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Securing Collateral Support for Whole Systems Change: Seeking Resources and Key Stakeholder Support. Victor Capoccia, Program Director, Open Society Institute John O’Brien, Legal Action Center Associate. What Do We Know About the Treatment Gap?.
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Securing Collateral Support for Whole Systems Change: Seeking Resources and Key Stakeholder Support Victor Capoccia, Program Director, Open Society Institute John O’Brien, Legal Action Center Associate
What Do We Know About the Treatment Gap? • Addiction to drugs and alcohol is a chronic health condition affecting 22 million Americans • Proven treatments for this health condition exist • Ninety percent of those who need addiction treatment are unable to get it.
Towards A National Campaign Campaign’s Focus • Increase awareness of this problem • Make treatment as available for addiction disorders as it is for any other chronic health condition
The Barriers to Success • It’s a personal, moral or social problem, not a health condition • There is nothing that can be done, treatment doesn’t help • The economic, legal, and social side effects of addiction are more compelling than the condition itself
Campaign Strategy Communication: • Shape message to policy makers and public Change Policy and Practice: • Insurance—Addiction is a chronic health condition and should be covered like diabetes by specific benefits in all existing and future public, semi-public and private health plans. • Appropriations— Where insurance is unavailable, government at all levels has a role to pay for treatment until universal health plan coverage reduces the need for special categorical funding. • Efficiency—Expediting the engagement, integration and retention of individuals into treatment is critical to using existing resources more effectively. Advocacy: • Drive policy message and policy change
Change Principles • It’s a Health Issue • Leadership, Champion • Clear and Persistent Public Presence • Payor Engagement • Change Leader • Access to and Facility with Datac
Towards A National Campaign • What Are the Goals? • Increased number of consumers receiving high quality care • Increased resources available to pay for treatment • Effective practices or models for change created by grantees that are applicable in other jurisdictions
What Are the Models? • Baltimore • Developed a broad-based advocacy and communications to increase appropriations • Developed a new city-wide administrative entity to purchase and monitor treatment services. • Used data to track performance aggressively and improve the efficiency and to effectiveness of individual programs. • The results: • Funding for the treatment system increased from $20.3 million in 1997 to $52.9 million in 2005, • Number of people receiving drug treatment in publicly funded programs increased from 18,449 in 1997 to 28,672 in 2005.
What Are the Models? • Florida • No clearly defined Medicaid SA benefit (> $10 million annually—redefined mental health coverage to include SA and created intensive TA for providers • Service gaps—initiated several new covered services for Medicaid recipients • Little new state funding—partnered with counties to identify local dollars and leverage federal funds
What Are The Models Connecticut—Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services: • Three state agencies had different contractual requirements for similar SA services—created one contract • Had multiple and different monitoring processes for same SA providers—create a single monitoring process • Paid vastly different amounts for the same services to the same providers—reviewing opportunities for developing a consistent reimbursement methodology
Future Directions—Closing the Addiction Treatment Gap (CATG) Seeks to expand treatment by increasing public funding, broadening insurance coverage and achieving greater program efficiency. • A $10 million national program of the Open Society Institute (OSI). • Demonstration sites across country • National communication initiative • Learning Collaborative and technical Assistance • Evaluation
CATG Summary • 35 Applications were submitted in April • 8 sites recommended for participation: • Arkansas • Milwaukee • New Hampshire • New Jersey • New York • Puerto Rico • Rhode Island • Tarrant County
Help Us with CATG • Financing, How do you: • Increase the scope of benefits covered by public payers (e.g. Medicaid, Medicaid contracted health plans and other state agencies)? • Shift expenditures from inpatient, emergency departments and corrections to community services? • Finance across systems and create purchasing efficiencies?
Proposed Strategies • Increase state appropriations for AODA treatment services—several different strategies proposed (general request for increased spending) • Add AODA community services to the state’s Medicaid plan • Shifting spending from inpatient services to more effective community treatment approaches • Review and retool the purchasing practices among state agencies that purchase substance abuse services. • Increase the insurance coverage (through state’s Medicaid program) for low-income uninsured individuals • Increase the use of evidenced based and promising practices offered by treatment providers and increase access and retention to addiction treatment services.
Help Us with CATG Efficiency, How do you: • Expand the use of proven interventions to improve outcomes and reduce relapse? • Develop recovery support systems? • Use established system redesign and improvement strategies to expand treatment access?
Help Us with CATG Advocacy and Communication • What is the message that you would use to publicize the costs and consequences of the treatment gap? • Who would you involve in delivering the message? • Who would you target to receive the message? • What data and analysis would you want to make the case?
Thank you for your thoughts! Track the CATG Initiative @ www.treatmentgap.org.