Making Integrated Care Work
         MI Primary Care Association
             September 28, 2012

            Laura Galbreath, MPP
Director, Center for Integrated Health Solutions
Agenda

-About the Center for Integrated Health Solutions
-Lessons Learned from Grantees and Others
• PC/BH Partnership - Communication
• Workforce Development
• Health Homes
• Health Behavior Change
• Operations and Administration
• Financing and Billing
About the Center
  In partnership with Health & Human Services (HHS)/Substance Abuse
  and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Health
  Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).
Goal:
  To promote the planning, and development and of integration of primary and behavioral
  health care for those with serious mental illness and/or substance use disorders and
  physical health conditions, whether seen in specialty mental health or primary care safety
  net provider settings across the country.

Purpose:
    To serve as a national training and technical assistance center on the bidirectional
     integration of primary and behavioral health care and related workforce development
    To provide technical assistance to PBHCI grantees and entities funded through HRSA
     to address the health care needs of individuals with mental illnesses, substance use
     and co-occurring disorders
The Center for Integrated Health Solutions is
 dedicated to increasing the number of:
 Individuals trained in specific behavioral health related practices
 Organizations using integrated health care service delivery
  approaches
 Consumers credentialed to provide behavioral health related
  practices
 Model curriculums developed for bidirectional primary and
  behavioral health integrated practice
 Health providers trained in the concept of wellness and behavioral
  health recovery
Center for Integrated Health Solutions
Target Populations
    SAMHSA Primary & Behavioral Health Care Integration (PBHCI) Grantees
    HRSA Grantees
    General Public
Services
      Training and Technical Assistance
      Knowledge Development
      Prevention and Health Promotion/Wellness
      Workforce Development
      Patient Protection and Accountable Care Act Monitoring and Updates
Technical Assistance Menu
Individual Technical Assistance:
    Phone consultations, e-mail, site visits

Group Learning Experiences:
      Learning Communities
      Webinars
      Trainings
      Practical Web-Based Resources (CIHS website, e-newsletter,
       discussion boards)
Tools:
    Toolkits/Guidelines
    Training Curricula
    Fact Sheets
SAMHSA Primary and Behavioral
Health Care Integration (PBHCI)
        Grant Program
PBHCI Program
Program purpose:
     To improve the physical health status of people with SMI by supporting
       communities to coordinate and integrate primary care services into
       publicly funded community-based behavioral health settings
Expected outcome:
     Grantees will enter into partnerships to develop or expand their offering
       of primary healthcare services for people with SMI, resulting in
       improved health status
Population of focus:
     Those with SMI served in the public behavioral health system
Eligible applicants:
     Community behavioral health agencies, in partnership with primary
       care providers
SAMHSA PBHCI Learning Communities
           West Region (1)                                                                             Northeast &
           14 Grantees                                                                                 Mid-Atlantic Region (5)
                                               Central Region (2)                                      17 Grantees
                                               9 Grantees                                                   VT
                 WA                                                          Midwest Region (4)                     ME
                                                                             15 Grantees
                                          MT                                                                              NH
                                                      ND
            OR                                                    MN
                                                                                                        NY
                                                                                                                          MA
                           ID                                                WI
                                                       SD
                                                                                        MI                         CT RI
                                          WY                                                           PA
                                                                                                                  NJ
      CA                                                               IA
                 NV                                    NE                                                            DE
                                                                                             OH
                                     UT                                       IL    IN
                                                                                                  WV                 DC
                                               CO
                                                                       MO                                             MD
                                                        KS                                   KY
                                                                                                        VA

                                                             OK                                             NC
                                AZ         NM                          AR                TN
                                                                                                       SC

