid Financing
  • The use of Medicaid to fund the vast majority of
    childrens mental health services has mixed
    blessings.
  • There is relatively easy access because
    Pennsylvania has a very generous Medicaid benefit
    for children (children with a diagnosed
    disability are considered as a family of one
    which usually means that they are eligible for
    Medicaid).

13
However
  • However, the use of Medicaid involves a medical
    necessity test, which means that the system is
    largely pathology focused.
  • And there are limitations to what can be funded
    and under what conditions the services must
    operate.

14
Managed Care
  • Pennsylvania introduced Medicaid Managed Care in
    the mid 1990s. Today, approximately 75 of the
    Medicaid population in Pennsylvania is covered by
    managed care.
  • By July, 2007 the entire Commonwealth will have
    behavioral health managed care

15
Benefits
  • Under the behavioral health component of the
    HealthChoices program, counties are required to
    ensure timely access to medically necessary
    mental health and drug and alcohol services and
    sufficient capacity to assure the consumer choice
    of their provider of service.
  • Managed care has significantly increased the
    access standards to which the counties are held,
    and the depth of the monitoring of their
    compliance with those standards.

16
Reorganization
  • The Childrens Bureau had been eliminated in the
    mid 1990s during a reorganization for managed
    care.
  • The Childrens Bureau reestablishment in 2003 has
    returned a focus on childrens behavioral health
    services.

17
Current Environment
  • Cabinet for Children and Families
  • Commission for Children and Families
  • System of Care Initiative
  • Integrated Childrens Service Plans
  • Integrated Childrens Service Initiative
  • School Based Partial Initiative
  • Restraint Elimination (Alternatives to Coercive
    Treatment)

18
Opportunities/resources
  • Interagency Childrens (CASSP Conference)
  • Office of Child Development and health Department
    Early Childhood grant
  • University Childrens Policy Collaborative
  • MacArthur Foundation Model System Initiative
  • Childrens Behavioral Health Task Force
  • Legislative Budget Finance Committee
  • Youth Suicide Prevention Grant
  • AND

19
Transformation Facilitation
  • National Technical Assistance Center for
    Childrens Mental Health at Georgetown
  • Pennsylvania one of 10 states chosen
  • Purpose is to support State Childrens Directors
    in identifying and realizing their state
    transformation goals for child and family mental
    health

20
Technical Assistance
  • Assessment protocol
  • Monthly telephone calls
  • Access to resources
  • Peer support form other states
  • Discipline through Action Plan

21
What will we Transform
  • Childrens Bureau Retreat involving OMHSAS
    Executive staff and Parent C0-chair of Advisory
    Council identified priorities for
  • Prevention and Early Intervention
  • Child and Family Teams, and
  • Development of the Continuum of Effective Services

22
Presidents New Freedom Commission found
  • unmet need (as much as 75 do not receive special
    mental health service)
  • and fragmentation
  • and the lack of a comprehensive, systematic
    approach to childrens mental health

23
Subcommittee on Children and Families
  • Expanded the focus of the Commission which was on
    children with serious emotional disorders
  • To include intervention for children at risk for
    mental disorders
  • As well as prevention of mental health problems
    and promotion of positive mental health for all
    children

24
Vision
  • Based on a System of Care approach
  • Calls for a broad array of services and support
    in a childs home, school and community
  • In partnership with the family and consistent
    with the culture, values, and preferences pf the
    child, youth and family.

25
A Public Health Approach
  • Preventing mental health problems, and
  • Creating conditions that promote positive
    socio-emotional health for all children

26
10 Challenges
  1. Developing Comprehensive Home and Community based
    services
  2. Family Partnerships and Support
  3. Culturally Competent Care
  4. Individualized Care
  5. Evidence Based Practice

27
Challenges, continued
  1. Coordination of Services, Responsibility, and
    Funding
  2. Prevention, Early Identification and Early
    Intervention
  3. Early Childhood Intervention
  4. Mental Health in Schools
  5. Accountability

28
Workforce Development
  • Transformed system will focus on natural
    supports, and
  • all staff will have expertise in how to harness
    the strengths of the child,
  • partner with the family in treatment planning and
    decision-making, and
  • to consult and collaborate with all other child
    serving systems.

29
What are other states doing?
  • Sheila Pires has reported that many states are
    exploring ways to refinance childrens behavioral
    health services. These include
  • looking for new money (primarily maximizing
    federal Medicaid),
  • redirecting current spending (primarily through
    reducing residential and/or moving money from
    services that produce poor outcomes), and
  • developing a locus of responsibility whereby a
    care management entity is empowered to purchase
    needed services to address the needs of the top
    5 of children who present with the most
    extensive (and potentially most expensive needs).

30
Locus of Responsibility
  • Wraparound Milwaukee, the Indiana DAWN Project,
    the New Jersey single payer system, and the New
    Mexico purchasing collaborative.
  • The experiences of these projects shows that
    consolidated purchasing power can effect changes
    in the provider community.
  • Furthermore, the entity with centralized
    accountability must have complete family
    involvement and focus on community supports, not
    just paid services.

