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Tribal Behavioral Health: Growing Healthy Communities and Healthy People. Charles H. Smith, PhD Regional Administrator – Region VIII Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration. Pathways to Respecting American Indian Civil Rights Conference August 8, 2012.
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Tribal Behavioral Health: Growing Healthy Communities and Healthy People Charles H. Smith, PhD Regional Administrator – Region VIII Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration Pathways to Respecting American Indian Civil Rights Conference August 8, 2012
Behavioral Health: A National Priority 2 Behavioral health is essential to health Prevention works Treatment is effective People recover SAMHSA’s Mission: Reduce the impact of substance abuse and mental illness on America’s communities www.samhsa.gov
SAMHSA’s Principles www.samhsa.gov
SAMHSA’s New Regional Presence • Represent SAMHSA leadership in the Regions • Provide SAMHSA with regional feedback • Establish working relationships with: • Regional representatives of OpDivs (HRSA, ACF, CMS, AoA) and internal staff divisions • State authorities for mental health and substance abuse, providers, advocates, and groups, state and local health departments. • Coordinate support for State implementation of health reform. • Coordinate, as needed, implementation of SAMHSA Strategic Initiatives and resources across SAMHSA to address emerging needs • Consultation and technical assistance within the regions.
Tribal Behavioral Health:Scope of the Problem Congress: Substance abuse “most severe health and social problem” for Indian tribes • Costs of consequences • Risk factor for other problems • Cause of death and disability
Tribal Communities andBehavioral Health Challenges 21.6 % of American Indians or Alaska Natives (AI/AN) experienced mental illness in the past year (vs. 19.9 % overall pop) The rate of past month binge alcohol use was ↑ among AI/AN adults than the national average (30.6 vs. 24.5%) The rate of past month illicit drug use was ↑ among AI/AN adults than the national average (11.2 vs. 7.9%) Only 1 in 8 (12.6%) of AI/AN adults (24,000 people) in need of alcohol or illicit drug use treatment in the past year received treatment at a specialty treatment facility American Indians are overrepresented in incarceration and arrests rates; in one Minnesota county, American Indians account for 50% of the arrests, but only 11.5% of the county population is American Indian.
Health Disparities: A Snapshot *Retrieved fromwww.ihs.gov/Disparities.asp Indian Country Rates Nationally* • 72 % higher suicide rate • 92 % higher homicide rate • 149 % higher unintentional injury rate (includes motor vehicle crashes) • 195 % higher diabetes rate • 500 % higher tuberculosis rate • 519 % higher alcoholism rate
Health Disparities: A Snapshot *Urban Indian Health Institute (2004) The Health Status of Urban American Indian and Alaska Natives; (2010) Visibility Through Data: Health information for Urban American Indian and Alaska Native Communities, retrieved from www.uihi.org Urban Indian Rates Nationally* • 38% higher accident mortality • 54% higher diabetes mortality • 126% higher chronic liver disease mortality • 178% higher alcohol-related mortality • Urban Indian youth are nearly 5 times more likely to attempt suicide requiring hospitalization than all other urban youth combined
Suicide Among American Indian and Alaskan Natives 10 Suicide among AI/NA populations • Higher risk: young and middle-aged AI/AN • Ages 15 – 24: Rates of 31.59 per 100,000 • Ages 40 – 59: Rates of 19.43 per 100,000 • Suicide is the second leading cause of death for AI/AN youth in the 15-24 age group, 2.5x the national rate for this age group Suicidal thoughts and plans among AI/AN adults age 18 and older • 54,000 (5.0%) had serious thoughts of suicide in the past year vs. 3.7% overall population • 26,000 (2.4%) made a suicide plan vs. 1.0% of overall population Suicide attempts among AI/AN adults age 18 and older • 16,000 (1.4%) made a suicide attempt vs. 0.05% of overall population
Current, Binge, and Heavy Alcohol Use among Persons Aged 12 & Older, by Race/Ethnicity: 2010 2010 NSDUH – Summary of National Findings
Substance Dependence or Abuse in the Past Year by Race/Ethnicity: 2010
Indian Country at a Glance Challenges in AI/AN Communities: Higher adolescent death rates Higher youth suicide rates Higher past month binge alcohol use Higher past month illicit drug use Higher sexual assault rates against females Higher homicide rates against women Higher rates of intimate partner violence Higher rates of historical trauma AND……... 13
Indian Country at a Glance AND……… Lower mental / substance use disorder treatment rates in non-IHS/specialty treatment settings 14
