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Lori Raney, MD Principal, Health Management Associates John Kern, MD Chief Medical Officer, Regional Mental Health. The Role of CCBHCs in Monitoring and Managing Chronic Illnesses. Speaker Name Title Organization. Mental Illness and Mortality.

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  1. Lori Raney, MD Principal, Health Management Associates John Kern, MD Chief Medical Officer, Regional Mental Health The Role of CCBHCs in Monitoring and Managing Chronic Illnesses Speaker Name Title Organization

  2. Mental Illness and Mortality Walker, E.R., McGee, R.E., Druss, B.G. JAMA Psychiatry. Epub, doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.2502

  3. Predicting Cardiovascular Risk in SMI Osborn et al, JAMA Psych, 2015 72(2): 143-51.

  4. Research So Far PBHCI 2703 SPA HOME STUDY PCARE

  5. Programs Generally Contain 3 Major Components: Kern J in Integrated Care: Working at the Interface of Primary Care and Behavioral Health, L Raney editor, American Psychiatric Publishing, 2014

  6. CCBHC and Mortality Gap • Ideally, a way to help fund services that could impact mortality gap: • community-based mental and substance use disorder services; • advancing integration of behavioral health with physical health care; • assimilating and utilizing evidence-based practices on a more consistent basis • “Care coordination is the linchpin holding these aspects of CCBHC care together and ensuring CCBHC care is, indeed, an improvement over existing services. “ • Funded viaPPR enhanced rate.

  7. CCBHC: Screening and Care Coordination • “Care coordination, including requirements to coordinate care across settings and providers to ensure seamless transitions for patients across the full spectrum of health services, including acute, chronic, and behavioral health needs. Care coordination requirements shall include partnerships or formal contracts with the following: • (i) Federally-qualified health centers (and as applicable, rural health clinics) to provide Federally-qualified health center services (and as applicable, rural health clinic services) to the extent such services are not provided directly through the certified community behavioral health clinic…. • (v) Inpatient acute care hospitals and hospital outpatient clinics.” • Help transition individuals from the ED or hospital to CCBHC care • ”The CCBHC is responsible for outpatientclinicprimarycare screening and monitoringofkeyhealthindicators and health risk. ”

  8. Differences: Care Coordination Care Management *Consists of identification of high-risk individuals and use of client information to determine level of participation in care management services; *assessment of preliminary service needs; *treatment plan development, which will include client goals, preferences and optimal clinical outcomes; *assignment of health team member roles and responsibilities; *development of treatment guidelines that establish clinical pathways for health teams to follow across risk levels or health conditions; *monitoring of individual and population health status and service use to determine adherence to or variance from treatment guidelines; and *development and dissemination of reports that indicate progress toward meeting outcomes for client satisfaction, health status, service delivery and costs. *Deliberately organizing consumer care activities and *Sharing information among all of the participants concerned with a consumer’s care to achieve safer and more effective care. *This means the patient’s needs and preferences are known ahead of time and communicated at the right time to the right people, and that this information is used to provide safe, appropriate, and effective care to the patient.

  9. Things we are working on at our site: • Monitoring of key health indicators: Leverage work already in place [PCBHI, for example] • Implement specific EBP's, including MI, CBT, medication-assisted smoking cessation, plus 2 more, one must be for kids.  • Formal referral /coordination, co-location of services, screening, multidisc team meetings, MD consults, ongoing staff training and development. • Relationships with EDs • Data exchange • Mobile crisis • Detox, ambulatory detox, MAT for SA

  10. Metabolic Quality Metrics for CCBHC CCBHC State Requirements Diabetes screening schizophrenia and bipolar disorder on SGAs Diabetes care for SMI with poor control HbA1c>9 Cardiovascular health screening SMI Health monitoring for SMI and cardiovascular disease • BMI • Control high blood pressure • Tobacco screen and cessation

  11. Roles of Psychiatric Medical Staff • There is now help to do a better job • Part of system that follows primary health care as matter of course. • Making these activities part of psychiatric business as usual • Asking about smoking at every visit • Accepting responsibility for all problems, including the physical ones • More flexible for access, like PCP’s • Call someone on their cell phone to coordinate care • Normalizing new models of care, where psychiatrist leads team: “This is what the best systems have.” • APA/AMP statement about scope of practice

  12. We Should Already do This:APA/ADA Guidelines for SGAs American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, North American Association for the Study of Obesity: Consensus development conference on antipsychotic drugs and obesity and diabetes. Diabetes Care 2004; 27:596–601

  13. Standards of Care: CVD Risk “CHODS” Chol, HTN, Obesity, Diabetes, Smoking • All patients all visits: BMI, Blood Pressure, ROS – Review of Systems • Patients on SGAs - Second Generation Antipsychotics, Lithium, Depakote, Tegretol: Baseline and Annual Labs • All patients with SMI: Annual Physical Exam or contact with PCP • Nicotine Cessation – Nicotine Replacement Therapy available on site • **Other considerations: Flu shots, Hep C, Hep B, HIV, cancer screenings

  14. Workflow: Medical Assistants Do Vitals and Prep for Clinic

  15. Review ofSystems(ROS) LAB FORM ROS

  16. ADA/APA Revised for Non-fasting Labs Nonfasting Screening for Cardiovascular Risk Among Individuals Taking Second Generation Antipsychotics. Vanderlip et al. Psychiatric Services, Vol. 65 No. 5. 573 - 576

  17. 50% of deaths in SMI population are due to smoking related cause • Psychiatrists counsel patients less frequently regarding cessation – <15% vs 90% for PCPs • Education issue? Reluctance? Belief not interested in quitting? Williams, et al, Psychiatric Services, October 2014

  18. Tracking System: Form Development

  19. Tracking - The “Purple Sheet”

  20. Performance Measurement Celebrate Success!

  21. PDSA Cycle for Continuous Quality Improvement

  22. Something YOU want to do Reasonable Behavior-specific Answer the questions: What? How much? When? How often? Confidence level of 7 or more All Staff: Counseling for Lifestyle Issues Seen as Their Mission! Kopes-Kerr, Am Fam Physician. 2010 Sep 15;82(6):610-614

  23. Using Dashboards For Patient Education Wellness Report Cards

  24. E & M Coding for Complexity • HPI – mixed behavioral health and physical health issues ex: schizophrenia, smoking, obesity – 3 problems addressed in the visit • ROS: 2 plus systems • Examination: must have 3 of 7 elements of vital signs • Data: ordering and reviewing labs • Problem points: from HPI – what is stable (1 point), not improving (2 points), new problem, etc

  25. Lori Raney MDPrincipal Health Management Associateslraney@healthmanagement.com John Kern MD Chief Medical Officer Regional Mental Health John.kern@regionalmentalhealth.com

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