      AK                                                                           MS    AL       GA
                      HI                               TX               LA                                       Southeast Region (3)
                                                                                                                 9 Grantees
                                                                                                       FL
SAMHSA PBHCI Grantees
West Region (1)
AK: Alaska Islands Community Services (III)
AK: Southcentral Foundation (IV)                     Southeast Region (3)                                         Northeast & Mid-Atlantic
CA: Alameda County Behavioral Health Care
                                                                                                                  Region (5)
    Services (II)                                    FL: Apalachee Center, Inc(III)
CA: Asian Community Mental Health Services (III)     FL: Coastal Behavioral Healthcare (III)                      CT: Bridges...A Community Support
CA: Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County (IV)    FL: Community Rehabilitation Center (III)                        System (I)
CA: Glenn County Health Services Agency (III)        FL: Lakeside Behavioral Healthcare (III)                     CT: Community Mental Health
CA: Mental Health Systems, Inc (I)                   FL: Lifestream Behavioral Center (III)                           Affiliates (III)
CA: San Francisco Department of Public Health (IV)   FL: Miami Behavioral Health Center (III)                     MA: Community Healthlink ,Inc (III)
CA: San Mateo County Health System (III)             GA: Cobb/Douglas Community Services Board (III)              MD: Family Services, Inc (III)
CA: Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. (III)            SC: South Carolina State Department of Mental Health (III)   ME: Community Health & Counseling
OR: Native American Rehabilitation Association of    VA: Norfolk Community Services Board (IV)                        Services (III)
    the Northwest (II)
                                                                                                                  NH: Community Council of Nashua (I)
WA: Asian Counseling and Referral Service (III)
                                                                                                                  NJ: Care Plus NJ (I)
WA: Downtown Emergency Service Center (III)
                                                                                                                  NJ: Catholic Charities, Diocese of
WA: Navos (IV)
                                                                                                                      Trenton (III)
                                                     Midwest Region (4)                                           NY: Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center
                                                                                                                      (III)
                                                     IL: Heritage Behavioral Health Center (III)
                                                                                                                  NY: Fordham Tremont CMHC (III)
                                                     IL: Human Service Center (I)
                                                                                                                  NY: ICD-International Center for the
Central Region (2)                                   IL: Trilogy, Inc(III)
                                                                                                                      Disabled (II)
                                                     IN: Adult & Child Mental Health Center (III)
                                                                                                                  NY: Postgraduate Center for Mental
AZ: CODAC Behavioral Health Services (I)             IN: Centerstone of Indiana (II)
                                                                                                                      Health (III)
CO: Mental Health Center of Denver (I)               IN: Health & Hospital Corporation of Marion County (IV)
                                                                                                                  NY: VIP Community Services (I)
LA: Capital Area Human Services District (IV)        IN: Regional Mental Health Center (II)
                                                                                                                  PA: Horizon House (III)
OK: Central Oklahoma Community MH Center (I)         KY: Pennyroyal Regional MH/MR Board (I)
                                                                                                                  PA: Milestone Centers (II)
OK: NorthCare Community Mental Health Center (III)   MI: Washtenaw Community Health Organization (III)            RI: Kent Center for Human &
TX: Austin-Travis County Integral Care (III)         OH: Center for Families & Children (I)                           Organizational Development (III)
TX: Lubbock Regional MH & MR Center (II)             OH: Community Support Services (IV)                          RI: The Providence Center (II)
TX: Montrose Counseling Center (II)                  OH: Greater Cincinnati Behavioral Health Services (III)
UT: Weber Human Services (III)                       OH: Shawnee Mental Health Center (I)
                                                     OH: Southeast Inc. (I)
                                                     WV: Prestera Center for Mental Health Services (III)
Integrated health care
11
      “…in essence integrated health care is the
        systematic coordination of physical
        and behavioral health care. The idea is
        that physical and behavioral health
        problems often occur at the same time.
        Integrating services to treat both will yield
        the best results and be the most
        acceptable and effective approach for
        those being served.” Hogg Foundation for Mental Health,
        Connecting Body & Mind: A Resource Guide to Integrated Health Care in
        Texas and the U.S., www.hogg.utexas.edu
12
     Consumers’ take on integration
        “Around the time that my bipolar condition was identified, I
     was diagnosed with kidney disease. Between the two
     disorders, it was a pretty upsetting time in my life… My
     doctors, dialysis clinic staff, and mental health case manager
     are well connected. They take a team approach, and they
     each check on the status of my health... Today I have control
     over my health; it doesn’t have control of me. The
     coordinated care allows me to feel like I can go out and be a
     part of the community.” – Cassandra McCallister, Board
     Member, Washtenaw Community Health Organization,
     Ypsilanti, MI
PC/BH Partnerships
Primary Care and
 Behavioral Health


