Due to greater understanding of how many Americans live with
mental illnesses and addiction disorders and how expensive the total
healthcare expenditures are for this group, we have reached a critical
tipping point when it comes to healthcare reform. We understand the
importance of treating the healthcare needs of individuals with serious
mental illnesses and responding to the behavioral healthcare needs of
all Americans. This is creating a series of exciting opportunities for
the behavioral health community and a series of unprecedented challenges
mental-health organizations across the U.S. are determined to provide
expertise and leadership that supports member organizations, federal
agencies, states, health plans, and consumer groups in ensuring that the
key issues facing persons with mental-health and substance use
disorders are properly addressed and integrated into healthcare reform.
In
anticipation of parity and mental healthcare reform legislation, the
many national and community mental health organizations have been
thinking, meeting and writing for well over a year. Their work continues
and their outputs guide those organizations lobbying for government
healthcare reform..
MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE DELIVERY
1. Mental Health/Substance Use Health Provider Capacity Building:
Community mental health and substance use treatment organizations,
group practices, and individual clinicians will need to improve their
ability to provide measurable, high-performing, prevention, early
intervention, recovery and wellness oriented services and supports.
2. Person-Centered Healthcare Homes:
There will be much greater demand for integrating mental health and
substance use clinicians into primary care practices and primary care
providers into mental health and substance use treatment organizations,
using emerging and best practice clinical models and robust linkages
between primary care and specialty behavioral healthcare.
3. Peer Counselors and Consumer Operated Services:
We will see expansion of consumer-operated services and integration of
peers into the mental health and substance use workforce and service
array, underscoring the critical role these efforts play in supporting
the recovery and wellness of persons with mental health and substance
use disorders.
4. Mental Health Clinic Guidelines: The pace
of development and dissemination of mental health and substance use
clinical guidelines and clinical tools will increase with support from
the new Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute and other research
and implementation efforts. Of course, part of this initiative includes
helping mental illness patients find a mental health clinic nearby.
MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM MANAGEMENT
5. Medicaid Expansion and Health Insurance Exchanges:
States will need to undertake major change processes to improve the
quality and value of mental health and substance use services at parity
as they redesign their Medicaid systems to prepare for expansion and
design Health Insurance Exchanges. Provider organizations will need to
be able to work with new Medicaid designs and contract with and bill
services through the Exchanges.
6. Employer-Sponsored Health Plans and Parity:
Employers and benefits managers will need to redefine how to use
behavioral health services to address absenteeism and presenteeism and
develop a more resilient and productive workforce. Provider
organizations will need to tailor their service offerings to meet
employer needs and work with their contracting and billing systems.
7. Accountable Care Organizations and Health Plan Redesign:
Payers will encourage and in some cases mandate the development of new
management structures that support healthcare reform including
Accountable Care Organizations and health plan redesign, providing
guidance on how mental health and substance use should be included to
improve quality and better manage total healthcare expenditures.
Provider organizations should take part in and become owners of ACOs
that develop in their communities.
MENTAL HEALTHCARE INFRASTRUCTURE
8. Quality Improvement for Mental Healthcare:
Organizations including the National Quality Forum will accelerate the
development of a national quality improvement strategy that contains
mental-health and substance use performance measures that will be used
to improve delivery of mental-health and substance use services, patient
health outcomes, and population health and manage costs. Provider
organizations will need to develop the infrastructure to operate within
this framework.
9. Health Information Technology: Federal
and state HIT initiatives need to reflect the importance of
mental-health and substance use services and include mental-health and
substance use providers and data requirements in funding, design work,
and infrastructure development. Provider organizations will need to be
able to implement electronic health records and patient registries and
connect these systems to community health information networks and
health information exchanges.
10. Healthcare Payment Reform:
Payers and health plans will need to design and implement new payment
mechanisms including case rates and capitation that contain value-based
purchasing and value-based insurance design strategies that are
appropriate for persons with mental health and substance use disorders.
Providers will need to adapt their practice management and billing
systems and work processes in order to work with these new mechanisms.
11. Workforce Development:
Major efforts including work of the new Workforce Advisory Committee
will be needed to develop a national workforce strategy to meet the
needs of persons with mental health and substance use disorder including
expansion of peer counselors. Provider organizations will need to
participate in these efforts and be ready to ramp up their workforce to
meet unfolding demand.
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