This document summarizes an article from the November 2011 newsletter of the National Association of County Behavioral Health and Developmental Disability Directors. The article discusses the history and increasing use of telemedicine and how it can improve access to healthcare, quality of care, reduce costs and isolation of professionals. Key benefits mentioned are improved access to underserved areas, improved quality through collaboration, reduced costs from less travel, and reduced isolation for professionals. The document also announces an opportunity for counties to apply for grants through HHS's Health Care Innovation Challenge to fund innovative healthcare projects using telemedicine and targeting mental health and substance abuse disorders.
The document summarizes telehealth news and events from Heartland Telehealth Resource Center (HTRC). HTRC provides free telehealth services to Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma and informs readers of upcoming telehealth meetings and trainings. Key topics discussed include a Kansas advisory board recommending expanded use of telesupervision for mental health professionals and a presentation on reimbursement challenges for telenutrition services. Upcoming telehealth events are also listed.
This document discusses mental health care access in rural Colorado. It provides background on policies that have aimed to improve access, including House Bill 92-1036 in 1992 and House Bill 15-1029 in 2015, which requires insurance coverage of telehealth services. While telehealth improves access for rural communities, weaknesses of the current policy include a lack of provisions around licensing, security, and prescribing medications via telehealth. The document examines research on the benefits and limitations of telehealth and implications for at-risk populations, social work practices, and ways the policy could be strengthened.
The document analyzes broadband connectivity and health information technology (HIT) adoption across healthcare providers in Virginia. It details a survey methodology used to assess broadband speeds, telehealth, electronic health records (EHR), and health information exchange among providers. Key findings include that most providers rely on broadband and intend to expand telehealth. EHR use is widespread but some physicians requested assistance, and health information exchange participation is low due to lack of awareness.
The document discusses the role of telesupervision in helping pre-licensed health professionals in rural areas fulfill their licensing requirements. It notes that telesupervision can help behavioral health professionals, speech language pathologists, and other allied health professionals meet supervision needs in areas with shortages. The document also discusses how telecollaboration allows advanced practice nurses and physicians assistants to meet collaborative requirements remotely in some states. Upcoming telehealth events and news are also mentioned.
Communities are the ultimate coronary care units. Learn about HEARTSafe Communities, a population and criteria based incentive program to help communities save the lives of sudden cardiac arrest victims.
The Great Plains Telehealth Resource and Assistance Center (gpTRAC) provides resources and assistance to healthcare providers in Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin who are interested in developing or expanding telehealth programs. gpTRAC aims to improve access to healthcare through telecommunications technologies. It works to advance telehealth by offering consultation services, educational resources, and data on telehealth services in the region. gpTRAC is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Office for the Advancement of Telehealth.
Yolo County in California used funding from the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program (HPRP) to establish a county-wide network of Housing Resource Centers (HRCs) that act as hubs providing centralized access to homelessness prevention and housing stabilization services. This reorganized the fragmented previous system into a coordinated system with standardized assessment and referral processes. HRCs provide direct financial assistance as well as referrals to a wide range of services using a "no wrong door" approach. Data from the Homeless Management Information System is used to track outcomes and target resources.
The document summarizes telehealth news and events from Heartland Telehealth Resource Center (HTRC). HTRC provides free telehealth services to Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma and informs readers of upcoming telehealth meetings and trainings. Key topics discussed include a Kansas advisory board recommending expanded use of telesupervision for mental health professionals and a presentation on reimbursement challenges for telenutrition services. Upcoming telehealth events are also listed.
This document discusses mental health care access in rural Colorado. It provides background on policies that have aimed to improve access, including House Bill 92-1036 in 1992 and House Bill 15-1029 in 2015, which requires insurance coverage of telehealth services. While telehealth improves access for rural communities, weaknesses of the current policy include a lack of provisions around licensing, security, and prescribing medications via telehealth. The document examines research on the benefits and limitations of telehealth and implications for at-risk populations, social work practices, and ways the policy could be strengthened.
The document analyzes broadband connectivity and health information technology (HIT) adoption across healthcare providers in Virginia. It details a survey methodology used to assess broadband speeds, telehealth, electronic health records (EHR), and health information exchange among providers. Key findings include that most providers rely on broadband and intend to expand telehealth. EHR use is widespread but some physicians requested assistance, and health information exchange participation is low due to lack of awareness.
The document discusses the role of telesupervision in helping pre-licensed health professionals in rural areas fulfill their licensing requirements. It notes that telesupervision can help behavioral health professionals, speech language pathologists, and other allied health professionals meet supervision needs in areas with shortages. The document also discusses how telecollaboration allows advanced practice nurses and physicians assistants to meet collaborative requirements remotely in some states. Upcoming telehealth events and news are also mentioned.
Communities are the ultimate coronary care units. Learn about HEARTSafe Communities, a population and criteria based incentive program to help communities save the lives of sudden cardiac arrest victims.
The Great Plains Telehealth Resource and Assistance Center (gpTRAC) provides resources and assistance to healthcare providers in Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin who are interested in developing or expanding telehealth programs. gpTRAC aims to improve access to healthcare through telecommunications technologies. It works to advance telehealth by offering consultation services, educational resources, and data on telehealth services in the region. gpTRAC is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Office for the Advancement of Telehealth.
Yolo County in California used funding from the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program (HPRP) to establish a county-wide network of Housing Resource Centers (HRCs) that act as hubs providing centralized access to homelessness prevention and housing stabilization services. This reorganized the fragmented previous system into a coordinated system with standardized assessment and referral processes. HRCs provide direct financial assistance as well as referrals to a wide range of services using a "no wrong door" approach. Data from the Homeless Management Information System is used to track outcomes and target resources.
EV Services, Inc. Newsletter for February 2012. Look for updates on Florida Legislation, Grants, American Heart Month and the MDX Career Enhancement Program.
The document discusses addressing family homelessness in rural communities in Georgia. It provides details on Georgia's Department of Community Affairs which administers homeless programs throughout the state, including the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-housing Program (HPRP). HPRP funds were distributed to 11 local governments and 7 nonprofit organizations to serve 151 out of 159 counties. The implementation faced challenges due to rural distances but utilized regional partnerships, a statewide website for communication, and HMIS to track outcomes. Lessons learned include the importance of strong sub-grantee selection and regular communication through webinars and reporting.
This document provides an overview and demonstration of Virginia's statewide health information exchange (HIE) called ConnectVirginia. It discusses the history and goals of ConnectVirginia, describes how DIRECT secure messaging works, highlights advantages like security and flexibility, and explains how to enroll. The demonstration shows how users can send and receive encrypted health information and attachments via a web browser without needing email.
The document discusses key issues related to health reform implementation for safety net health systems. It provides an overview of the National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems (NAPH), which advocates for safety net hospitals. The document outlines provisions of the Affordable Care Act related to coverage expansion, exchanges, provider payments, and innovation opportunities. It identifies challenges and questions for safety net health systems to consider regarding health reform implementation.
Health Care Emerging WiMax (Senza Consulting)Going Wimax
WiMAX has the potential to greatly improve healthcare access and quality in developing nations by enabling secure, real-time wireless broadband connections for remote and mobile healthcare workers. This allows workers to access patient records, test results, specialists for consultations, and online training from anywhere. It also empowers patients with more comprehensive healthcare and access to information through nurses and doctors in their communities. WiMAX can help developing nations more efficiently meet healthcare needs with limited resources.
Texas' Fourteen Year Journey to Rebalance Its LTSS SystemOneVoiceTexas
Texas has taken steps over the past 14 years to rebalance its long-term services and support system away from institutions and toward home and community-based services. This includes programs like Money Follows the Person (2001) and Aging and Disability Resource Centers (2006). Through the Balancing Incentive Program (2012), Texas received $301.5 million to further its efforts with initiatives like expanding the ADRC system statewide and improving integrated IT systems. The goal is a fully integrated system where data and services can easily follow individuals to support living in the community.
The UK government has implemented austerity measures to reduce public spending and lower the budget deficit, with £20 billion in cuts planned for the NHS by 2015. This will significantly impact public services and how they are delivered. New technology may help make services more efficient but ambitious plans to empower patients and increase broadband access face challenges implementing major cultural changes with tight budgets. Local authorities have been invited to bid for funding to help achieve the goal of high-speed broadband nationwide. Public engagement will be key to balancing service reductions with community priorities.
Across England local Healthwatch are working to find out what people want from health and care services and to make sure that those who run services hear these views.
We’ve pulled together 28 stories from our 2016 Healthwatch Network Awards of how peoples views are helping to improve NHS and social care services across England.
This document discusses how mobile phones can help achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by reaching remote, "last mile" communities. It notes that 50 countries are not on track to meet the MDGs, especially in Africa. The author believes current strategies have limitations and that rethinking assumptions is needed. Mobile phones can play several roles, including substituting for transportation, providing on-demand advice and education, cutting delays in information sharing, and enabling citizen monitoring and accountability. The author outlines a birth registration partnership in Uganda between the government and a mobile carrier that leverages phones to scale up registration at low cost. He poses questions for private sector actors on how they can further support development goals through technology and partnerships
The document outlines an agenda and programme for a workshop aimed at teaching participants how to gather and analyze both qualitative and quantitative patient data in order to map existing epilepsy services, identify gaps, and make a case to commissioners for improved epilepsy services in a local area. The workshop covers finding and prioritizing stakeholders, facilitating focus groups, analyzing themes in qualitative data, and presenting findings to commissioners using various formats including presentations, reports, and graphics.
Although symptoms can vary widely, the first problem many people notice is forgetfulness severe enough to affect their ability to function at home or at work or to enjoy lifelong hobbies.