It goes together like
 Peanut Butter and
        Jelly!
Communication with Your Partners
“The Four Agreements,” Don Miguel Ruiz
• Be impeccable with your words. Clarify your partnership’s goal and
   recognize that you have created a process that requires constant
   nurturing and communication.
• Don’t take anything personally. Disagreements will occur. Learn to
   manage the process, not the personality, and recognize and understand
   your differences.
• Don’t make assumptions. Involve both boards, schedule weekly
   administrative meetings, hold regular treatment team meetings,
   communicate between team meetings, and create a specialized data
   collection position.
• Do your best. Involve state and local stakeholders, seek training for staff
   in care coordination, bring in outside experts such as CIHS for guidance,
   and engage other organizations that do similar work.
The Role of Leadership
 Main point: Leaders who employ research informed
 approaches are more likely to activate the organization to
 support a change initiative:

      Communicating for buy in (what is the message? Who delivers
       the message? How do we know if the workforce understands and
       values the message? What practical actions can the workforce
       take that promotes engagement of consumers?
      How does an organization insure that the workforce supports the
       aims of the integration initiative?
      How does the organization insure that the primary care partners
       understand, value and act in ways that are likely to engage
       consumers.


16
8.Make the
                   Changes Stick         Steps leaders take to
                  7. Don’t Let Up
                                         successfully
                                         implement change
                 6. Short Term Wins
               5. Empower Action
              4. Build the Right Team
            3. Communicate for Buy In
           2. Get the Vision Right
         1. Build a Sense of Urgency

 Based on the work of J. Kotter (2002) The Heart of Change.


17
Workforce Considerations
Administrative Staff and Board of Directors – data
  including prevalence, clinical and productivity
  outcomes
Clinical Team – screening, clinical
  protocols, motivational interviewing, how to deal with
  upset patients smoothly, effectively, empathetically
Behavioral Health Clinicians – UMass
  training, motivational interviewing, Psychiatric
  Consultation
Front Desk, Security - Mental Health First Aid
The Right Temperament
Persistence
Creativity and flexibility
Enthusiasm for learning
Strong patient advocate
Willingness to be interrupted
Ability to work in a team
Health Homes
Focus on Behavioral Health
Incorporating attention to behaviors affecting health, mental health and
   substance abuse
• PCMH 1: Enhance Access and Continuity
    – Comprehensive assessment includes depression screening, behaviors affecting
      health and patient and family mental health and substance abuse
• PCMH 3: Plan and Manage Care
    – One of three clinically important conditions identified by the practice must be a
      condition related to unhealthy behaviors (e.g. obesity) or a mental health or
      substance abuse condition
    – Practice must plan and manage care for the selected condition
• PCMH 4: Provide Self-Care and Community Resources
    – Self-care support includes educational and community resources and adopting
      healthy behaviors
• PCMH 5: Track and Coordinate Care
    – Tracks referrals and coordinates care with mental health and substance abuse
      services
• PCMH 6: Measure and Improve Performance
    – Preventive measures include depression screening

                      Achieving NCQA Recognition as a Patient-Centered Medical Home
                                                                                          22
                                   RI Statewide Learning Collaborative February 5, 2011
Behavior Health Change
Why Do People Change?
Individuals change voluntarily when they. . .
 Become interested in or concerned about the need
 for change
 Become convinced that the change is in their best
 interests or will benefit them more than cost them
 Organize a plan of action that they are committed to
 implementing
 Take the actions that are necessary to make the
 change and sustain the change
Person-Centered Skills:
The Basics
Utilize O.A.R.S.
  • Ask Open-ended questions
    (not short-answer, yes/no, or rhetorical)
  • Affirm the person/commitment positively
    on specific strengths, effort, intention
  • Reflect feelings and change talk
  • Summarize topic areas related to changing
Operations
Formal Business Process Analysis Supports
Clear, Precise, Accessible Communication

