1 / 11

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: Depression in Primary Care Initiative: National Meeting, Amelia Island FL

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: Depression in Primary Care Initiative: National Meeting, Amelia Island FL. Massachusetts Consortium on Depression in Primary Care (MCDPC) Demonstration February 16, 2006 Challenges for Medicaid Plans. Thanks to: UMMS Team. Linda Weinreb, MD, PI

fergus
Download Presentation

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: Depression in Primary Care Initiative: National Meeting, Amelia Island FL

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. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: Depression in Primary Care Initiative: National Meeting, Amelia Island FL Massachusetts Consortium on Depression in Primary Care (MCDPC) Demonstration February 16, 2006 Challenges for Medicaid Plans

  2. Thanks to: UMMS Team • Linda Weinreb, MD, PI • Carole Upshur, EdD, Co-PI • Gail Sawosik, MBA, Project Coordinator • Deborah-Ruth Mockrin, LICSW, Care Manager • Judith Savageau, MPH, Data analyst • Ken Fletcher, PhD, Data analyst • Dan O’Donnell, MD, MPH, Primary Care Consultant • Sandy Blount, PhD, MH Integration Consultant • Heidi Vermette, MD, (former Consulting Psychiatrist) • Dan Kirsch, MD, Consulting Psychiatrist • Elizabeth de la Rosa, Bilingual Care Manager • Lorna Chiasson, DFMCH Administrative Staff • Jianying Zhang, MS, CHPR Statistician for MassHealth claims data • Ann Lawthers, ScD, CHPR research staff for MassHealth claims data

  3. MassHealth Team • Annette Hanson, MD (former Medical Director), Co-PI • Michael Norton, MSW, MassHealth Behavioral Health Programs, Co-PI • Louise Bannister, RN, JD, Director PCC Plan • Phyllis Peters, MBA, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Acute and Ambulatory Services • Fran Slate, MS, Contract Manager, MCO Plan • Kate Staunton Rennie, MPA, Deputy Director, PCC Plan • Kate Willrich Nordahl, MS, Director MCO Plan Ron Steingard, MD, Medical Director

  4. Collaborating Health Plans • Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership • PCC Plan • Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan • Neighborhood Health Plan • Network Health

  5. Issues for MCDPC • Plans had different arrangements around behavioral health—carve in, carve out, FFS, capitated; and these evolved during the demonstration time • Significant investment of plans collaborating was made possible by RWJF grant (e.g. monthly meetings); likely not sustainable • Major state budget and plan changes required staff time unrelated to the demonstration project • Significant leadership turnover, Medicaid office reorganizations, and need to defend a federal suit on children’s mental health during time of depression demonstration • Enrollments and over all risk (e.g. disabled members) shifted among plans during implementation period

  6. Challenges to behavioral health integration found in MassHealth Plans • Failure of network administrators or plan behavioral health directors to appreciate the extent of patient access difficulties and difficulties for PCPs trying to access BH care on behalf of patients • Limited availability of urgent care appointments in behavioral health resulting in crisis care, ER visits • Up to 50% of patients don’t show up for BH appointments without follow up support • Patients ‘on paper’ were connected to behavioral health but not in fact • Behavioral health rules about compliance push patients out (e.g. if miss certain number of appointments, they will no longer be served) • Behavioral health providers, like primary care, don’t have chronic illness or patient management system in place • Both PCPs and behavioral health providers acknowledged there were no systems for communicating with each other; time investment to do this and lack of financial support for that time an issue as well as lack of guidelines, protocols, expectations

  7. PCPs want • Sense that they can get patients connected to behavioral health without undue wait time (applies to both MassHealth and commercial payers) • Medication consultation on short notice/real time—phone or email ‘curbside consult’ without need to wait for patient referral process • Ability to make referral appointments for patients like other specialties • All payers need to be on same page about reimbursement for depression treatment • Needs to be way to work with same team of care manager, psychiatrists, therapists to address patient needs—difficult to develop multiple relationships

  8. Intervention tried Care Manager role • CM or PCP office staff able to fax or call in appointment for patient; if BH provider prefers patient to call, CM is notified if call takes place • Information communicated back and forth from practice to BH provider by CM • CM conducts routine follow-up; connects patient to plan based social case management, transportation, community resources • CM monitors all health care needs and keeps PCP informed • CM collects data and follow up PHQ-9 scores Systems changes in behavioral health: • Urgent visits (within 2-3 days) available • Some providers allocated priority BH slots to high volume primary care sites • Regular intake and initiation of therapy within two weeks • Psychiatry medication consultation within 1-2 weeks • Patient asked to sign HIPAA release for CM and PCP practice • BH providers have` information from PCP to assist with patient assessment

  9. Sustainable solution across plans • Preferred providers convened along with PCP practice representatives from each plan • Lists of contact information, including ‘inside lines’ and what to do to reach clinician (either PCP or BH provider for patient) in an emergency distributed for practices and BH agencies • PCP practices identify an appointment liaison • Preferred providers agree to accept appointments from PCP practice, not just directly from patient • PCP practices agree to provide PHQ score and other information to the BH provider at time of referral for an appointment • BH providers agree to communicate to PCP practices if patient kept the appointment • BH providers agree to improve communication with PCP practices about patient progress (with appropriate consent)

  10. Remaining challenges • How to set this process up across the state • Define and continue role of BH network mangers to link to PCPs • Maintaining communication and connections between PCPs and BH providers with staff turnover • Addressing shortages of specific services, e.g. bilingual therapists, and psychiatrists • Sustaining learning from this project into the future with potential changes in contracting language, new vendors etc. that result in leadership changes

  11. Issues specific to Medicaid plans • Lack of continuity of insurance coverage-patients in and out of coverage in frequent cycles due to both administrative and patient factors • Rates paid to providers—both BH and PCP • Biases by providers vis a vis Medicaid • Hard to reach consumers (transient, lose of phones etc.) • More diverse racially/ethnically/linguistically • More psychosocial challenges that medical care can’t address (food security, housing problems, disabilities, etc.) • Less resources for self-management • Less community-based support resources: cost and other barriers

More Related