The Senate Task Force on the Delivery of Social Services in New York City held a public forum on April 16, 2015 to discuss the state of the social services delivery system. Commissioner Steve Banks testified about the services provided by the Human Resources Administration, including cash assistance, SNAP benefits, Medicaid, child support services, homeless prevention assistance, and employment programs. Concerns raised included homelessness, work sanction policies, language access issues, services for children, funding for nonprofits, services for seniors, and work/training opportunities. Technological improvements and streamlining processes were discussed as ways to address issues around applications getting lost in the system.
This document discusses a regional initiative led by Regional Development Australia (RDA) Logan and Redlands to address rising healthcare costs and chronic disease through digital innovation. The initiative aims to encourage collaboration across health services, enhance digital workflows, and build a knowledge repository of effective solutions. It will take a community-based approach to issues of disadvantage in Logan and Redlands. Key components include conducting a needs analysis, gathering evidence of best practices, and establishing an accelerator event to prototype apps to improve health outcomes. The goal is to aggregate data and lessons learned on a trusted platform to help communities make informed choices about health and wellness.
Prepared by Helene Andre and Luka Grujic for French Tech Hub
The aging population is expected to sky rocket in the next decade and the United States has to rethink how it will deliver care for its elderly.
With recent advancements in technology, Aging in Place has emerged as strong solution to address this pressing need.
In this presentation, French Tech Hub explores the dynamics of the U.S. aging population and gives an overview of the solutions that are being developed for Aging in Place.
EV Services, Inc. Newsletter for February 2012. Look for updates on Florida Legislation, Grants, American Heart Month and the MDX Career Enhancement Program.
The document discusses addressing family homelessness in rural communities in Georgia. It provides details on Georgia's Department of Community Affairs which administers homeless programs throughout the state, including the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-housing Program (HPRP). HPRP funds were distributed to 11 local governments and 7 nonprofit organizations to serve 151 out of 159 counties. The implementation faced challenges due to rural distances but utilized regional partnerships, a statewide website for communication, and HMIS to track outcomes. Lessons learned include the importance of strong sub-grantee selection and regular communication through webinars and reporting.
This document provides an overview and demonstration of Virginia's statewide health information exchange (HIE) called ConnectVirginia. It discusses the history and goals of ConnectVirginia, describes how DIRECT secure messaging works, highlights advantages like security and flexibility, and explains how to enroll. The demonstration shows how users can send and receive encrypted health information and attachments via a web browser without needing email.
The document discusses key issues related to health reform implementation for safety net health systems. It provides an overview of the National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems (NAPH), which advocates for safety net hospitals. The document outlines provisions of the Affordable Care Act related to coverage expansion, exchanges, provider payments, and innovation opportunities. It identifies challenges and questions for safety net health systems to consider regarding health reform implementation.
Health Care Emerging WiMax (Senza Consulting)Going Wimax
WiMAX has the potential to greatly improve healthcare access and quality in developing nations by enabling secure, real-time wireless broadband connections for remote and mobile healthcare workers. This allows workers to access patient records, test results, specialists for consultations, and online training from anywhere. It also empowers patients with more comprehensive healthcare and access to information through nurses and doctors in their communities. WiMAX can help developing nations more efficiently meet healthcare needs with limited resources.
Texas' Fourteen Year Journey to Rebalance Its LTSS SystemOneVoiceTexas
Texas has taken steps over the past 14 years to rebalance its long-term services and support system away from institutions and toward home and community-based services. This includes programs like Money Follows the Person (2001) and Aging and Disability Resource Centers (2006). Through the Balancing Incentive Program (2012), Texas received $301.5 million to further its efforts with initiatives like expanding the ADRC system statewide and improving integrated IT systems. The goal is a fully integrated system where data and services can easily follow individuals to support living in the community.
The UK government has implemented austerity measures to reduce public spending and lower the budget deficit, with £20 billion in cuts planned for the NHS by 2015. This will significantly impact public services and how they are delivered. New technology may help make services more efficient but ambitious plans to empower patients and increase broadband access face challenges implementing major cultural changes with tight budgets. Local authorities have been invited to bid for funding to help achieve the goal of high-speed broadband nationwide. Public engagement will be key to balancing service reductions with community priorities.
Across England local Healthwatch are working to find out what people want from health and care services and to make sure that those who run services hear these views.
We’ve pulled together 28 stories from our 2016 Healthwatch Network Awards of how peoples views are helping to improve NHS and social care services across England.
This document discusses how mobile phones can help achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by reaching remote, "last mile" communities. It notes that 50 countries are not on track to meet the MDGs, especially in Africa. The author believes current strategies have limitations and that rethinking assumptions is needed. Mobile phones can play several roles, including substituting for transportation, providing on-demand advice and education, cutting delays in information sharing, and enabling citizen monitoring and accountability. The author outlines a birth registration partnership in Uganda between the government and a mobile carrier that leverages phones to scale up registration at low cost. He poses questions for private sector actors on how they can further support development goals through technology and partnerships
The document outlines an agenda and programme for a workshop aimed at teaching participants how to gather and analyze both qualitative and quantitative patient data in order to map existing epilepsy services, identify gaps, and make a case to commissioners for improved epilepsy services in a local area. The workshop covers finding and prioritizing stakeholders, facilitating focus groups, analyzing themes in qualitative data, and presenting findings to commissioners using various formats including presentations, reports, and graphics.
Although symptoms can vary widely, the first problem many people notice is forgetfulness severe enough to affect their ability to function at home or at work or to enjoy lifelong hobbies.
The Senate Task Force on the Delivery of Social Services in New York City held a public forum on April 16, 2015 to discuss the state of the social services delivery system. Commissioner Steve Banks testified about the services provided by the Human Resources Administration, including cash assistance, SNAP benefits, Medicaid, child support services, homeless prevention assistance, and employment programs. Concerns raised included homelessness, work sanction policies, language access issues, services for children, funding for nonprofits, services for seniors, and work/training opportunities. Technological improvements and streamlining processes were discussed as ways to address issues around applications getting lost in the system.
This document discusses a regional initiative led by Regional Development Australia (RDA) Logan and Redlands to address rising healthcare costs and chronic disease through digital innovation. The initiative aims to encourage collaboration across health services, enhance digital workflows, and build a knowledge repository of effective solutions. It will take a community-based approach to issues of disadvantage in Logan and Redlands. Key components include conducting a needs analysis, gathering evidence of best practices, and establishing an accelerator event to prototype apps to improve health outcomes. The goal is to aggregate data and lessons learned on a trusted platform to help communities make informed choices about health and wellness.
Prepared by Helene Andre and Luka Grujic for French Tech Hub
The aging population is expected to sky rocket in the next decade and the United States has to rethink how it will deliver care for its elderly.
With recent advancements in technology, Aging in Place has emerged as strong solution to address this pressing need.
In this presentation, French Tech Hub explores the dynamics of the U.S. aging population and gives an overview of the solutions that are being developed for Aging in Place.
The document discusses how information sharing can divert people with mental illness from the local mental health system. It describes how collaboration between law enforcement, mental health providers, and other groups through a crisis care center reduced wait times. Specifically, wait times for medical clearance at the crisis care center were reduced to 45 minutes from over 9 hours. It also shows cost savings of over $15 million over two years from diverting public inebriates, injured prisoners, and mentally ill people from detention facilities, emergency rooms, and jails.
The document discusses telehealth as a growing trend in the healthcare industry and related job opportunities. It defines telehealth as the delivery of health services using telecommunications. The economics section notes that telehealth can reduce costs through lower travel, wages, and hospital expenses based on a study. Growing telehealth adoption in both rural and urban areas is expanding access and addressing disparities. The technology discussion highlights how various devices enable remote care. Legislation is increasingly supporting telehealth coverage. Personal lifestyle interventions using telehealth can help address major health issues like obesity and diabetes. A variety of jobs are emerging in areas like healthcare IT, administration, virtual care coordination, and health policy.
Medical Informatics Update 2013 Programpaulgoldfarb
Event program for the Medical Informatics Update 2013 held October 16, 2013 and sponsored by the Center for Advanced Information Management at Columbia University and IBM Healthcare.
This document discusses the evolution of telehealth from traditional fixed systems to a new era of mobile telehealth, or "Telehealth 2.0". It describes how mobile devices and wireless connectivity now provide a robust platform for telehealth. Key applications like telestroke are incorporating mobile technologies to provide doctors access to patient information and consult with specialists from anywhere via smartphones and tablets. This new mobile approach addresses limitations of prior telehealth systems and could help drive broader adoption of telehealth.
This document summarizes several ways that Tennessee is using broadband and technology to improve healthcare. It discusses the launch of the Tennessee eHealth Network, the first statewide health information exchange network. The network allows secure sharing of medical records, prescriptions, images and more between providers across the state. It also describes how telemedicine is being used in Tennessee jails to provide medical care to inmates via video appointments instead of transporting them, and how expectant mothers in Middle Tennessee can stay connected to family and friends during high-risk pregnancies through technology.
Regional health information exchanges are being developed across the US to allow electronic sharing of medical records between healthcare providers. This reduces costs by eliminating duplicate tests and improves quality of care by giving doctors access to full patient histories. States are taking a leading role in establishing HIEs due to the large costs of healthcare for their budgets. Telemedicine is also expanding, using technology to allow remote patient consultations and care. National electronic sharing of records may eventually be possible if technical, financial and privacy challenges can be overcome.
Starting Your TeleMental Health Program outlines key steps for developing a tele-mental health program, including conducting a needs assessment, establishing policies and procedures, ensuring HIPAA compliance, obtaining proper equipment, providing training to staff, and documenting medical records. Tele-mental health programs allow for the delivery of mental healthcare through videoconferencing technology regardless of patient location. Reimbursement for tele-mental health services varies by state and insurance provider.