• Step-by-step financial, clinical and practice
  management activities
• Promotes cross-discipline understanding of each step
• Connects multiple dimensions –billing, data collection
  and reporting, clinical services, practice management,
  etc.
• “Requirements Traceability Matrix” - what you do and
  why you do it
Cleaned up
Analysis Examples
• Timing
   • How long are activities within the process taking?
   • How much time passes between activities?
   • How long are the patient contact intervals within Intake? Between
     Intake and Re-assessment?

• Billing
   • What are the billable/non-billable events?
   • Is there a way you can make non-billable events billable?
   • How do these events match up to the appropriate license/credential of
     the role? Are you maximizing the amount of reimbursement?

• Role License and Credentials
   • Where and how are you meeting credentialing requirements?
   • Do they match the billable activities?
Finance and Billing
Billing and Coding Infrastructure

•   Staffing – Sample of needed expertise
     • Chief Financial Officer
     • Payables and Receivables staff
     • Claims Processers
•   Knowledge of Payer Requirements
     • Private Payers
     • Medicaid
     • Medicare
•   Technology supports
•   Accurate, good documentation of services
The Health and Behavior Assessment/Intervention Codes
(96150 - 96155)

• Approved CPT Codes for use with Medicare right now
• Some states are using them now for Medicaid
• Behavioral Health Services “Ancillary to” a physical health
  diagnosis
    Diabetes
    COPD
    Chronic Pain
Maximizing Who Can Bill, for What, and By
Whom – Interim Billing Worksheets
•   Point in time review of each states Medicaid program on what may or
    may not be reimbursable in your state for integration using currently
    available codes
•   Point in time review of Medicare reimbursement
•   Link CPT, Diagnostic Code and Credential
•   One of many tools – a place to start the conversation and billing locally
    and in a state
•   Do not GUARANTEE you will be paid based on the worksheet
                           Worksheets Available at:
                        www.integration.samhsa.gov
The resources and
                                       information needed to
                                       successfully Integrate
                                       primary and behavioral
                                            health care


Laura Galbreath, MPP
Online: integration.samhsa.gov
Phone: 202-684-7457, ext 231
Email: laurag@thenationalcouncil.org