31
Sheila Pires
  • systems change will require structural change,
    training, coaching, and support.
  • Sheila recommends that Pennsylvania consider
    several counties as early adapters to begin the
    concept of centralized authority for children who
    have complex, multi-system needs. This will
    allow experimentation with integrated care
    management, case rates, risk pools, and
    regulatory/policy changes.
  • It will also allow for the development of family
    and consumer involvement that is essential to the
    ultimate success of such a cross categorical
    effort.

32
Our Transformation Priorities
  • Child and Family Teams
  • Evidence Based Practice
  • Early Identification and Early Intervention
  • Interagency Integration
  • Managed Care
  • Youth Suicide Prevention

33
Recovery and Resilience
  • People who are involved in supportive social
    relationships experience benefits in terms of
    health morale and coping
  • Strengthening interpersonal and community ties is
    a resilience and development promoting strategy

34
Child and Family Teams
  • In Arizona, the child and family team is
    comprised of the child, the childs family,
    foster parents, a behavioral health
    representative,
  • and any individual important in the childs life
    who are identified and invited to participate by
    the child and family

35
Congruent with
  • Wraparound
  • Family Group Decision making
  • Person centered planning
  • IDEA Individual Family Service Plan

36
The Ideal
  • One family
  • One Team
  • One Plan
  • Everyone working to support the child and family

37
Family Development Credential Training Program
  • Allegheny County, skills and competencies related
    to working effectively with individuals and
    families.
  • to ensure that services to families are
    consistent with DHS guiding principles, i.e.,
    high quality, strengths-based, culturally
    competent, individually tailored and empowering,
    and holistic. Helping individuals and families
    reach their goals and attain a healthy self
    reliance and interdependence with their
    communities, requires workers who are skillful
    and knowledgeable. This FDC training will help
    front line workers to enhance their own
    competence, self-confidence and empowerment, so
    that they can help to engender the same in the
    families with whom they work.

38
Maryland Waiver
  • a wraparound model of community-based service
    delivery for children with serious emotional
    disturbance (SED).
  • The wraparound model is a family-driven,
    community-based, inter-agency cooperative model.
    Each childs plan of care is tailored to that
    child and familys individual needs.
  • Under this model, a care managing entity (CME)
    will receive a set payment rate in exchange for
    delivering a specific package of specialty mental
    health services .

39
continued
  • In addition to providing the specified package of
    specialty mental health services, the CME(s) may
    use the rate to provide non-Medicaid covered
    services, with the goal of preventing the need
    for more intensive services.
  • The CME(s) will individualize the package of
    benefits to the needs of the child and to build
    on the strengths of the childs family and
    community.

40
Our Vision of Evidence Based and Promising
Practices
  • Based on the central role of families as full
    team members and as the critical resource for our
    children
  • Recognize the importance of fitting models and
    interventions with the diverse cultural
    perspectives and preferences of families and
    communities
  • Place the challenges faced by kids in the context
    of their developmental issues, their family
    circumstances, and the many worlds that real kids
    function in school, peers, neighborhood, family,
    etc.
  • Are individualized, holistic, and coordinated
    and
  • Insist on outcomes focused treatment planning

41
Evidence Based Practice
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  • Functional Family Therapy
  • Parent-Child Interaction therapy
  • MultiSystemic therapy
  • MultiDimensional Treatment Foster Care

42
Other Promising Practices
  • Intensive In-Home Services
  • Child respite services
  • Mobile response and stabilization
  • Mental health consultation
  • Independent living skills and supports
  • Family/Youth education and peer support

43
Whats Not listed as Evidence Based
  • Traditional office based talk therapy
  • Residential treatment
  • Group homes
  • Day Treatment

44
Alternatives to Residential
  • As part of the Deficit Reduction Act for Federal
    FY October 1, 2006, CMS is considering creating a
    waiver to allow youth to stay in the community
    and receive home and community based services
    instead of being placed in a PRTF.
    The demonstration project will be granted to 10
    states as part of this consideration. CMS would
    like to publish specific information on how to
    apply by the end of the summer.

45
RTFs
  • 1710 beds for In State non accredited
  • 3027 beds for in state accredited
  • 1963 beds for out of state accredited

46
Early Intervention
  • Mental Health Consultation to Early care and
    Education
  • Partnerships with education on service delivery
    to young children

47
Integration efforts
  • System of Care
  • Integrated Childrens Services Plan
  • Integrated Childrens Services Initiative
  • MacArthur MH-JJ Model System Initiative
  • Education Initiatives
  • Co-occurring efforts

48
Managed Care
  • Broad array of evidence based and promising
    practices
  • Services and Supports to family members
  • Case rates or bundled rates to support evidence
    based and promising practices
  • Support to the youth and family to partner in
    planning, quality monitoring, peer support, and
    service provision
  • Replace deficit oriented assessments with
    strength based

49
Youth Suicide Prevention
  • Promotion of wellness and healthy social,
    emotional, and behavioral development
  • Reduction and elimination of stigma
  • Early identification and intervention.

50
Our own Call to Action
  • We spend 900 million on childrens behavioral
    health services
  • We have little more than anecdotal evidence that
    our efforts result in desired outcomes
  • We have a wealth of talented, committed people
    with a passion for change.
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