Stars in Global Health Grant Proposal Version I (2)Peter Zhang
This grant proposal aims to address malnutrition in Mali by developing a smartphone application to help community health workers (CHWs) more effectively monitor child growth and nutrition. Undernutrition accounts for over a third of child deaths under age 5 in Mali. CHWs play a key role in growth monitoring but face challenges with low literacy, inaccurate data collection, and inability to provide timely counseling. The proposed app would use speech recognition and touchscreen technology to help CHWs collect and interpret growth data, provide counseling, and share information. It would also allow aggregated anonymized data to be accessed by the Ministry of Health to guide nutrition programs. The goal is to ultimately reduce infant mortality, hunger, and improve maternal health through more effective CHW services
This document provides an overview of interactive health communication systems and telehealth technologies. It discusses physician perspectives on adoption barriers like workflow integration and reimbursement issues. It also profiles two AHRQ grants that utilize telehealth to improve cancer care in rural areas and provide remote monitoring for heart failure patients.
The document discusses the potential roles and applications of wireless technology in healthcare. It describes how cell phones are becoming ubiquitous personal computing devices well-suited for delivering healthcare applications. Some current uses include monitoring physiological functions and providing patients with health information and feedback to encourage self-management of chronic conditions. Challenges include establishing reimbursement, proving benefits, ensuring privacy and developing standards.
National Honor Society Scholarship Essay.pdfCrystal Wright
National Honor Society Essay | How to Write? Format, Example and .... Descriptive essay: National honor society scholarship essay. 019 National Honor Society Essay Samples Personal Statement Nhs L .... ️ National honor society essay examples. National Honor Society. 2019-02-01. 006 Essay Example National Honor Society Letter Of Recommendation For .... 019 Essay Example National Junior Honor Society ~ Thatsnotus. National Honors Society Essay – Telegraph. 012 National Honor Society Character Essay 006813659 1 ~ Thatsnotus. Expository essay: National honor society application essay. National honor society essay - College Homework Help and Online Tutoring.. 019 Sample National Honor Society Essay Ideas Scholarship Junior ....
Reflection paper NO PLAGIARISM TIMES NEW ROMAN FONT. DO NOT U.docxlillie234567
Reflection paper: NO PLAGIARISM / TIMES NEW ROMAN FONT. / DO NOT USE CITATIONS EXCEPT FOR THE VIDEO.
For this assignment, you will take some time to reflect on what you know, what you are learning, and what you still want/need to learn in relation to this course. Opportunities to reflect on our profession’s learning competencies, practice behaviors, and methods for how to be an effective social worker are important moments in our development as lifelong learners. To complete this assignment, you will reflect on the assigned readings, classroom discussions, activities, and assignments.
INSTRUCTIONS:IT SHOULD BE REFLECTIVE WRITING. Please divide your paper up by competency. Each competency should be a new paragraph (1 paragraph for competency) that includes all of the information below:
EACH PARAGRAPH MUST CONTAIN THE INFORMATION BELOW:
1.
Describe the assignment/activity you engaged in. Describe the purpose of this assignment/activity. What did you do?
2.
Briefly describe the competency you are linking the assignment/activity to. Provide a brief synopsis of the competency in your own words.
3.
Describe how the assignment/activity helped you obtain certain knowledge and skills for each competency covered. how the assignment/activity helped you in the process of mastering the competency? How did this assignment/activity help you in learning the skill and/or obtaining the knowledge that the competency discusses?
4.
What do you still want and/or need to know in order to master the competency? This can be briefly summarized in a short conclusion paragraph at the end of your paper, or briefly discussed throughout the paper under each competency.
Core Competencies:
CC 1 – Demonstrate Ethical & Professional Behavior: I did a Response Paper on the Day It Snowed in Miami.
CC2 – Advance human rights and social, racial, economic, and environmental justice: I did a Response Paper on the 13th Film (13th Amendment).
CC3 – Engage Anti-racism, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (ADEI) in Practice: I did a Social Justice & Action Project on the Women's Rights Movement.
CC4 – Engage in research-informed practice and practice-informed research: We talk in class about the TEDMED of Nadine Burke Harris regarding How childhood trauma affects health across a lifetime.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95ovIJ3dsNk
CC5 – Engage in Policy Practice: I did a Policy Research Paper on Student Loans Forgiveness.
CC6 – Engage with Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations, and Communities: I learn how to do an action plan and I created one Action Plan with goals and objectives for someone on how to work on anger management and how to find a job.
CC7 – Assess Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations, and Communities: I did an Individual & Family Assessment Paper on the movie (Precious) the principal actor.
Interoperability is one of the most critical issues facing the health care industry today. A universal exchange language is needed to assist health care providers in sharing health information in order to coordinate diagnosis and treatment, while maintaining privacy and security of personal data. Health Information Exchanges (HIE) allow for the movement of clinical data between disparate systems; they enable providers to electronically share health records through a network. This presentation provides an overview of HIE and the Meaningful Use requirement related to the exchange of clinical information as well as information about standards of exchange and the recommended "next steps" for providers.
Usability Lessons From National Healthcare AppsCyber-Duck
From our webinar, The Good, The Bad & The Ugly - Usability Lessons From National Healthcare Apps.
Discover our presentation for World Usability Day, as we shine a light on the impact of digitalisation on public health services, specifically through the lens of delivering great user experiences and better patient care with healthcare apps.
The document discusses the history and development of electronic health record systems (EHRs) in the United States. It describes how the US president called for widespread EHR adoption in 2004. It outlines the key components of EHRs and notes their benefits like improved patient care. It also discusses the roles of various government agencies and private organizations in initiatives to promote EHR adoption and interoperability through standards, funding, and public-private partnerships.
E-health uses digital technologies like computers, the internet and mobile devices to facilitate health care services remotely. It allows users to communicate with health care providers via email, access medical records, research health information, and engage in real-time audio/video exchanges. Common forms of e-health include telemedicine, interactive TV/video conferencing, kiosks and mobile health apps. Telemedicine specifically involves the remote delivery of clinical services using telecommunications technology.
2018 09-26 Texas Legislature County Affairs Testimony Rep ColemanGilbert Gonzales
Invited testimony for the 86th Texas Legislative Session on Interim Charge #3: Study how counties identify defendants' and inmates' behavioral health needs and deferral opportunities to appropriate rehabilitative and transition services. Consider models for ensuring defendants and inmates with mental illness receive appropriate services upon release from the criminal justice system.
Testimony reviews the Bexar County Texas Model for Behavioral and Criminal Justice Improvement by (in order) Mr. Kenny Wilson, Haven for Hope; Mr. Mike Lozito Judicial Services Director, Bexar County; Mr. David Pan, CHCS Community Initiatives Liasion and Mr. Gilbert Gonzales, Bexar County Mental Health Department Director.
The document discusses improving mental health and criminal justice outcomes through community-based solutions. It notes that the current mental health system is fragmented and fails to address the needs of those with severe mental illness, leading to unnecessary costs. The Bexar County, Texas model created a county-wide jail diversion program through collaboration between law enforcement, courts, treatment providers, and other stakeholders. Key outcomes included reduced incarceration and revocation rates, lower healthcare costs, and over 800 empty jail beds.
Bexar county efforts transformamtion grant 10.18.10Gilbert Gonzales
The document describes several programs that provide mental health services to children:
1) Children's Crisis Intervention Training provides intensive mental health crisis intervention training to school police and administrators to help them respond to student mental health crises. It has successfully trained over 75 officers and 25 staff.
2) The Youth Empowerment Services waiver provides home and community-based services to 300 children with severe emotional disturbances to prevent institutionalization. It uses the wraparound process and cultural competency training.
3) Bexar CARES coordinates access to mental health resources for at-risk youth through the wraparound process, training, and family/youth involvement to reduce out-of-home placements. It
1) Community-based mental healthcare services are more effective than institutional care by allowing for greater family involvement, being less restrictive, and producing better outcomes at a lower cost.
2) Integrating community-based services helps with early detection and treatment of mental health issues while reducing hospitalization needs and helping patients live successfully in their communities.
3) Studies show that average monthly spending per person for home and community-based services is much lower than for institutional care like nursing homes.
This document discusses efforts to address mental illness, substance abuse, and homelessness in Bexar County, Texas. It outlines collaborative initiatives between various community agencies and stakeholders to divert individuals from the criminal justice system into treatment services through programs like the Crisis Care Center. Data is presented showing improvements in wait times and reductions in emergency room utilization and associated cost savings since implementing these diversion and jail diversion programs.
The document discusses jail diversion programs that aim to divert individuals with mental illness from incarceration and instead provide community-based treatment services. It provides an overview of the problem of high rates of mental illness in jails, and describes the comprehensive diversion model implemented in Bexar County, Texas. This model involves collaboration between multiple agencies and has intervention points at various stages of the criminal justice system. It also outlines the benefits of diversion programs, such as reduced costs, fewer mentally ill individuals in jails, and increased public safety.
Taap Conference Therapeutic Jurisprudence Models In San Antonio Texas FinalGilbert Gonzales
This presentation will discuss the origin of the Therapeutic Jurisprudence from Mental Health Law and its evolution to include addiction and dual diagnosis youths and adults involved in the criminal justice system. A national movement of Drug Courts, which execute therapeutic justice strategies to motivate high recidivist populations toward treatment in lieu of incarceration, is occurring across the US.
This document discusses various community collaborations and initiatives around behavioral health, criminal justice, veterans services, and children's services in Bexar County, Texas. It mentions collaborations between law enforcement, mental health providers, hospitals, courts, schools, and other groups. The goals are to divert people from jail into treatment, share data and coordinate emergency response, and increase capacity for mental health and substance abuse services.