Making Integrated Care Work

  • 1.
    Making Integrated CareWork MI Primary Care Association September 28, 2012 Laura Galbreath, MPP Director, Center for Integrated Health Solutions
  • 2.
    Agenda -About the Centerfor Integrated Health Solutions -Lessons Learned from Grantees and Others • PC/BH Partnership - Communication • Workforce Development • Health Homes • Health Behavior Change • Operations and Administration • Financing and Billing
  • 3.
    About the Center In partnership with Health & Human Services (HHS)/Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Goal: To promote the planning, and development and of integration of primary and behavioral health care for those with serious mental illness and/or substance use disorders and physical health conditions, whether seen in specialty mental health or primary care safety net provider settings across the country. Purpose:  To serve as a national training and technical assistance center on the bidirectional integration of primary and behavioral health care and related workforce development  To provide technical assistance to PBHCI grantees and entities funded through HRSA to address the health care needs of individuals with mental illnesses, substance use and co-occurring disorders
  • 4.
    The Center forIntegrated Health Solutions is dedicated to increasing the number of:  Individuals trained in specific behavioral health related practices  Organizations using integrated health care service delivery approaches  Consumers credentialed to provide behavioral health related practices  Model curriculums developed for bidirectional primary and behavioral health integrated practice  Health providers trained in the concept of wellness and behavioral health recovery
  • 5.
    Center for IntegratedHealth Solutions Target Populations  SAMHSA Primary & Behavioral Health Care Integration (PBHCI) Grantees  HRSA Grantees  General Public Services  Training and Technical Assistance  Knowledge Development  Prevention and Health Promotion/Wellness  Workforce Development  Patient Protection and Accountable Care Act Monitoring and Updates
  • 6.
    Technical Assistance Menu IndividualTechnical Assistance:  Phone consultations, e-mail, site visits Group Learning Experiences:  Learning Communities  Webinars  Trainings  Practical Web-Based Resources (CIHS website, e-newsletter, discussion boards) Tools:  Toolkits/Guidelines  Training Curricula  Fact Sheets
  • 7.
    SAMHSA Primary andBehavioral Health Care Integration (PBHCI) Grant Program
  • 8.
    PBHCI Program Program purpose:  To improve the physical health status of people with SMI by supporting communities to coordinate and integrate primary care services into publicly funded community-based behavioral health settings Expected outcome:  Grantees will enter into partnerships to develop or expand their offering of primary healthcare services for people with SMI, resulting in improved health status Population of focus:  Those with SMI served in the public behavioral health system Eligible applicants:  Community behavioral health agencies, in partnership with primary care providers
  • 9.
    SAMHSA PBHCI LearningCommunities West Region (1) Northeast & 14 Grantees Mid-Atlantic Region (5) Central Region (2) 17 Grantees 9 Grantees VT WA Midwest Region (4) ME 15 Grantees MT NH ND OR MN NY MA ID WI SD MI CT RI WY PA NJ CA IA NV NE DE OH UT IL IN WV DC CO MO MD KS KY VA OK NC AZ NM AR TN SC AK MS AL GA HI TX LA Southeast Region (3) 9 Grantees FL
  • 10.
    SAMHSA PBHCI Grantees WestRegion (1) AK: Alaska Islands Community Services (III) AK: Southcentral Foundation (IV) Southeast Region (3) Northeast & Mid-Atlantic CA: Alameda County Behavioral Health Care Region (5) Services (II) FL: Apalachee Center, Inc(III) CA: Asian Community Mental Health Services (III) FL: Coastal Behavioral Healthcare (III) CT: Bridges...A Community Support CA: Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County (IV) FL: Community Rehabilitation Center (III) System (I) CA: Glenn County Health Services Agency (III) FL: Lakeside Behavioral Healthcare (III) CT: Community Mental Health CA: Mental Health Systems, Inc (I) FL: Lifestream Behavioral Center (III) Affiliates (III) CA: San Francisco Department of Public Health (IV) FL: Miami Behavioral Health Center (III) MA: Community Healthlink ,Inc (III) CA: San Mateo County Health System (III) GA: Cobb/Douglas Community Services Board (III) MD: Family Services, Inc (III) CA: Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. (III) SC: South Carolina State Department of Mental Health (III) ME: Community Health & Counseling OR: Native American Rehabilitation Association of VA: Norfolk Community Services Board (IV) Services (III) the Northwest (II) NH: Community Council of Nashua (I) WA: Asian Counseling and Referral Service (III) NJ: Care Plus NJ (I) WA: Downtown Emergency Service Center (III) NJ: Catholic Charities, Diocese of WA: Navos (IV) Trenton (III) Midwest Region (4) NY: Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center (III) IL: Heritage Behavioral Health Center (III) NY: Fordham Tremont CMHC (III) IL: Human Service Center (I) NY: ICD-International Center for the Central Region (2) IL: Trilogy, Inc(III) Disabled (II) IN: Adult & Child Mental Health Center (III) NY: Postgraduate Center for Mental AZ: CODAC Behavioral Health Services (I) IN: Centerstone of Indiana (II) Health (III) CO: Mental Health Center of Denver (I) IN: Health & Hospital Corporation of Marion County (IV) NY: VIP Community Services (I) LA: Capital Area Human Services District (IV) IN: Regional Mental Health Center (II) PA: Horizon House (III) OK: Central Oklahoma Community MH Center (I) KY: Pennyroyal Regional MH/MR Board (I) PA: Milestone Centers (II) OK: NorthCare Community Mental Health Center (III) MI: Washtenaw Community Health Organization (III) RI: Kent Center for Human & TX: Austin-Travis County Integral Care (III) OH: Center for Families & Children (I) Organizational Development (III) TX: Lubbock Regional MH & MR Center (II) OH: Community Support Services (IV) RI: The Providence Center (II) TX: Montrose Counseling Center (II) OH: Greater Cincinnati Behavioral Health Services (III) UT: Weber Human Services (III) OH: Shawnee Mental Health Center (I) OH: Southeast Inc. (I) WV: Prestera Center for Mental Health Services (III)
  • 11.
    Integrated health care 11 “…in essence integrated health care is the systematic coordination of physical and behavioral health care. The idea is that physical and behavioral health problems often occur at the same time. Integrating services to treat both will yield the best results and be the most acceptable and effective approach for those being served.” Hogg Foundation for Mental Health, Connecting Body & Mind: A Resource Guide to Integrated Health Care in Texas and the U.S., www.hogg.utexas.edu
  • 12.
    12 Consumers’ take on integration “Around the time that my bipolar condition was identified, I was diagnosed with kidney disease. Between the two disorders, it was a pretty upsetting time in my life… My doctors, dialysis clinic staff, and mental health case manager are well connected. They take a team approach, and they each check on the status of my health... Today I have control over my health; it doesn’t have control of me. The coordinated care allows me to feel like I can go out and be a part of the community.” – Cassandra McCallister, Board Member, Washtenaw Community Health Organization, Ypsilanti, MI
  • 13.
  • 14.
    Primary Care and Behavioral Health It goes together like Peanut Butter and Jelly!
  • 15.
    Communication with YourPartners “The Four Agreements,” Don Miguel Ruiz • Be impeccable with your words. Clarify your partnership’s goal and recognize that you have created a process that requires constant nurturing and communication. • Don’t take anything personally. Disagreements will occur. Learn to manage the process, not the personality, and recognize and understand your differences. • Don’t make assumptions. Involve both boards, schedule weekly administrative meetings, hold regular treatment team meetings, communicate between team meetings, and create a specialized data collection position. • Do your best. Involve state and local stakeholders, seek training for staff in care coordination, bring in outside experts such as CIHS for guidance, and engage other organizations that do similar work.
  • 16.
    The Role ofLeadership Main point: Leaders who employ research informed approaches are more likely to activate the organization to support a change initiative:  Communicating for buy in (what is the message? Who delivers the message? How do we know if the workforce understands and values the message? What practical actions can the workforce take that promotes engagement of consumers?  How does an organization insure that the workforce supports the aims of the integration initiative?  How does the organization insure that the primary care partners understand, value and act in ways that are likely to engage consumers. 16
  • 17.
    8.Make the Changes Stick Steps leaders take to 7. Don’t Let Up successfully implement change 6. Short Term Wins 5. Empower Action 4. Build the Right Team 3. Communicate for Buy In 2. Get the Vision Right 1. Build a Sense of Urgency Based on the work of J. Kotter (2002) The Heart of Change. 17
  • 18.
    Workforce Considerations Administrative Staffand Board of Directors – data including prevalence, clinical and productivity outcomes Clinical Team – screening, clinical protocols, motivational interviewing, how to deal with upset patients smoothly, effectively, empathetically Behavioral Health Clinicians – UMass training, motivational interviewing, Psychiatric Consultation Front Desk, Security - Mental Health First Aid
  • 19.
    The Right Temperament Persistence Creativityand flexibility Enthusiasm for learning Strong patient advocate Willingness to be interrupted Ability to work in a team
  • 20.
  • 22.
