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THE SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH IMPERATIVE Steven Adelsheim, M.D. University of New Mexico Department of Psychiatry NM Department of Health, OSH Jenni Jennings Dallas Independent School District
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THE SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH IMPERATIVE Steven Adelsheim, M.D. University of New Mexico Department of Psychiatry NM Department of Health, OSH Mark D. Weist, Ph.D. University of Maryland Department of Psychiatry
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Prevalence of Childhood Mental Health Problems ä About 20% of children and adolescents (15 million), ages 9 to 17, have diagnosable mental health disorders ä Between 9-13% of children, ages 9-17 years, meet the definition of serious emotional disturbance (SED) that limits their ability to function in the family, school, and community ä An estimated 70% of those identified are not getting the mental health treatment they need
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Surgeon General’s Conference on Children’s Mental Health ä By 2020, childhood neuropsychiatric disorders will rise by over 50% internationally to become one of the 5 most common causes of morbidity, mortality, disability ä Global Burden of Disease study predicts that major depression will become the second leading cause of disability in the world by the year 2010 ä “There is no mental health equivalent to the federal government’s commitment to childhood immunization”
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Surgeon General’s Suicide Data - 1997 ä Rate for ages* 10-14 - 1.6 /100,000 * 15-19 - 9.7 /100,000 * 20-24 - 14.5 /100,000 ä For young people 15-24, suicide is third leading cause of death ä In 1996, more youth and young adults died from suicide than cancer, heart disease, AIDS, stroke, pneumonia, & birth defects COMBINED
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2001 New Mexico YRRS ä 13.7% of students had attempted suicide in the 12 months prior to the survey ä 15.5% of females ä 7.1% of males ä Up from 9.1% in 1999
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An Attitudinal Shift Towards Children’s Mental Health Programs ä Public Health perspective similar to that for immunizations, sexually transmitted diseases ä Put children’s services on equal financial footing as adult programs if we really believe in prevention and early identification ä Equal focus for children’s services at federal, state, and local systems ä University training systems prioritize children services
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Prevalence of Mental Health Problems Post 9/11 ä 64% of students had been exposed to one or more traumatic events BEFORE 9/11 ä 10.5% of students were estimated to have PTSD (75,000) ä Previous exposure to traumatic event or exposure of a family member or were more important than personal physical exposure in predicting who developed PTSD ä 26.5% have at least one of the seven assessed mental health problems, excluding alcohol abuse (190,000 students) ä At least 66% of students with probable PTSD following the 9/11 attacks had not sought out ANY mental health services!
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Early Identification and Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders as Prevention ä ADHD – Pharmacotherapy reduces risk for later substance use disorder (Biederman, et al, 1999) ä Bipolar disorders – early identification of BAD in younger children reduces risk of ASUD 8X over adolescent identification (Wilens et al, 1999) ä Opposition Defiant/Conduct Disorders – early treatment of child, parent, family all decrease later ASUD risk (Riggs)
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NYC Mental Health System Recommendations ä All interventions should be school-based to increase access and decrease stigma ä Outreach and training in schools to identify youth with mental health problems ä Screening and assessment system within schools. that includes a seamless link to services ä Evidence–based models of intervention ä Increase school-based clinics throughout NYC schools
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Schools: The Most Universal Natural Setting ä Over 52 million youth attend 114,000 schools ä Over 6 million adults work in schools ä Combining students and staff, one-fifth of the U.S. population can be found in schools
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Why Put Mental Health Services in Schools? ä Improve access: It’s where the students are! ä Families more comfortable in community setting ä Minimize stigma issues ä Opportunities to observe and intervene directly in setting where most student’s time is spent ä Clinical efficiency and productivity ä Ability to collaborate and advocate directly for education needs of students ä Greater ability to reach those with “internalizing disorders”
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Major Approaches to Mental Health in Schools ä School-Based Health Centers (1,400) ä Community Mental Health Center Outreach (114,000 schools) ä Private Practitioner Outreach ä Communities in Schools ä Enabling Framework (Adelman and Taylor) ä Other Education-Based, Including Special Education Linked and Consultation
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School Mental Health Partnerships with Families ä Opportunities to collaborate with providers on- site about education needs of child ä Improved coordination of interventions around whole child and family ä Access is easier with fewer transportation issues ä More comfortable community setting ä Stigma issues may be minimized
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School-Community Collaboration in School Mental Health Programs ä Collaboration and coordination between school and providers is critical ä Roles of all on-site providers, including school health professionals must be clear ä Communication and confidentiality issues must be directed addressed and established ä Resource coordination efforts must be determined by organized team within school (SAT, resource team, etc.)