This document summarizes a systems approach to crisis care developed in Bexar County, Texas. It involves extensive collaboration between law enforcement, mental health providers, courts, hospitals, and other community partners. The approach includes co-response teams of mental health professionals and law enforcement, crisis intervention training for officers, jail diversion programs, and a crisis care center that provides rapid medical and psychiatric evaluation to reduce wait times. The initiatives aim to improve outcomes for those in mental health crisis and reduce incarceration through comprehensive community collaboration.
The document discusses implementing a public health approach to address drug abuse, mental illness, homelessness, and incarceration of those with mental illnesses or substance abuse issues. It notes the high economic and social costs of the current fragmented system and lack of treatment. Over 20% of jail and prison populations have a mental illness or were incarcerated due to lack of treatment options. The document calls for a national strategy with coordinated services across housing, employment, treatment, law enforcement, and other areas to improve outcomes and reduce costs to taxpayers.
The document describes the therapeutic justice model used in Bexar County, Texas to integrate treatment services and the criminal justice system. It discusses collaborations between various agencies to provide alternatives to incarceration like crisis centers, courts focused on treatment, and programs for veterans. Data is presented showing improvements in wait times and outcomes from these diversion and treatment initiatives.
This document summarizes a presentation about integrating mental health and substance abuse services in Bexar County, Texas. It describes the development of collaborative diversion initiatives between local law enforcement, hospitals, courts, and mental health agencies. These initiatives include a crisis care center, jail diversion programs, veterans services, and specialty courts to help treat and rehabilitate individuals with mental illnesses or substance abuse issues in the community instead of incarcerating them. The presentation provides data showing these collaborative efforts have significantly reduced wait times for individuals in crisis and saved millions of dollars in healthcare costs.
The document summarizes initiatives in Bexar County, Texas to better integrate mental health and substance abuse services with law enforcement, courts, and corrections to improve outcomes for those with mental illnesses and substance abuse issues in the criminal justice system. It describes the development of programs like the Crisis Care Center, Restoration Center, veterans services, and specialty courts. Key programs introduced include jail diversion, outpatient competency restoration, and forensic outpatient commitments to provide alternatives to incarceration.
NACo Jan 2010 Justice and Public Safety ConferenceGilbert Gonzales
The document summarizes initiatives in Bexar County, Texas to better integrate mental health and substance abuse services with law enforcement and the criminal justice system. It describes the development of programs like the Crisis Care Center to provide rapid psychiatric screening, various diversion and treatment programs as alternatives to incarceration, initiatives to improve services for veterans, and the establishment of collaborative partnerships between multiple organizations. The goal has been to create a coordinated "system of care" to improve outcomes for individuals living with mental illness or substance abuse issues who come into contact with law enforcement or the criminal justice system.
The document discusses the fragmentation and costs of the mental health system in the US. It notes that mental illnesses lead to unnecessary disability, unemployment, homelessness, school failure and incarceration. The annual economic cost of mental illness in the US is estimated to be $79 billion. About 20% of jail populations have a serious mental illness. There is a lack of coordinated services across systems like law enforcement, treatment, housing, etc. This leads to poor outcomes for those with mental illnesses.
Basavarajeeyam is a Sreshta Sangraha grantha (Compiled book ), written by Neelkanta kotturu Basavaraja Virachita. It contains 25 Prakaranas, First 24 Chapters related to Rogas& 25th to Rasadravyas.
Here is the updated list of Top Best Ayurvedic medicine for Gas and Indigestion and those are Gas-O-Go Syp for Dyspepsia | Lavizyme Syrup for Acidity | Yumzyme Hepatoprotective Capsules etc
Cell Therapy Expansion and Challenges in Autoimmune DiseaseHealth Advances
There is increasing confidence that cell therapies will soon play a role in the treatment of autoimmune disorders, but the extent of this impact remains to be seen. Early readouts on autologous CAR-Ts in lupus are encouraging, but manufacturing and cost limitations are likely to restrict access to highly refractory patients. Allogeneic CAR-Ts have the potential to broaden access to earlier lines of treatment due to their inherent cost benefits, however they will need to demonstrate comparable or improved efficacy to established modalities.
In addition to infrastructure and capacity constraints, CAR-Ts face a very different risk-benefit dynamic in autoimmune compared to oncology, highlighting the need for tolerable therapies with low adverse event risk. CAR-NK and Treg-based therapies are also being developed in certain autoimmune disorders and may demonstrate favorable safety profiles. Several novel non-cell therapies such as bispecific antibodies, nanobodies, and RNAi drugs, may also offer future alternative competitive solutions with variable value propositions.
Widespread adoption of cell therapies will not only require strong efficacy and safety data, but also adapted pricing and access strategies. At oncology-based price points, CAR-Ts are unlikely to achieve broad market access in autoimmune disorders, with eligible patient populations that are potentially orders of magnitude greater than the number of currently addressable cancer patients. Developers have made strides towards reducing cell therapy COGS while improving manufacturing efficiency, but payors will inevitably restrict access until more sustainable pricing is achieved.
Despite these headwinds, industry leaders and investors remain confident that cell therapies are poised to address significant unmet need in patients suffering from autoimmune disorders. However, the extent of this impact on the treatment landscape remains to be seen, as the industry rapidly approaches an inflection point.
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/kqbnxVAZs-0
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/SINlygW1Mpc
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
- Link to NephroTube website: www.NephroTube.com
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These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a quick overview of the physiological basis of a normal electrocardiogram.
Learning objectives:
1. Define an electrocardiogram (ECG) and electrocardiography
2. Describe how dipoles generated by the heart produce the waveforms of the ECG
3. Describe the components of a normal electrocardiogram of a typical bipolar lead (limb II)
4. Differentiate between intervals and segments
5. Enlist some common indications for obtaining an ECG
6. Describe the flow of current around the heart during the cardiac cycle
7. Discuss the placement and polarity of the leads of electrocardiograph
8. Describe the normal electrocardiograms recorded from the limb leads and explain the physiological basis of the different records that are obtained
9. Define mean electrical vector (axis) of the heart and give the normal range
10. Define the mean QRS vector
11. Describe the axes of leads (hexagonal reference system)
12. Comprehend the vectorial analysis of the normal ECG
13. Determine the mean electrical axis of the ventricular QRS and appreciate the mean axis deviation
14. Explain the concepts of current of injury, J point, and their significance
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 11, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 9, Human Physiology - From Cells to Systems, Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
3. Chapter 29, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
4. Electrocardiogram, StatPearls - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK549803/
5. ECG in Medical Practice by ABM Abdullah, 4th edition
6. Chapter 3, Cardiology Explained, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2214/
7. ECG Basics, http://www.nataliescasebook.com/tag/e-c-g-basics
TEST BANK For Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, 14th Edition by Bertram G. Kat...rightmanforbloodline
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Rasamanikya is a excellent preparation in the field of Rasashastra, it is used in various Kushtha Roga, Shwasa, Vicharchika, Bhagandara, Vatarakta, and Phiranga Roga. In this article Preparation& Comparative analytical profile for both Formulationon i.e Rasamanikya prepared by Kushmanda swarasa & Churnodhaka Shodita Haratala. The study aims to provide insights into the comparative efficacy and analytical aspects of these formulations for enhanced therapeutic outcomes.
Histololgy of Female Reproductive System.pptxAyeshaZaid1
Dive into an in-depth exploration of the histological structure of female reproductive system with this comprehensive lecture. Presented by Dr. Ayesha Irfan, Assistant Professor of Anatomy, this presentation covers the Gross anatomy and functional histology of the female reproductive organs. Ideal for students, educators, and anyone interested in medical science, this lecture provides clear explanations, detailed diagrams, and valuable insights into female reproductive system. Enhance your knowledge and understanding of this essential aspect of human biology.
Muktapishti is a traditional Ayurvedic preparation made from Shoditha Mukta (Purified Pearl), is believed to help regulate thyroid function and reduce symptoms of hyperthyroidism due to its cooling and balancing properties. Clinical evidence on its efficacy remains limited, necessitating further research to validate its therapeutic benefits.
Role of Mukta Pishti in the Management of Hyperthyroidism
2011 technology and telemedicine plus nacbhdd newsletter for november 2011
1. National Association of County Behavioral Health
and Developmental Disability Directors
The voice of local authorities in the Nation’s capital
NEWSLETTER
NOVEMBER 2011
TECHNOLOGY AND TELE-MEDICINE PLUS
Leon Evans and Gilbert Gonzales
The Center for Health Care Services
Bexar County (TX) Mental Health Authority
Chester Gould changed Dick Tracy forever with the introduction of the 2-way wrist radio. This communications
device, worn as a wristwatch became every child‘s must have crime fighting tool and an absolute necessity in
making the world a better safer place. The Dick Tracy wrist watch was introduced on January 13, 1946. This
seminal communications device, worn as a wristwatch by Tracy and members of the police force, became one of
the comic strip's most immediately recognizable icons, and could be viewed as a precursor to a later technological
development known as the cell phone. Today, USA Today estimates that ―smart phone‖ ownership is approaching
50% worldwide.
Telemedicine is defined as the use of medical information exchanged via various technologies from one site to
another via electronic communications including videoconferencing, e-health, patient portals, remote monitoring,
nursing call centers and more.