    Focus on BehavioralHealth Incorporating attention to behaviors affecting health, mental health and substance abuse • PCMH 1: Enhance Access and Continuity – Comprehensive assessment includes depression screening, behaviors affecting health and patient and family mental health and substance abuse • PCMH 3: Plan and Manage Care – One of three clinically important conditions identified by the practice must be a condition related to unhealthy behaviors (e.g. obesity) or a mental health or substance abuse condition – Practice must plan and manage care for the selected condition • PCMH 4: Provide Self-Care and Community Resources – Self-care support includes educational and community resources and adopting healthy behaviors • PCMH 5: Track and Coordinate Care – Tracks referrals and coordinates care with mental health and substance abuse services • PCMH 6: Measure and Improve Performance – Preventive measures include depression screening Achieving NCQA Recognition as a Patient-Centered Medical Home 22 RI Statewide Learning Collaborative February 5, 2011
  • 23.
  • 24.
    Why Do PeopleChange? Individuals change voluntarily when they. . . Become interested in or concerned about the need for change Become convinced that the change is in their best interests or will benefit them more than cost them Organize a plan of action that they are committed to implementing Take the actions that are necessary to make the change and sustain the change
  • 25.
    Person-Centered Skills: The Basics UtilizeO.A.R.S. • Ask Open-ended questions (not short-answer, yes/no, or rhetorical) • Affirm the person/commitment positively on specific strengths, effort, intention • Reflect feelings and change talk • Summarize topic areas related to changing
  • 26.
  • 27.
    Formal Business ProcessAnalysis Supports Clear, Precise, Accessible Communication • Step-by-step financial, clinical and practice management activities • Promotes cross-discipline understanding of each step • Connects multiple dimensions –billing, data collection and reporting, clinical services, practice management, etc. • “Requirements Traceability Matrix” - what you do and why you do it
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Analysis Examples • Timing • How long are activities within the process taking? • How much time passes between activities? • How long are the patient contact intervals within Intake? Between Intake and Re-assessment? • Billing • What are the billable/non-billable events? • Is there a way you can make non-billable events billable? • How do these events match up to the appropriate license/credential of the role? Are you maximizing the amount of reimbursement? • Role License and Credentials • Where and how are you meeting credentialing requirements? • Do they match the billable activities?
  • 30.
  • 31.
    Billing and CodingInfrastructure • Staffing – Sample of needed expertise • Chief Financial Officer • Payables and Receivables staff • Claims Processers • Knowledge of Payer Requirements • Private Payers • Medicaid • Medicare • Technology supports • Accurate, good documentation of services
  • 32.
    The Health andBehavior Assessment/Intervention Codes (96150 - 96155) • Approved CPT Codes for use with Medicare right now • Some states are using them now for Medicaid • Behavioral Health Services “Ancillary to” a physical health diagnosis  Diabetes  COPD  Chronic Pain
  • 33.
    Maximizing Who CanBill, for What, and By Whom – Interim Billing Worksheets • Point in time review of each states Medicaid program on what may or may not be reimbursable in your state for integration using currently available codes • Point in time review of Medicare reimbursement • Link CPT, Diagnostic Code and Credential • One of many tools – a place to start the conversation and billing locally and in a state • Do not GUARANTEE you will be paid based on the worksheet Worksheets Available at: www.integration.samhsa.gov
  • 34.
    The resources and information needed to successfully Integrate primary and behavioral health care Laura Galbreath, MPP Online: integration.samhsa.gov Phone: 202-684-7457, ext 231 Email: laurag@thenationalcouncil.org

Editor's Notes

  • #4 Dedicated to promoting the development of integrated primary and behavioral health services to better address the needs of individuals with mental health and substance use conditions, whether seen in specialty behavioral health or primary care provider settings.
  • #16 The primary care, mental health, and addiction fields each have their own, and when working together, differences often bubble to the surface. If unaddressed, this barrier can hamper care coordination and, ultimately, the care individuals receive
  • #25 People may change involuntarily, but this is often short lived unless they go through the above process. Once the external pressure is relieved, often people go back to familiar behavior.So then the question is, how do we engage people in a conversation about change so that they are free to consider why they would be motivated to change their behavior?
  • #26 OARS Help: Focus on MI Spirit Provide the framework (the how-to skills) for the MI Guiding Principles. Build relationship with Consumer Increase/highlight ambivalence Elicit change talk Help avoid the Common Traps