1 / 9

Washington State

Washington State. MaryAnne Lindeblad Director, Division of Program Support WA Dept. of Social & Health Services. Doug Allen Director, Division Alcohol & Substance Abuse WA Dept. of Social & Health Services. State of Washington. Population: 6.5 Million Department of Social & Health Services

cleo
Télécharger la présentation

Washington State

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

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Washington State MaryAnne LindebladDirector, Division of Program SupportWA Dept. of Social & Health Services Doug AllenDirector, Division Alcohol & Substance AbuseWA Dept. of Social & Health Services

  2. State of Washington • Population: 6.5 Million • Department of Social & Health Services • 1.2 Million customers a day DASA Fiscal Year 2005: Treatment: 29,105 adults 5,639 adolescents Prevention: 45,299 adolescents in recurring programs

  3. Goals • Explore and develop new cooperative approaches to service delivery with funding streams. • Improve capacity in DASA, Mental Health, and Medicaid delivery systems using best practices to serve more Medicaid eligible clients (e.g. children, co-occurring).

  4. Looking at the Bigger Picture The Division of Alcohol and Substance Abuse budget is a small fraction of that of DSHS DASA’s projected 2005-2007 Biennium Budget of $303.9 million represents 1.8% of Department of Social and Health Services. Even so, recent increases in funding create a need to leverage systems change within a much larger bureaucracy in order to satisfy legislative requirements. DSHS BudgetTotal=$17.2 Billion (34.7%) State BudgetTotal = $49.5 Billion

  5. DSHS-DASA Budget Changes State General and Other Federal funding categories represent the largest portion of the 92% increase in DASA’s biennial budget. Recent increases in State General Fund have created a need to alter delivery systems at the state and local level. Budget Growth1993-1995 vs. 2003-2005 vs. 2005-2007 1993-1995 Biennium$158.3 Million 2003-2005 Biennium$240.3 Million 2005-2007 Biennium$303.9 Million

  6. Though contracts with counties, tribes, and community-based providers, DASA provides a full range of prevention and treatment services. How do we spend our funds? 6% Criminal Justice 41% County Managed Expenditures Drug CourtsCourt Supervised Treatment County Grant in Aid Youth Outpatient Pregnant/Parenting Women Outpatient Opiate Substitution Treatment Detoxification ADATSA Outpatient Treatment Assessment Title XIX Services SSI Client Offset Services TANF Services Children & Family Services 7% Prevention County Prevention Services Direct Prevention Services Training 7% Support Services Youth Services Native American Services Interpreter Services PPW & Child Care Services HIV Support Services ResearchTARGET (reporting database) 28% Residential Adult & Youth Treatment Pregnant/Parenting Women Involuntary Treatment 2% Administration 2% Special Projects

  7. Challenges • Increase treatment services for aged, blind, disabled, and other Medicaid-eligible adults. • Effect changes in delivery of services to provide appropriate treatment for these populations. • Maintain current levels of treatment retention and treatment completion. Treatment Expansion ProgressStatewide, Adults Meeting Expansion Criteria SOURCE: DSHS-Research and Data Analysis. DASA Treatment Expansion Client Monitoring Report.

  8. Challenges • Increase treatment services for aged, blind, disabled, and other Medicaid-eligible adults. • Effect changes in delivery of services to provide appropriate treatment for these populations. • Maintain current levels of treatment retention and treatment completion. Medicaid Disabled GAU TANF/Other Medicaid Aged SOURCE: DSHS-Research and Data Analysis. DASA Treatment Expansion Client Monitoring Report.

  9. Challenges • Increase treatment services for aged, blind, disabled, and other Medicaid-eligible adults. • Effect changes in delivery of services to provide appropriate treatment for these populations. • Maintain current levels of treatment retention and treatment completion. Treatment Completion: Outpatient SOURCE: DSHS-DASA TARGET reporting database.

More Related