In 1950 one of the earliest telepsychiatry events occurred between
a state mental hospital and the Nebraska Psychiatric Institute using a
microwave link. In Texas, the University of Texas at Galveston ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
(UTMB) began telemedicine in the early 1980s for the treatment of
county inmates via telemonitors from jail cell to doctors screening Bits from DC
rooms. As Executive director of a local Texas community mental HHS Innovation Challenge
health center we have begun using telemedicine in Walker, Liberty SAMHSA Goes Regional
and Montgomery Counties, the seat of the Texas Prison system for Burke Center (TX) Lauded
treatment of prisoners. The Center also began providing opportunities We Want You: Health Reform Strategies
for persons being served to establish a supported network, provide Hill Happenings
treatment input and recommendations to the treatment team via
Award Nominations Solicited
televideo. Other centers began using telemedicine in rural and frontier
areas with the advent of yet another technology known as ―skyping‖ (a The Value of Social Media
software application that allows users to make voice calls over the HHS News and Notes
Internet). Ever increasing technology improvements such as greater On the Legal Front
capacity via larger data pipelines (T1-lines) meant higher quality VA CSB Director on the Move
video in greater detail. New EHR system in LA County
Technology‘s evolution also meant increasing access to more Around the States
affordable tools, greater equipment accessibility, ease of use and cost Call for Proposals
effective solutions. Video conferencing meant that patients did not The Essential Health Benefits
have to be ―transported‖, inmates did not have to be ―escorted‖ and
On the Bookshelf
crisis centers could have medical staff available 24/7 while being
hundreds of miles from the physical site. In addition to direct Mark Your Calendars
treatment, additional uses for the telemedicine platform surfaced such Teddi Fine, MA, Editor
it‘s use for continuing medical education, real time staff training,
continuous monitoring and the parallel evolution of the ―electronic medical record (EMR).
2. Now merging, physical and behavioral healthcare combine to provide a whole ―health
care‖ approach. This integration is improving. This means we can start putting the mind and
body back together. Behavioral health/physical health care plans for all regions are being
developed in rural and urban communities. Criminal justice is leading the way by using the
telemedicine approach to provide treatment and streamline the judicial process resulting in,
expedited court processing (i.e. in competency to stand trial), less jail time or no jail time at
all.
New initiatives with health care reform are pressing against the need to adapt and
improve. Still, we know that persons with mental illness die 25 years sooner than the general population. This is
ideal, perfect timing to develop an integrated health plan to use telemedicine and make use of the progress
technology has manifested. For fiscal years 2008 and 2009, the Texas legislature allocated $82 million dollars for a
state wide crisis redesign for services with the goals of: improved accessibility, improved standards of care,
community involvement, consumer choice, services providing a less restrictive treatment environment and which
lessen the burden on hospitals, jail and law enforcement. One could say that all elements above which could be
more rapidly achieved via enhanced telemedicine.
So, what‘s the bottom line? What are the benefits of using telemedicine? Let‘s look at a few:
• Improved access: covers previously unserved or underserved areas
• Improved quality of care: enhanced decision making through collaborative efforts
• Reduced isolation of healthcare professionals: peer and professional contacts for patient consultation and
continuing education (staff development)
• Reduced costs: reduced necessity for travel and optimum use of resources.
The Dick Tracy watch had at its imagined core a televideo communication base instantly connected with far
away resources and support crime fighting collaboration. At this writing (Fall 2011) our Center is working to extend
it‘s tele-medicine/televideo base, support a mobile optimized web site (for use on all cell phones), implement an
―app‖ link for mobile phones, establish a tablet based telemedicine process (using IPADs) for mobile crisis
assessments, provide easy text message donation links and providing ―quick read (QR) direct code mobile links for
quick access to service information.
Perhaps moving forward with mobile, we will all be sitting at a table talking on our watches and improving the
future of health care delivery and making the world a better place.
BITS FROM DC
Dear NACBHDD Colleagues:
We have just returned from a very successful Fall Board Meeting in Albany, New York.
Highlights include the activation of our ID/DD Committee under the leadership of Chad
VonAhnen; initiation of the redesign of our website, including links to social media and more
focused distribution of NACBHDD materials; and initial planning for our 2012 Legislative and
Policy Conference. (Please hold March 5-7 (Monday to Wednesday) for this event. More
information will follow shortly.)
We thank Kelly Hansen of the NY Conference of Local Mental Hygiene Directors for joining
us and describing developments in NY State, and we look forward to working with her much more
closely in the future. We also appreciate meeting other members from the NY Conference, and having the
opportunity to share a joint reception with them.
As I write this on November 20, it now appears very likely that the Supercommittee will fail in its assignment
to identify $1.5 trillion in federal budget cuts. Clearly, we have been advocating every day that any cuts do not fall
disproportionately on those who are disabled or who are elderly. If we move into the sequestration phase of the
budget cut debate after the holiday, the very same vigilance will be required. I will keep you posted on these
developments.
We also have been working very hard to avert the SAMHSA budget cuts for 2012 proposed by the House
Budget Committee. These cuts of almost 10% would be devastating to the discretionary programs operated by
SAMHSA, including many that relate to county operations. We have been systematically calling all members of the
3. House Mental Health Caucus to register our strong objection and to solicit their support in opposition to the
proposed cuts. I will keep you informed as this issue develops further.
Please accept my very best Thanksgiving wishes for you and your family, and for your colleagues. Despite all
of our difficulties as a Nation, we really do have much for which to be grateful.
Ron Manderscheid
Executive Director, NACBHDD
IMPORTANT OPPORTUNITY FOR COUNTIES: HHS HEALTH CARE INNOVATION CHALLENGE
The Department of Health and Human Services has made $1 billion available in grants for
innovative healthcare projects that test creative ways to deliver high quality medical care and
save money. The Health Care Innovation Challenge is being funded by the federal healthcare
reform law and managed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Critically
counties are eligible; mental and substance use disorders are specifically identified as
targets. Three-year awards will range from $1 million to $30 million.
Awards will be made in March 2012 to applicants who can implement the most compelling
new ideas to deliver better health, improved care and lower costs to people enrolled in Medicare,
Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program, particularly those with the highest health
care needs. The Challenge will support projects that can begin within 6 months; projects that
focus on rapid workforce development will be given award priority.
Proposals are encouraged to focus on high cost/high-risk groups including those populations
with multiple chronic diseases and/or mental health or substance abuse issues, poor health status due to socio-
economic and environmental factors, multiple medical conditions, high cost individuals, or the frail elderly. Each
grantee project will be evaluated and monitored for measurable improvements in quality of care and savings
generated.
According to the Department, all proposals should include the following elements:
• Workforce Development and Deployment. Models should include innovative development and/or deployment
of health care workers. The review process will favor innovative proposals that demonstrate the ability to
create the workforce of the future.
• Speed to Implementation. Models must be operational or capable of rapid expansion within 6 months.
• Model Sustainability. Proposals should define a clear pathway to sustainability and should consider
scalability and diffusion of the proposed model.
Interested parties of all types who have developed innovations that will meet the goals of improving care,
lowering costs, and creating health care jobs are welcome to apply. Examples of the types of organizations expected
to apply are: provider groups, health systems, payers and other private sector organizations, faith-based
organizations, local governments, and public-private partnerships. Certain organizations are eligible to apply as
conveners to assemble and coordinate groups of participants. Conveners could serve as facilitators or could be
direct award recipients. States are not eligible to apply under this funding opportunity.
For more information, go to the Health Care Innovation Challenge web site: www.innovation.cms.gov.
Important deadlines:
• Letter of Intent: December 19, 2011
• Applications due: January 27, 2012
• Anticipated Award date: March 30, 2012
NOTE: If you are interested in applying, please send NACBHDD a note to let us know. We will be organizing
a call to discuss the opportunity at greater length and to create a mechanism to help you with applications.
HOLD THAT DATE
The 2012 NACBHDD Legislative and Policy Conference will convene at 12 noon, Monday March 5, and continue
through lunch on Wednesday March 7. The conference will be at the Phoenix Park Hotel on Capitol Hill in
Washington, DC
4. SAMHSA GOES REGIONAL
For the first time in its almost 20 year history, SAMHSA will have a presence in each of the 10 Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) Regional Offices. This new configuration is intended to help ensure that a voice
for behavioral health is present in the regions along with that of the other HHS operating divisions. Two of the
Regional Administrators currently serve in SAMHSA‘s Headquarters -
Kathryn Power, Director of the Center for Mental Health Services and Dennis
Romero, Acting Director of the Office of Indian Alcohol and Substance
Abuse, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. The new Regional
Administrators include:
o Region 1, Boston, MA: A. Kathryn Power, Director, Center for Mental Health Services, SAMHSA.
o Region 2, New York, NY: Dennis O. Romero, Acting Director, Office of Indian Alcohol and Substance
Abuse, CSAP, SAMHSA
o Region 3, Philadelphia, PA: Jean Bennett, senior advisor to HHS Assistant Secretary for Administration;
former HHS regional office disaster coordinator.
o Region 4, Atlanta, GA: Stephanie McCladdie; Director, Prevention Services, Alabama Department of
Mental Health.
o Region 5, Chicago, IL: Jeffrey Coady, national behavioral health consultant, Medicaid Integrity Group,
CMS.
o Region 6, Dallas, TX: Michael Duffy; Deputy Assistant Secretary, Office for Addictive Disorders, State of
Louisiana.
o Region 7, Kansas City, MO: Laura Howard, Deputy Secretary, Kansas Department of Social and
Rehabilitation Services.
o Region 8, Denver, CO: Charles Smith, Director, Division of Behavioral Health, Colorado Department of
Human Services; Deputy Commissioner, Mental Health and Substance Abuse, State of Colorado.
o Region 9, San Francisco: Jon Perez, national behavioral health consultant, Indian Health Service.
o Region 10, Seattle, WA: David Dickinson, Director, Division of Behavioral Health and Recovery,
Department of Social and Health Services, State of Washington.
The Regional Administrators will move to each of the regional offices between November and January; they will
report to Anne Herron, Director, Division of Regional and National Policy Liaison, Office of Policy, Planning and
Innovation, SAMHSA.
