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Adequacy of California's hospital infrastructure for treating the mentally ill. American Public Health Association San Diego CA - 29 Oct 2008. Presenter Disclosures.
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Adequacy of California's hospital infrastructure for treating the mentally ill American Public Health Association San Diego CA - 29 Oct 2008
Presenter Disclosures The following personal financial relationships with commercial interests relevant to this presentation existed during the past 12 months: None to disclose. Linda Remy, MSW PhDGerry Oliva, MD MPH Family Health Outcomes Project Department of Family and Community Medicine University of California, San Francisco
Background • In 1968 California led the national movement to deinstitutionalize the mentally ill with intend to establish outpatient treatment • Community programs not developed • Availability of new evidence –based treatments • Serious access and quality issues exist • Mental Health Services Act offers and opportunity
Study Objectives • Describe the history of health planning in California • Describe hospital infrastructure changes • Evaluate the impact on hospital utilization for the population of reproductive age (15 to 44) diagnosed with mental illness and/or substance abuse (MISA)
1970s - Rise of Health Planning • Congress established health planning • Health Service Areas (HSA) defined nationally based on cluster analysis of MediCare utilization data • HSA to do health planning driven by local needs, with quality, accessibility, continuity, and cost containment as major goals
Rise of Health Planning - California • 1976 California legislation paralleled Federal initiative and qualified State for Federal planning funds • Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) created • OSHPD established review process with Certificate of Need for new programs, facilities, and expensive equipment
Decline of Health Planning • 1983 - After intense hospital industry lobbying, California legislature suspended planning • 1987 - hospitals could close or consolidate without state review • 1993 - counties authorized to eliminate or consolidate HSA/HFPA boards • 1995 - Repealed all provisions addressing hospital construction and health planning
Number Of Hospitals In County With Adolescent Psychiatric Beds
Adolescent Treatment Capacity2007 • California Department of Health and Welfare • 5 residential treatment facilities, 142 beds • Department of Social Services • 1,162 beds in group homes for SED children in 18 counties • California Counties • 11 counties Inpatient adolescent psychiatric beds Residential treatment settings Treatment group homes • 7 counties Treatment group homes • 40 counties No adolescent capacity
Chemical Dependency 2007 • Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs • 41,382 residential and day CD slots • in 28 counties • 10 counties - Full range of CD treatment • 18 counties - Residential or day treatment • 30 counties - No licensed CD treatment
MISA admits (%) to hospitals lacking psychiatric capacity by location
Summary of Findings • Structural capacity plummeted • Psychiatrists well-represented in most areas but lacking inpatient care • OOC admissions increased significantly for MISA population compared to general population • MISA admissions to hospitals lacking specialized facilities almost doubled • No relationship between structural capacity and where patients received care
Results of “Voluntary Planning” • Deteriorated inpatient infrastructure • Community-based treatment not available • Resulting geographic disparities impact both access and outcome indicators • Findings provide solid evidence that "voluntary" planning failed • Literature supports that access to services is more equitable and may be less expensive in states with planning mechanisms
Recommendations • Universal health insurance • Implement parity in insurance coverage for mental health and substance abuse services • Reinstitute mandatory health planning • Legislate standards for care of MISA in hospitals without psychiatric beds • Strengthen Health and Safety Code to address geographic disparities in structural and professional capacity
For Further Information: • Linda Remy, MSW, PhD • Email: lremy@well.com • Gerry Oliva, MD, MPH • Email: olivag@fcm.ucsf.edu • Mail: Family Health Outcomes Project • 500 Parnassus Ave. Room MU-337 • San Francisco, CA 94143 • Website: http://familymedicine.medschool.ucsf.edu/fhop/