1 / 23

March 29, 2011 Caroline Buck David Lumbert

Assessing the Consequences of a Decade of Funding Cuts to New Hampshire State Mental Health Services. March 29, 2011 Caroline Buck David Lumbert. Project Goal & Method. Examine impacts of recent budget cuts on mental health services in New Hampshire.

lisastuart
Télécharger la présentation

March 29, 2011 Caroline Buck David Lumbert

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. Assessing the Consequences of a Decade of Funding Cuts to New Hampshire State Mental Health Services March 29, 2011 Caroline Buck David Lumbert

  2. Project Goal & Method • Examine impacts of recent budget cuts on mental health services in New Hampshire. • Contacted health professionals at all ten Community Mental Health Centers (CMHCs). • Analyzed past reports on NH mental health system services from the last decade.

  3. Presentation Overview • CMHC organization & funding structure. • Internal effects of funding changes. • External effects of funding changes. • Other state examples & policy options.

  4. History • In the 1980s, New Hampshire boasted a model U.S. community-based mental health care system. • In 2008,  $4.6 million in Medicaid payments was cut. • In 2009, $3 million was cut. • NH mental-health centers were forced to choose between cutting services or reducing the quality of services.

  5. Organizational Structure of the Mental Health Care System • Community mental health centers (CMHCs) are private not-for-profit facilities that have been contracted out by the government. • NH Department of Health and Human Services (Bureau of Behavioral Health). • There are ten centers located in New Hampshire • Each serves a specific region in NH.

  6. Community Mental Health Care Centers The centers combined serve 47,000 patients annually. Required to be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week for emergency psychiatric care.

  7. Funding Structures • CMHCs are private, non-profit organizations. • 85% of funding comes from consumer fees. About ¾ of these fees are paid by federal Medicaid money. • State of NH provides very little Medicaid funding to CMHCs.

  8. River Bend CMHC – Funding Example Fiscal Year 2008, Source: River Bend 2008 Annual Report

  9. Where Money Is Being Lost • Serving uninsured and underinsured patients. • Mandate to be open 24 hours/day. • Staffing costs increased 24% from 2004-2009, while overall expenses increased by 26%. (Kane 2010) • Current proposal to amend legislation.

  10. Internal Impacts of Funding Changes • Number of beds available – 236 in 1990, 186 in 2008. • Increasing demand for services. • Burdens on staff availability and quality. • Reduction in types of services offered.

  11. Impact on Patients • Increase in patients over the past decade. • 1 in 5 children and 26% of adults in NH have a mental health disorder. • Reduction in beds leads to longer wait times. • Less time with patients, fewer resources directed toward substance abuse, and less communication with parents. (UNH Survey)

  12. Impact on Staff • Layoffs – 10% of workforce at Riverbend. • Increase in caseload – 50-80 at Seacoast. • Salary freezes and benefit reductions. • Loss of paid vacation. • High turnover rate – 20% statewide.

  13. Impact on Programs • Examples of programs that have been eliminated due to budget cuts: • 13-bed, 24 hour residential program at Riverbend. • Assertive Community Treatment team at Riverbend. • Child Respite Program at West Central. • Several satellite clinics and residential facilities.

  14. External Impacts of Funding Changes • Emergency room mental health care. • Correctional facilities. • Increase in homeless population.

  15. Impact on Emergency Rooms • Overcrowding of CMHCs has increased the burden (and cost) on Emergency Rooms. • Wait times have gone from 8 hrs to almost one week. • Community-based treatment could cost $200 per patient day vs. $600 to $2,000 per day in the ER.

  16. Impact on Correctional Facilities • Prison population has increased by 31% and spending on correctional facilities has doubled. • 65% of inmates in state prison are diagnosed with mental health issues. • Lack of care can lead to recidivism.

  17. Impact on Homeless Shelters • Studies show a direct correlation between a shortage of psychiatric beds and high homelessness rates. • 50% of clients in New Hampshire homeless shelters have some kind of mental illness.

  18. How New Hampshire Stacks Up • In 2006, NH received a "D" rating from NAMI. • In the 2009 NAMI state mental-health ratings, New Hampshire was among 18 states who earned a "C" grade. • Top states for mental health: NY, MA, CT, ME, MD, and OK.

  19. Massachusetts • NAMI “B” grade. • Forefront of mental health care for over a century. • Community-Based Flexible Support Program. • Independent living skills training and support for discharged patients and their families.

  20. New York • NAMI “B” grade. • Innovative “Housing First” project. • New York pledged 9,000 new housing units over a ten-year time span & costs the state $62 per day. • More cost effective than hospital care ($479), treatment in correctional facilities ($233) or treatment in homeless shelters ($74).

  21. Connecticut • NAMI “B” grade. • Very forward-thinking vision for programs. • Electronic monitoring system for recovery of patients & collaboration between CHMCs and jails. • Jay Couture (Seacoast MHC) cited the value for mental health centers having better electronic health records.

  22. Policy Options • Maintain current system. • Allocate more state Medicaid funding into the mental health system. • Institute Community-Based, Transitional Housing Programs (follow example of New York and Massachusetts). • Eliminate 24-hour service mandate. • State pay for care of uninsured/underinsured patients.

  23. Questions.

More Related