With the move of CMHS Director Power to Region 1, Paolo del Vecchio, long-time CMHS Associate Director
for Consumer Affairs, has been tapped by SAMHSA Administrator Hyde to serve as acting CMHC Director.
APA LAUDS BURKE CENTER (TX) MENTAL HEALTH EMERGENCY CENTER
Established in 2008, the Burke Center‘s Mental Health Emergency Center (MHEC) has been
honored with the American Psychiatric Association‘s top national Gold Achievement Award for
Community-based Programs for bringing innovative, cutting-edge, comprehensive psychiatric
emergency services to the 12 rural East Texas counties it serves, including Trinity, Polk and San
Jacinto counties. Providing intensive, emergency mental health care in a nonhospital setting, the Center
serves a population of 370,000 over 11,000 square miles.
The APA award specifically recognizes the MHEC‘s use of both an onsite multidisciplinary team
of nurses, licensed counselors, case managers, and mental health technicians as well as a cadre of
psychiatrists available through teleconference. The use of telepsychiatry makes possible a level of services often not
available in rural areas and also reduces the need for inpatient referrals to distant facilities.
Burke Center CEO Susan Rushing said the award was the result of the collaborative efforts of stakeholders
from across the region. ―We live in a medically under-served, mental health shortage area,‖ said Rushing. ―By
creating partnerships with the State, counties, cities, hospitals, law enforcement, as well as the TLL Temple
Foundation, we were able to come to the table and find a solution together to make things better for people in
crisis.‖
5. HELP FRAME NACBHDD HEALTH REFORM EFFORTS
In a first-of-its kind meeting on September 13, 2011, representatives from the Boards of the
NACBHDD and the Association for Behavioral Health and Wellness (ABHW) met to explore areas
of shared interests, and concerns about both national health care reform and managed behavioral
healthcare organizations (MBHO) and their relationship to the public sector mental health system.
It was agreed that in our rapidly changing healthcare service delivery environment, new needs and
opportunities would arise for the 2 organizations to address together.
To begin, the NACBHDD and ABHW agreed to seek submissions from their members to provide examples, for
example of new working partnerships, new financing strategies, and innovations in clinical and administrative
practices, that shed light on excellence in current activities at the interface of MBHOs and public sector providers.
To that end, we ask you to submit examples of projects, programs, innovations, collaborations, etc.
focused on at least one of the following categories:
Efforts at improving efficiencies and measuring outcomes that help to better demonstrate the business case
for specialty behavioral healthcare and the return on investment for purchasers and payers of these services.
Innovations in care management, care coordination/integration, accountability, outcomes, etc.
Payment/finance reforms including but not limited to pay for performance, case rates, capitation, risk
adjustment/risk sharing, contracting/purchasing, etc.
Innovations in providing ‘wrap-around’ services (e.g. Assertive Community Treatment (ACT), Therapeutic
Behavioral Services (TBS), Intensive (field-based) Case Management) etc. and other evidence-based
practices to a broad population of individuals beyond those typically served by the public sector.
Integration/coordination of specialty behavioral health and primary care and disease management.
Increasing role of peer support services and other self-help efforts to promote and support consumer and
family ‗self-management‘ in both the primary care and specialty behavioral health setting.
Within each focus area, we are particularly interested in projects that are developing working relationships between
health insurance companies and NACBHDD/ABHW members.
Your submission should be no longer than 2 pages, and it should include (a) title, (b) goal, (c) activities, (d)
impact and (e) cost.
Once we have reviewed your responses, each organization will compile the findings in a brochure for use to
educate representatives of state health insurance exchanges, the health insurance industry, policy makers,
employers, state and local governments, regulators, providers, consumers, researchers, media and health delivery
entities about the contributions being made daily by the behavioral healthcare industry.
We appreciate your early attention to this request. Responses are due at NACBHDD by January 6, 2012. If
you have any questions please contact either me at rmanderschedi@nacbhd.org or Pamela Greenberg at
greenberg@abhw.org
HILL HAPPENINGS: THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY
Government Goes On. On November 17, following a House 298-121 vote, the Senate
joined suit (70-30) and cleared a conference report on a fiscal 2012 spending package,
sending it for President Obama‘s signature. The ―minibus‖ package contains 3 of the
usual 12 annual appropriations bills: Agriculture, Commerce-Justice-Science and
Transportation-HUD. Critically, it also included a continuing resolution to keep the
rest of the government operating at current levels through December 16.
House Committee Decidedly un-CLASS-y. On November 15, the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on
Health advanced legislation to repeal the long-term care program included in the health care law—the CLASS Act—one
month after the Administration announced it was suspending the program‘s implementation. Democrats plan a myriad of
amendments at full committee, in the hope of salvaging the CLASS Act.
Supercommittee Deadlock: Now What? With the collapse of the work of the Supercommittee to find $1.2
trillion in funds through cuts and tax changes, will the sequester, which promises even more draconian cuts to
programs across the government, actually take place? Not necessarily. Remember, the sequester will not take
effect until January 2, 2013. So, in the meantime, Congress could send a bill to the President to repeal or
6. modify the sequester. According to pundits, that‘s an increasingly likely scenario, but efforts to restore cuts in
the sequester already underway have been declared DoA by the President. Some are suggesting a return to
consideration of the Simpson-Bowles Commission recommendations. Time will tell.
Veterans Mental Health to be Considered. After returning from the Thanksgiving recess, both House and
Senate Veterans‘ Affairs Committees will be exploring issues related to veteran mental health. The Senate
Committee will convene a hearing on November 30 titled ―VA Mental Health Care: Addressing Wait Times
and Access to Care.‖ And on December 10, the House VA Health Subcommittee will hold a hearing on
preventing veteran suicide.
NOMINATIONS WANTED….
ACMHA: The College for Behavioral Health Leadership seeks nominees for 4 awards recognizing outstanding
contributions to the College and to the behavioral health field:
• Timothy J. Coakley Behavioral Health Leadership Award
• The King Davis Award for Emerging Leadership in Promoting Diversity and Reducing Disparities
• Walter Barton Distinguished Fellow Award
• Saul Feldman Award for Lifetime Achievement
The awards, with the exception of the Barton award, are open to both ACMHA members and non-members. For
more information about each award, criteria for nomination, and a nominating form, call ACMHA at 505-822-5038
or e-mail to executive.director@acmha.org. The deadline is December 31, 2011. The awards will be presented
during the ACMHA Summit, March 21 – 23, 2012 in Charleston, SC.
PROVIDING EMERGING LEADERS WITH TIMELY INSIGHTS INTO CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
USING SOCIAL MEDIA
Katie Bess, MSW
The NACBHDD Board of Directors met on this new and expanding resource to educate emerging
October 23-25, 2011, at the Desmond Hotel in Albany, leaders coming into the field?
NY. Attendees included county and state association Today, with approximately 800 million users on
directors from the mental health, substance use and Facebook and the average person connected to 80
intellectual disabilities fields. One of the seminal issues community pages and events, a single post of
discussed was the need to identify and educate information distributed on the site has the potential to
emerging political and program leaders about policy be passed on to all Facebook user‘s who are interested
and advocacy issues regarding behavioral health and in that particular organization as well as other related
intellectual disabilities. A key concern was how to organizations on the Web. Social networking sites,
facilitate communication in ways that such as LinkedIn, provide opportunities
give these emerging leaders insight into for professionals to post their resumes
the rapidly evolving health care system. and connect with other colleagues. This
It was agreed that the social media network also allows people to meet
represent an important, evidenced-based potential clients and browse for
conduit for achieving that aim. employment opportunities. Adding a
Today is a new era in which social group to the LinkedIn website will let
media, including the Web and mobile others in your field know about current
technologies, have turned communication into an issues your organization is addressing and also offers a
interactive dialogue, surpassing the days when forum for interacting with colleagues in the behavioral
telephone, letters, and in-person communication were health and developmental disability field. Most
the conventional ways to interact. Today, we can have importantly, it provides the emerging leaders a place to
social interaction no matter where we are in the world, connect with experts in the field and to benefit from
with just a mobile smart phone. We are moving into a their perspectives.
period where social media is taking over and changing According to a 2010 report by the U.S. Department
the way in which we communicate. How can we use of Education on the Evaluation of Evidenced-Based
Practices in Online Learning, students that participated
7. in online learning had on average a better provide accredited educational courses for their staffs.
understanding of factual information than classroom- This is another tool to help educate future leaders on
based instruction with the two being equivalent in current behavioral health and developmental disability
terms of procedural learning. Today, many people in topics with curricula prepared by experts in the field.
the fields of behavioral health and developmental The emerging data on social media suggest that
disabilities are using eLearning, as well as webinars social media provides a new and exciting opportunity
and other educational courses. eLearning, a database to mentor and train new generations of professionals.
providing online education, can be added to websites Compared to other approaches that require face-to-face
or posted on social networking sites to provide easy and time-specific trainings, social networking is less
access for individuals interested in a range of costly and affords flexibility not previously available to
contemporary topics. Many businesses and organizations and their members.
organizations are using a web eLearning component to
HHS NEWS AND NOTES
Integrated Care Resource. There‘s a new federal resource to help integrate primary and behavioral health
care, the SAMHSA-HRSA Center for Integrated Health Solutions website. It features clinical, operational and
financing tools to develop integrated care models — primary care in behavioral health, behavioral health in
primary care, and person-centered health homes. Users also can connect with national experts and each other to
share solutions and best practices. Go to: http://www.integration.samhsa.gov/
New ACO Advance Payment Model Deadline Set. As reported in last month‘s
newsletter, in October, CMS announced a new Advance Payment Model for physician-
based and rural ACOs selected to participate in the Medicare Shared Savings Program.
