North Carolina State Spending On A Community-based Mental Health Program Drops 50% In One Year
Main Category: Mental HealthAlso Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 19 Nov 2008 - 7:00 PDT
The State Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) has reduced spending on a community-based mental health program by nearly 50 percent over the past year.
For the first four months of the current fiscal year, which began July 1, expenditures for Community Support totaled $183 million. Over the same period last year, July-October 2007, Community Support expenditures surpassed $355 million. The current spending levels are below even those of July-October 2006 - $195 million - when the program was less than a year old.
DHHS Secretary Dempsey Benton said the heightened efficiency has not come at the expense of Community Support recipients. "We have observed no systematically adverse conditions that hamper the ability of the 'at risk' population to be served," Benton said.
The Department has also observed an increase in the numbers of recipients served by other community-based mental health and substance abuse services, which are provided by more clinically specialized providers. "This means that consumers served inappropriately by large amounts of the basic Community Support service in the past are now more appropriately served by these new, more enhanced services," Benton said.
Community Support was launched in March 2006 as one of an array of community-based state mental health services. It was designed to be a time-limited service that helped adults and adolescents with a diagnosis of mental illness or substance abuse to be able to live and function in their communities while receiving other community-based services.
Reviews and audits by DHHS found that Community Support in many cases was not being provided appropriately. Problems ranged from paperwork and documentation errors to recipients who either received excessive amounts of the service or who did not have an actual diagnosis of mental illness or substance abuse.
Secretary Benton credited the one-year, 48-percent drop in spending to several factors:
• -- tightening service definitions, including an emphasis on Community Support as a clinical service that must meet acceptable medical standards;
• -- recouping payments from providers who either provided the service improperly or could not document appropriately;
• -- suspending enrollment of new providers;
• -- raising providers' qualification requirements;
• -- limiting weekly hours of the service for adults;
• -- performing closer reviews upon initial requests for the service;
• -- processing appeals more timely, which reduces costs for continued services while appeals are pending.
Additional provisions to the Community Support service are currently awaiting approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. These include even tighter service definitions, a tiered payment rate for providers and more upgrades to provider qualification requirements.
North Carolina Dept. of Health and Human Services
www.dhhs.state.nc.us
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14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/130042.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/130042.php.
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Savings For State Or Clients Slipping Through The Cracks
posted by Concerned citizen on 29 Jan 2009 at 8:15 pmDempsey wrote about the wonderful reduction in Community Based Supports and forgot to mention some important facts.
Agency Providers are not able to offer Community Based Services and stay in business because of the reduced reimbursement rates for these services and for the reduction of units or hours that a consumer may qualify for.
The state of North Carolina wants to emphasize relying upon natural or community supports that are free, such as relying upon the family, churches, and community organizations.
This would reduce the need for Community Support and other mental health care providers. However, many families are ill equipped to handle the added stress of managing all of their loved ones mental illness needs, do not know how to navigate a complicated mental health system, are not aware of the services that are availabe, do not know how to advocate for their loved one's care properly, are not able to properly assess symptoms, do not understand medication effectiveness and side effects, and are often not able to act quickly enough to prevent an escaulation of their loved one's symptoms.
Often many families have a predispostion genetically that with enough stress allows for mental illness to present itself, which means that by increasing the stressors upon individual families by relying too heavily upon natural supports, we may in fact be increasing the number of clients in need of mental health care within family uniits.
With many mental illnesses having a genetic componet, there are many families who are not able to care for one another. Churches do not have the resources nor the education to know how to treat or care for the mentally ill among us. Why not allow them to fulfill their role in society which is to meet the spiritual needs of the community?
Shouldn't those who went to college to prepare themselves for a career in helping others, who have the heart and the education be the ones to take care of the mentally ill?
Are we really saving tax dollars or are we creating a mental health care system in North Carolina that is allowing more and more clients to slip through the cracks of a broken system that has no safety net in place.
Do we value the mentally ill and the mentally handicapped in North Carolina so little that we are proud to boast about saving money when it comes to their care?
There are financial costs and there are people costs to consider. By offering Community support services to fewer and fewer clients, by allowing those with the least amount of education to provide those services, and by placing more stress upon families and expecting the community at large to provide our community mental health care for free is costing North Carolina dearly. We must count the cost of the clients who are slipping through the cracks, becoming homeless, placing a financial and psychologicaal burdon upon already stressed families, and or end up hospitalized when that hospitalization could have been prevented if North Carolina would focus upon providing effective servicies, not cheap and quick, time limited services to our mentally ill.
There are many different perspectives to this NC Mental Health Reform Act and the "dummying down of the mental health care field" is what is really being implemented. Not only are the clients not being valued, the helping professionals have also been devalued and underappreciated. Many of the best in the mental health care field have had to leave their chosen careers to find jobs in other fields so that they can support their families. This unfortunately leaves those with the least experienced and least amount of education staying in the field, doing the grunt work, that the State does not value.
Is this cost effective?
Is this humane?
Are we not stepping backwards into the dark ages?
The mentally ill are the poor and needy among us, and we as a state do not feel the need to take care of them properly.
This is my perspective. Others need to speak out. Shout!
Informative Article
posted by ClinAsia on 30 Jan 2009 at 4:28 amThe article is highly informative and talks how cost effectively things can be dealt. I am opinion that things can also be cost effective if outsourced to Asia seeing the Asia Advantage.
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