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Seattle SBHCs “Reaching for Excellence” TJ Cosgrove – Public Health Seattle & King County
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Seattle’s School-Based Health Centers 14 SBHCs:10 Comprehensive HS 4 Comprehensive MS Public Health-Seattle & King County serves as program manager Four additional health care organizations serve as SBHC “sponsors” School District and City are key partners
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Seattle’s School-Based Health Centers Staffing:1.0 FTE Mid-Level Practitioner (ARNP) 1.0 FTE MH Counselor 1.0 FTE Administrative Support Middle schools flex.5 FTE ARNP into mental health and/or health education Some sites offer “enhanced” services (health education, nutrition, massage therapy)
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Seattle’s School-Based Health Centers Funding Seattle’s Families and Education Levy Partner Contribution Billing (Medicaid, Take Charge) National Philanthropic Organizations Local Philanthropic Organizations School District “in-kind”
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Mental Health Services Prior to Caring for Kids Grant SBHCs in transition from gateway to mental health services to provider of mental health services Health care sponsors providing mental health services rather than subcontracting with community agencies Reduction in resources for Medicaid eligible youth Need to increase in-house skills, resources, and expertise to address the above trends
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“Reaching for Excellence” Goals of the Project Increase School-Based Health Center staffs’ ability to knowledgeably treat youth that have significant mental health issues Improve interdisciplinary (mental health/physical health) coordination within the School-Based Health Center sites Improve coordination with external agencies that provide psychiatric/mental health services
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RFE Project Activities Partnership with University of Washington / Children’s Hospital & Regional Medical Center Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences 4 second-year fellows to provide psychiatric support and services 1 University faculty member to serve as project lead Formal trainings for all SBHC staff 7 sites to receive 4 hours per month of on-site psychiatric support, includes phone/email consultation Evaluation and Communication teams
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On-Site Psychiatric Support Consultation to SBHC mental health and medical staff Direct patient care: evaluation, pharmaceutical management, and referral Formal training of SBHC staff Program planning and evaluation
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Evaluation Plan Surveys of clinic staff (including school nurses) and psychiatrists each spring for the first three years of the project First year evaluation also included structured facilitated group interviews with clinic staff at each school and the psychiatrists Year 2 and 3 surveys repeated some questions to monitor progress on program development issues and added new questions to target impact of formative changes made based on earlier surveys Data review and analysis
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Using Caring for Kids Data to Inform the Program and the Project Encounter forms were not collecting meaningful data Procedure and diagnosis coding included: CPT, DSM-IV, ICD-9, and “homegrown” codes – without consistent definitions Encounter forms were revised along CPT and DSM definitions/guidelines (with exceptions) Training was provided by UW fellows and faculty on use and application of DSM-IV and diagnosis of externalizing and internalizing disorders On-site services emphasized interdisciplinary consultations
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Program Improvements & Lessons Learned More consistent, reliable and meaningful program data For example: In the last quarter (Oct-Dec) of 2004, 40% of mental health visits had “No Diagnosis” as the primary diagnosis. In the last quarter of 2005, 6.5% of mental health visits had “No Diagnosis” as the primary diagnosis Improved data revealed prevalence of emotional health diagnoses leading to University-led training in CBT and IPT
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Program Improvements & Lessons Learned Based on the surveys, the model for providing psychiatric support evolved toward consultation, particularly interdisciplinary case consultations. QuestionYear 1Year 2Year 3 Percent who felt amount of time psychiatrist spent on-site was adequate 27%53%80% Percent who worked with the psychiatrist in Interdisciplinary Case Consultation Assessment Medication Management Referrals 79% 63% 42% 16% 70% 45% 35% 20% 93% 27% 60% 47% Percent who saw improvements in medication management Not asked 45%80% Percent who saw improvements in interdisciplinary consultation process Not asked 50%60%
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Program Improvements & Lessons Learned As psychiatrist time was used more for consultation, staff became more satisfied with 4 hours per month 93% of staff believed having on-site psychiatrist created more opportunities for interdisciplinary consultations and 87% felt the psychiatrist improved the quality of these consultations. 73% believed that the on-site psychiatric support was the aspect of Reaching for Excellence that contributed most toward improving mental health services
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Program Improvements & Lessons Learned The picture that emerges is a steadily improving multidisciplinary approach to provide mental health services that maximizes the benefit of a small amount of psychiatrist time Over the course of the project, improved data, enhanced skill sets, and a partnership with University expertise formulate professional development needs
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Sustaining the Project Continue each of the four fellows providing consultation and service to two school-based health centers Each rotation includes two sites that are geographically proximate and, when possible, the pairing has included a high school and a middle school that “feeds” into the high school SBHC sponsors will reallocate a portion of contract dollars from SBHCs into a contract with the to maintain these personnel and this model
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