Selected ACOs will receive advance payments that will be recouped from shared savings
they earn. The Advance Payment Model will NOT require a notice/letter of intent as part
of the application. But organizations interested in applying for the Advance Payment
Model must complete separate applications for the Shared Savings Program and the
Advance Payment Model. An application template will be available on the Advance Payment website later this
fall. Go to: (http://www.innovations.cms.gov/initiatives/aco/advance-payment/index.html)
Advance Payment Model application deadlines:
April 1, 2012 start date (applications accepted between January 3 - February 1, 2012)
July 1, 2012 start date (applications accepted between March 1 - 30, 2012)
For information about all CMS ACO initiatives, visit www.cms.gov/aco.
Educating about Substance Use by People with Physical or Sensory Disabilities. A SAMHSA issues brief
gives health care professionals who work with people with physical or sensory disabilities information about
substance use disorders, including risk factors and warning signs; screening; types of substance abuse services;
and strategies for helping clients. Go to: http://store.samhsa.gov/product/SMA11-4648
Guide on Teen Alcohol Use. A new National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) evidence-
based guide can help health care providers identify children and youth (ages 9-18) at risk for alcohol-related
problems, provide brief counseling, and refer them to appropriate treatment if indicated. Developed with the
American Academy of Pediatrics, Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention for Youth: A Practitioner's Guide,
has brief risk assessment resources. Go to:
http://www.niaaa.nih.gov/Publications/EducationTrainingMaterials/YouthGuide
LEGAL HAPPENINGS
Supreme Court to Hear ACA Challenge. After almost 18 months of legal battles at
the district and appellate levels, the US Supreme Court will weigh in on the
Constitutional challenge to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA)
launched by Florida and 25 other Republican-controlled states and the National
Federation of Independent Business, the largest of a number of current court
8. challenges. The case is not just the largest; it also is the only suit that actually proposes that the entire law,
not just the individual mandate, be tossed out. While the vast majority of conservative and liberal-leaning
appellate justices have affirmed the constitutionality of the law, the Supreme Court‘s ultimate decision
remains in doubt. Complicating the picture, the Court has decided to hear arguments on every single
element of the Florida challenge to the ACA, including the law‘s provisions that broaden Medicaid
coverage to people at up to 133% of the federal poverty level. The states‘ challenge calls the Medicaid
expansion ―coercive‖ and unconstitutional. Five-and-a-half hours of time have been set aside for arguments
that most likely will occur in March; a decision may come as early as just after Memorial Day.
DC Appellate Decision Backs ACA. While the lawyers gear up for a U.S. Supreme Court battle, a 3-
judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has handed down a 2 to 1 decision that
held the individual insurance mandate to be constitutional and within Congressional authority to regulate
interstate commerce. Judge Laurence H. Silberman, who wrote the court decision for the majority, is an
influential conservative appointed by President Reagan. To date, only one appeals court has rejected the
mandate, with but three of the 12 appellate judges in all weighing in against the mandate. All will be moot,
when the US Supreme Court renders its opinion.
Reconsidering Ruling on Veterans’ Mental Health Care. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals will
reconsider a 3-judge ruling ordering major reform by the US Department of Veterans‘ Affairs in the care of
recent returning veterans with PTSD and other emotional injuries of war. Two veterans groups bringing the
suit allege system-wide treatment failures to help lower a staggering suicide rate among returning veterans.
NORFOLK VA CSB DIRECTOR SAYS GOODBYE VIRGINIA, HELLO KANSAS
Maureen Womack, director of the Norfolk (VA) Community Services Board, is leaving her
post at the end of the year. She has accepted a new position as director of the Johnson County
Mental Health Center, near Kansas City, KS.
In a communiqué to her staff about her departure, she wrote: "Norfolk CSB has shown
remarkable resolve in providing quality care in the face of many challenges. This was a very
difficult decision, and although I am excited about the new opportunity, I am sad to leave."
Womack previously was executive director of Davis Behavioral Health in Davis County,
Utah, and also held behavioral health leadership positions in Mississippi and Alabama. In
Norfolk she has been credited with helping promote greater accountability in program, budget and policy direction.
No decisions have been made by the CSB on how her position will be filled; much may rest on whether the
CSB is made part of the Norfolk city government.
LA COUNTY MENTAL HEALTH TO GET NEW EHR SYSTEM
Thanks to an agreement approved by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, Netsmart Technologies,
Inc., will be developing a state-of-the-art electronic health record system, known as the Integrated Behavioral
Health Information System (IBHIS) for the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health (LACDMH). This is
yet another step by the Department in its efforts to eliminating paper health records. Not only will it put the County
ahead of the curve toward care coordination mandated by the ACA, but also it will be in compliance with the
Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, avoiding penalties for not having electronic
health record systems in place for Medicare providers by 2015.
―We are excited that the Board of Supervisors has approved this agreement,‖ said LACDMH Director, Marvin
Southard, DSW. ―This will allow us to apply the most advanced technology to support the work and partnerships
that create hope, wellness and recovery in the lives of clients and their families.‖
AROUND THE STATES: AN UPDATE
All State Interactive Map on Implementation of Health Insurance Exchanges
9. Available. The National Conference of State Legislators (NCSL) has created an interactive map to show State
actions to implement health insurance exchanges. The map shows implementation legislation or executive
actions related to the exchanges and it provides detailed information on the efforts for each State. To view the
map, visit http://www.ncsl.org/?tabid=21388
Florida. While fighting to overturn the federal health overhaul, the State is preparing to launch its own
insurance marketplace early next year that looks like a distant cousin of the ones being created under the federal
law. We‘ll learn more as the effort takes shape.
Georgia. Under a settlement with the Justice Department, Georgia must close State hospitals that house over
9,000 people with mental illnesses and 750 with developmental disabilities and move them into community-
based care. The model the 2-year-old Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities is
crafting includes community treatment teams, supported housing and employment, wellness centers and peer-
support programs. Community-based services will link to a statewide system of comprehensive mental health
service, a system still under development. Can model become reality? Stay tuned.
Illinois. The Chicago city council unanimously approved the mayor‘s controversial budget that, among other
sharp cuts, will close 6 of the city‘s 12 mental health clinics and privatize all of the City‘s community primary
care clinics, many of which serve the most economically challenged neighborhoods. The cutbacks are likely to
result in layoffs; they already have spawned sit-ins at City Hall. This past week, opponents of the plan spent 10
hours in a City Hall sit-in.
Kansas. A major revision of the State Medicaid program will place all Medicaid
beneficiaries into private, managed-care plans. This change would affect primarily older
adults and persons with disabilities whose care is currently provided under a fee-for-service
system. Low-income families already are served by private managed care plans.
Massachusetts. To help over 100,000 low-income people with mental illnesses, substance abuse disorders and
intellectual disabilities better navigate the maze of disconnected health and support services available to them
through Medicaid, Medicare and other sources the State is streamlining its systems of care. Hoped-for collateral
benefits include improved quality and reduced costs.
Nebraska. The State will not begin the process of creating an insurance exchange until after the Supreme Court
rules on the constitutionality of the ACA individual mandate.
New York. Notwithstanding the threat of premium increases, the Governor has signed into law a requirement
that insurers in the state cover screening, diagnosis and treatment for autism spectrum disorders (e.g.,
behavioral care, and speech, occupational and physical therapy for toddlers).
Ohio. Not waiting for the Supreme Court, a ballot initiative was approved on Election Day earlier this month to
refuse to implement the ACA‘s individual mandate in the State. Bear in mind, however, federal law trumps
state law or mandate. Final resolution is in the hands of the US Supreme Court.
Oregon. Not waiting for the ACA‘s deadline, Oregon has begun establishing new accountable care
organizations, but not exactly in the form and structure envisioned under the ACA. In addition to calling them
―coordinated care organizations,‖ the State aims to measure their success—to grade them on how well they
improve Oregonians‘ health – reducing illness and health care costs of acute and chronic illnesses.
Puerto Rico. After 12 years, Puerto Rico and the Department of Justice have ended a battle to improve health
care for hundreds of children, youth and adults with intellectual disabilities who had been housed, abused and
neglected in residential treatment facilities. The facilities that served over 700 persons with intellectual
disabilities have been shuttered; residents have been transferred to new, community homes. A local judge will
oversee compliance with the settlement.
Texas. Over the coming months, the Texas House, charged with identifying ways to reduce the
State‘s debt, will be examining the financing and delivery of long-term Medicaid services and
examining both the infrastructure and funding for mental health services. Stay tuned; the issues
may heat up.
Vermont. The latest State projections suggest that by 2020, adoption of universal health care could
cost between $13,000-$14,000 per resident—a cost of up to $9 billion annually. However, the
State plans to move forward nonetheless, since the current private insurance-based system would cost even
more.
10. EMPLOYEE ASSISTANCE RESEARCH FOUNDATION CALLS FOR GRANT PROPOSALS
The Employee Assistance Research Foundation has called for research grant proposals. This second
grand cycle is focused on workplace-related outcomes of EAP. Organizations such as tax-exempt
educational institutions, agencies, or for-profit business entities (such as an LLC) that have access
to an Institutional Review Board may apply.
The two-part application process includes
o Submission of a brief proposal; and
o For those approved for the second stage, a full proposal that may lead to an offer of a grant award. Grants
will be reviewed by a committee consisting of Foundation board members, which includes distinguished
researchers and clinicians.
Applicants have until November 30 to submit brief proposals. For a copy of the call for proposals, go to
this website: http://www.eapfoundation.org/apply-for-grants/
THE ESSENTIAL HEALTH BENEFIT: WILL ESSENTIAL BECOME MINIMAL?
