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PARTNERING TO END HOMELESSNESS IN A CHANGING HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT Pamela S. Hyde, J.D. SAMHSA Administrator National Alliance to End Homelessness U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness Washington, DC July 16, 2012
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BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND HOMELESSNESS Among sheltered homeless adults (HUD, 2010 Point-in-Time): 34.7 percent (~552,000) with substance used disorders (SUD) 26.2 percent (~417,000) with serious mental illness (SMI) 46 percent (~732,000) with co-occurring disorders (COD) Of those using homeless residential services in 2010: 6.4 percent (>100,000) reported a psychiatric facility, SA treatment facility, or hospital as their living arrangement the night before entry TEDS, 2010: Of the ~1.8 million treatment admissions aged 12 or ↑, 12.7 percent were homeless at time of admission 3
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RECOVERY REQUIRES HOUSING 4 4 Individuals and Families HOME ↑ Permanent Housing COMMUNITY ↑ Peer/Family/ Recovery Network Supports PURPOSE ↑ Employment/ Education HEALTH ↓ Symptoms & Distress ↑ Abstinence, Self-Care & Resilience
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2014 – MORE AMERICANS WILL HAVE HEALTH COVERAGE OPPORTUNITIES Currently, 37.9 million are uninsured <400% FPL* 18.0 M – Medicaid expansion eligible 19.9 M – ACA exchange eligible** 11.019 M (29%) – Have BH condition(s) * Source: 2010 NSDUH ** Eligible for premium tax credits and not eligible for Medicaid 5
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PREVALENCE OF BH CONDITIONS AMONG MEDICAID EXPANSION POP CI = Confidence Interval Sources: 2008 – 2010 National Survey of Drug Use and Health 2010 American Community Survey 6
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PROVIDERS ACCEPTING HEALTH INSURANCE PAYMENTS Primary MH plus some SA: 85 percent Primary SA: 56 percent Other (homeless shelters and social services): 37 percent Residential SA: 54 percent Inpatient: 95 percent Outpatient: 68 percent Source: NSATSS 7
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SAMHSA ENROLLMENT ACTIVITIES Consumer Enrollment Assistance (thru BRSS TACS) Outreach/public education Enrollment/re-determination assistance Plan comparison and selection Grievance procedures Eligibility/enrollment communication materials Enrollment Assistance Best Practices TA – Toolkits Communication Strategy – Message Testing, Outreach to Stakeholder Groups, Webinars/Training Opportunities SOAR Changes to Address New Environment Data Work with ASPE and CMS 8
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SAMHSA PROVIDER CAPACITY EFFORTS Provider Business Operations Contract Billing Electronic Health Records Compliance Business Planning Being in a Provider Network Technical Assistance and Training Workforce Issues
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SAMHSA FUNDING TO ADDRESS HOMELESSNESS SAMHSA’s 2012 homeless programs budget (PATH, GBHI & SSH) is ~$139 million Support for 220 direct grantees and > 600 PATH provider agencies in 50 states 93 active grantees: GBHI, including CABHI and CSAT’s Services in Supportive Housing (SSH) and general grantees 71 active grantees: SSH programs, supported by CMHS 10
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SAMHSA’S CABHI PROGRAM Subprogram of GBHI A 3-year program that began in September 2011 31 active CABHI grants CABHI Grantees: Development/implementation of programs integrating services and treatment for individuals who are chronically homeless ↑ number of individuals who are placed in permanent housing with supportive services ↑ provider capabilities to enroll individuals in mainstream benefit programs (e.g., Medicaid, SSI/SSDI, SNAP) 11
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CABHI COLLABORATION WITH HOUSING PARTNERS First 6 months, CABHI grantees placed > 300 individuals into housing Funding sources U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development: Supportive Housing Program Project-based vouchers Shelter Plus Care vouchers Section 8 vouchers U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing Vouchers Public and private program partnerships Local housing authorities 12
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COMMUNITY LIVING INITIATIVE (CLI) HHS’s CLI promotes federal partnerships in support of the 1999 Olmstead decision As part of the CLI, HUD and HHS cooperated in the Housing Capacity Building Initiative for Community Living Combines efforts among HUD, CMS and SAMHSA Encourages public housing agencies to establish persons transitioning from institutions as a priority population for public housing and Housing Choice vouchers Awarded ~ 1,000 of the 5,400 new Non-Elderly Disabled (NED) vouchers to individuals leaving institutions, including many in the CMS Money Follows the Person program 13
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2013: SAMHSA POLICY ACADEMY Focus on states or cities with high rates of chronic homelessness Federal partners include HRSA, HUD, VA, CMS and ASPE Process will rely heavily on web technology in providing TA and communicating with teams Teams will include policymakers in housing, BH, Medicaid, criminal justice, labor, and veterans affairs Consumer leaders and members of State Interagency Councils, Continuums of Care, and Coalitions for the Homeless will participate 14
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