SAMHSA Programs Serving AI/AN Communities 17 Strategic Prevention Framework Tribal Incentive Grants 54 Drug Free Communities Support grants 29 Garrett Lee Smith Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention grants 65 Native communities served by Native Aspirations (bullying, violence, and suicide prevention) 7 Circles of Care Infrastructure grants for Children’s Mental Health Systems 1 Project LAUNCH grantee Native American Center for Excellence (provides technical assistance to native communities)
SAMHSA Block Grants • Currently, 2/3 of SAMHSA’s budget goes to State Block Grants. • Mental Health Services Block Grant • Substance Abuse Prevention & Treatment Block Grant • 2011 & 2012 Uniform Block Grant • States must show evidence they consulted with the Federally recognized Tribes within borders • Current analysis of Section G –Tribal Consultation
Behavioral Health – Tribal Prevention Grant (BH-TPG) A proposed non-competitive, multi-year grant included in SAMHSA’s FY 2013 budget request. $40 million from ACA Prevention Fund “Basic” award for every Federally recognized Tribe that submits a plan to prevent substance abuse and suicide. On-going Tribal Consultations on distribution formula and program design.
Health Care Reform More people will have insurance coverage ↑ Demand for qualified and well-trained BH professionals Medicaid (and States) will play a bigger role in M/SUDs Focus on primary care & coordination w/ specialty care Major emphasis on home & community-based services; less reliance on institutional and residential care Priority on prevention of diseases & promoting wellness Focus on quality rather than quantity of care 18
Tribal Law and Order Act (TLOA) TLOA was signed into law on July 29, 2009. It reauthorized and amends the Indian Alcohol and Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (IASA) of 1986. TLOA Section 241: SAMHSA Shall… Lead interagency coordination of efforts, resources and services. Seek Tribal Leader input (consultation) Develop a Memorandum of Agreement with Justice, Interior and HHS. 19
Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 Signed into law July 29, 2010 Reauthorizes and amends: Indian Alcohol and Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (IASA) of 1986 20
Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 Key Features: Three (plus) federal Departments U.S. Dept of Health and Human Services U.S. Dept of the Interior U.S. Dept of Justice Plus… U.S.D.A., Dept of Ed, DOL, ONDCP Establish objectives/goals Encourage development of “Tribal Action Plans” (TAPs) Respect for Tribal sovereignty No additional $$ 21
Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 Key Features: Three main goals (1) Determine scope of the problems faced by Tribes (2) Identify relevant resources and programs of each partner agency (3) Coordinate existing agency programs with those established under the Act 22
Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 Key Features: Encourage development of “TAPs” Tribal Action Plan coordinate resources and programs to combat substance abuse in the tribe Federal cooperation at the tribe’s request, federal partner agencies help develop a TAP Implementation federal area representatives enter into agreement with tribe to implement TAP 23
Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 Key Features: Respect for Tribal sovereignty Unique historical, legal, moral responsibility Tribal sovereignty to determine what’s best for their people Together, these are the basis of: Government-to-government relationship 24
TLOA also requires SAMHSA to… Create and staff a SAMHSA Office of Indian Alcohol and Substance Abuse (OIASA): • Secure operating framework for a Tribal Action Plan (TAP). • Establish Inventory/Resource Workgroup. • Establish Newsletter Workgroup. • Establish an Education Services Workgroup. Launch OIASA website: http://www.samhsa.gov/tloa/
OIASA Quarterly Newsletter Publish quarterly Include reviews of exemplary AI/AN programs Provide contact and follow-up information about the programs 26
Raising Awareness about Behavioral Health in Tribal Communities http://store.samhsa.gov/home http://blog.samhsa.gov/ http://actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org/
National Network to Eliminate Disparities in Behavioral Health (NNED) http://nned.net/index-nned.php/
Multicultural Public Awareness Campaign Raising Awareness about Mental Health Problems in Tribal Communities 29 http://www.whatadifference.samhsa.gov/native/
Thank You Charles H. Smith, PhD Regional Administrator – Region VIII (CO, MT, ND, SD, UT, WY) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (303) 844-7873 Charles.smith@samhsa.hhs.gov www.samhsa.gov