“NEARSIGHTED” IOM RECOMMENDATIONS FAIL TO CONSIDER LONG-TERM VALUE OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH
BENEFITS
Ron Manderscheid, PhD
While every element of health reform Institute of Medicine (IOM), a unit of the National
in the United States is important to the Academies of Science, to outline the framework and
future of mental health and substance considerations necessary to define the EHB. The IOM
use treatment, several of these has now issued its final report (available here).
interrelated elements are absolutely As the IOM recommended, HHS has begun
critical, including the Medicaid holding listening sessions to receive input from
expansion and State Health Insurance consumers, providers, and small businesses on the
Exchanges (HIEs), the Essential Health scope of benefits that should be encompassed in the
Benefit (EHB), and Accountable Care Organizations EHB.
(ACOs). Here‘s where the issue gets more complicated. In
Here is why: the Medicaid expansion and the HIEs defining the EHB, HHS must consider tradeoffs
will generate the financial resources for needed care; between affordability and comprehensiveness. The
the EHB will define the floor benefit for the care to be ACA offers some guidance on this issue, saying that
provided; and ACOs will serve as the organizational the EHB is to be based on what is offered in private
engines through which higher quality, lower cost care sector plans. The IOM went further still,
delivery will take place. recommending that the EHB be based on the average
For now, let‘s focus on the Essential Health cost of current plans offered by small businesses.
Benefit. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is very clear This recommendation is a problem: Current small
that: business insurance plans frequently do not include
• The EHB will specify the floor benefit to be offered mental health and substance use care benefits, and
to new enrollees through Medicaid (all adults up to most are not operated at parity because they are not
134 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) and required to do so under the Wellstone-Domenici Act of
through the insurance plans offered by the state 2008.
HIEs (adults 135 percent FPL and higher). Hence, our response to the IOM report must be
• The Secretary of the Department of Health and clarion: Health plans offered by small businesses
Human Services (HHS) is to define this EHB. cannot be accurate reference points for the mental
• The EHB is to encompass 10 ―essential benefits‖ health and substance use components of the EHB.
including benefits for mental health care and Instead, large private plans could serve as a much more
substance use care which must be offered at parity accurate reference point. IOM also expressed
with medical care benefits. considerable concern that the EHB be affordable.
To begin this work, HHS issued a contract to the While affordability can be defined in different
11. ways, the IOM chose to define it in terms of the cost of different benefits. To those in behavioral health fields,
the insurance policy. To be frank, this is very balance means two kinds of parity: parity between
nearsighted. The true costs of health insurance medical care and mental health care benefits and parity
coverage must also encompass the very real costs that between medical care and substance use care benefits.
occur if needed care is not covered and therefore not To settle for anything less would only continue the
provided. disparities that behavioral health fields have suffered
For example, in the case of an EHB that fails to for generations. Parity also makes economic sense,
include mental health and substance use treatment, because good mental health care and good substance
these costs would include those incurred as individuals use care can and do reduce medical care expenses.
suffering from mental health and substance use As the development of the EHB discussion unfolds
problems sought help in emergency rooms, got arrested within HHS, it is essential that the voices of behavioral
and went to jails or prisons, or required other social or health be heard on the importance of two things: strong
behavioral health services. mental health and substance use care benefits in the
Another important consideration is balance. The EHB, both of which must be at parity with medical
ACA requires that the EHB have balance among care benefits.
ON THE BOOKSHELF: RECENT POLICY PUBLICATIONS OF NOTE
Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. Moving Ahead amid Fiscal Challenges: A Look at
Medicaid Spending, Coverage and Policy Trends: Results from a 50-State Medicaid Budget Survey for State
FYs 2011 and 2012 reports state Medicaid spending is expected to increase in 2012 by 28.7 percent. Continuing
Medicaid budget pressure on many states likely will lead to more cost-saving measures in 2012 For more, go to:
http://media.navigatored.com/documents/Kaiser+2011+Medicaid+Budget+Survey.pdf
Mayo Clinic. Written in everyday language, a set of 11 warning signs of adolescent mental
problems can help parents distinguish between normal behavior and behavior or emotions
that may signal early emotional problems. The aim: to catch potential problems early, when
they can be most susceptible to treatment. For more, go to:
http://www.thereachinstitute.org/files/documents/action-signs-toolkit-final.pdf
Commonwealth Fund. Electronic Consultations between Primary and Specialty Care
Clinicians: Early Insights outlines how e-consults can foster better communication among
clinicians, improve continuity of care and reduce the need for in-persons referrals. It also
explores barriers to its adoption. Go to:
http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/Files/Publications/Issue%20Brief/2011/Oct/1554_Horner_econsul
tations_primary_specialty_care_clinicians_ib.pdf
Kaiser Family Foundation. The Uninsured: A Primer 2011 delineates characteristics of the uninsured and
factors behind their umber, implications for access and financial burden, sources of health coverage, role of
Medicaid and potential impact on ACA. Go to: http://www.kff.org/uninsured/upload/7451-07.pdf
Harvard School of Public Health. Policy Makers Should Prepare for Major Uncertainties in Medicaid
Enrollment, Costs, and Needs for Physicians under Health Reform (October issue Health Affairs) reports that
ACA Medicaid expansion could add 8.5-22.4 million to the rolls by 2019, driving up annual spending by an
additional $34-98 billion. Abstract: http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/early/2011/10/24/hlthaff.2011.0413
Commonwealth Fund. Promoting the Integration and Coordination of Safety-Net Health Care Providers
under Health Reform: Key Issues outlines ways to promote ACOs and medical homes among safety-net
providers, overcoming disincentives to coordinated care for the uninsured. Go to:
http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/Files/Publications/Issue
Brief/2011/Oct/1552_Ku_promoting_integration_safetynet_providers_under_reform_ib.pdf
Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. Medicaid’s Long-term Care Users: Spending Patterns
Across Institutional and Community-based Settings profiles and articulates policy and cost implications of
acute and long-term care users served by Medicaid, including elderly, disabled, dual eligible and other
beneficiaries. Go to: http://www.kff.org/medicaid/upload/7576-02.pdf.
Manatt Health Solutions. Overview of Proposed Exchange, Medicaid and IRS Regulations describes the
implications of draft IRS regulations on Medicaid, health insurance exchanges, and premium tax credits under
12. health reform, and examines minimum essential coverage, eligibility criteria, and enrollment. Go to:
http://www.kidswellcampaign.org/docs/other-resources/chcf-manatt-regs-analysis---august-2011.pdf
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. How Competitive Are State Insurance Markets? Explores how market
competitiveness will affect state policy decisions about insurance exchange design, rate reviews and market
rules. Go to: http://www.kff.org/healthreform/upload/8242.pdf
U.S. PIRG Education Fund. Making the Grade: A Scorecard for State Health Insurance Exchanges assesses
and grades states on progress toward creating exchanges, including policies on governance, structure,
negotiating power, consumer experience, and avoiding adverse selection. Go to:
http://www.uspirg.org/uploads/db/69/db69717a1ba8ce0ae4bd5d00bd586906/Making-the-Grade-vUS-WEB.pdf
California HealthCare Foundation. California’s 2010 Medicaid Waiver Stakeholder Process: Impact and
Lessons Learned discusses lessons and makes recommendations about the effectiveness, benefit and impact of a
stakeholder advisory process used to develop the 2010 hospital financing waiver request. Go to:
http://www.chcf.org/~/media/MEDIA LIBRARY Files/PDF/S/PDF
Section1115MedicaidWaiverStakeholderProcess.pdf
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Reform in Action: Can Measuring Physician Performance Improve
Health Care Quality provides examples of how public reporting on facility and physician quality measures can
change how care is provided (based on the Aligning Forces Quality Initiative). Go to:
http://www.rwjf.org/files/research/72929.5414.canmeasuring.pdf
MARK YOUR CALENDAR
Ohio Association of County Boards-Serving People with Developmental Disabilities.
The 28th annual convention will be held November 30-December 2, 2011, Columbus,
Ohio. For more, go to: www.oacbdd.org. To register go to:
http://www.oacbdd.org/forms/oacb-28th-annual-convention/
National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors (NASADAD). Next annual
meeting, June 26-28, 2012, Hyatt Regency, Savannah, GA. Hold the date; more information forthcoming soon.
ACMHA-College for Behavioral Health Leadership. Annual Summit, March 21-23, 2012, Charleston, SC,
focusing on communities‘ role in promoting resiliency and recovery by creating social supports and networks.
More information will be forthcoming on the ACMHA website, http://www.acmha.org
National Association for Rural Mental Health (NARMH). National Conference, May 15-18, 2012,
Anchorage, AK. For more, go to: http://www.narmh.org/conferences/2012/default.aspx
Michigan Association of CMH Boards. Improving Outcomes, Finance & Quality Through Integrated
Information XXVIII, December 1-2, 2011, Radisson Hotel Lansing, 111 N. Grand Ave., Lansing, MI 48933. For
more, go to: www.macmhb.org click on to conferences and trainings.
A new webinar on community-collaboration to meet the needs of recently returning veterans,
featuring Eric Hall, with the Geisinger Health System Reaching Rural Veteran‘s initiative, will be
held on Thursday, December 15 (2 pm, EST). For more, go to the ACMHA website. After the
December webinar, the series will take a hiatus while the organizers prepare for the ACMHA
Summit. They will resume in May 2012, with the third annual series.
The 2010, 12-part critical issue webinar series that focused on the 2010 health reform
legislation and its implications for behavioral health is now available online. Topics broadly span
insurance, coverage, quality, payments and health information technology. Visit
http://acmha.org/current_events_critical_issues.shtml to access the audio/visual presentations and
accompanying PowerPoint slides from this outstanding series.
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