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School Mental Health Programs and Special Education ä Currently most school mental health professionals work only with special education students ä SBHCs may have a critical role to play in evaluation, recommendations, interventions, IEPs for special education ä School mental health providers may find students in need of further educational assessment and be on site to advocate for their needs ä On-site school mental health professionals are a resource for administrators struggling with difficult discipline issues ä School mental heath providers may give direct guidance to teachers in meeting student classroom needs
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School Mental Health Program Outcomes ä Improved grades, attendance, and behavior in students ä Decreased inappropriate referrals to special education ä Improved school climate
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Funding a Continuum of School Mental Health Programs and Services ä State and local grants and contracts ä Federal and foundation grants and contracts ä Innovative prevention funding ä Medicaid: fee-for-service, Medicaid managed care, Medicaid in the Schools ä Allocations from schools, special education services, and departments of education
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Continuum of Care for School Mental Health Programs ä Awareness and training ä Three levels of prevention, including universal, selective and indicated ä Screening and assessment ä Early identification and early intervention ä Three levels of treatment, including community-based, transitional, and high-end
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NM DOH Office of School Health
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Office of School Health Locations District III District IV
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New Mexico School Behavioral Health Partnership ä Office of School Health $300,000 ä Behavioral Health Division $400,000 ä CYFD-Prev. & Interv. $320,000 ä Dept of Ed.-Spec.Ed.$170,000 ä Dept. of Ed.-School Health$350,000 ä Fed. M H Block Grant $140,000 ä HSD-Med. Asst. Div.
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Interdepartmental School Behavioral Health Partnership ä Funded Programs ä School Behavioral Health Training Institute ä Youth Mental Health Awareness Initiative- “Childhood Revealed” ä Dropout Prevention Project ä School Behavioral Health Screening Program ä School-Based Mental Health Center Program Development ä SBHC Mental Health Exemplary Pilot Sites
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School Mental Health System Recommendations ä Through schools, train educators, students, and families about children's mental health issues and their impact on education ä Continue to fund evidence-based prevention programs, including indicated prevention activities ä Expand incentives to increase the numbers of child-trained MH providers and require a school-based component to their training
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School Mental Health System Recommendations-continued ä Implement screening and assessment for behavioral health issues: ä Head Start ä Child Find and IDEA ä EPSDT ä Entrance to schools with vision and hearing ä At critical junctures in school such as at transition grades and at point of disciplinary action
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School Mental Health System Recommendations-continued ä Create specific funding for school-based mental health services in school-based health centers and as a part of federally funded mental health and education programs ä Examples: ä SCHIPS ä Medicaid ä Medicaid in the Schools ä “No Child Left Behind”-Safe and Drug Free Schools, Title 1 and other entitlements
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School Mental Health System Recommendations-continued ä Support state level infrastructure for mental health service system delivery between mental health and education systems ä Fund school mental health demonstration sites and disseminate the most effective models ä Create Office of School Health/Mental Health at federal level (joint Health and Ed.), pool funds from multiple agencies and distribute to school- community collaboratives ä Integrate school-based mental health and primary care services
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Find Children and Adolescents with Behavioral Health Problems Early and Treat Them ä Prevent later special education referrals ä Reduce primary care and urgent care over utilization ä Decrease high risk behaviors including violence and substance abuse ä Improve educational outcomes ä Decrease the accidents, suicides, and homicides that are the public health mortalities for our children
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The National Child Psychiatrist Shortage ä In 1990, COGME reported a national need for 30,000 child psychiatrists by 2000 ä Currently there are 6,300 ä A minimum projected need for 12,624 to meet demand by 2020 with a predicted 30% increase in numbers to 8,312
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New Mexico School Behavioral Health Training Institute ä Train-the–Trainers model of adult education ä Training 180 teachers and school health professionals from 14 districts this year ä Training in aspects of school behavioral health and classroom intervention ä On-site workshops with staff support
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Childhood Revealed New Mexico 2001 ä Art exhibit as centerpiece for youth mental health awareness expansion statewide ä Linkages to school districts for in-service training and classroom programs (0ver 5000 youth so far this year) ä Community education programs for expanded awareness ä Media, government, and business support all to help to decrease stigma
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New Mexico School Mental Health Prevention Programs ä Dropout Prevention Program ä Peer Navigator’s Program ä Crisis Prevention and Intervention Coordination ä Prevention Programs Resource
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New Mexico Dropout Prevention Initiative ä Case management model for high risk youth and their families ä Focus on wraparound supports for those identified of being at risk to dropout ä Statewide training and RFP development 2002 fiscal year ä Focus on implementation at 3 pilot sites statewide for fiscal years 2003-4 ä Target 9th grade students making transition to high school
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New Mexico K-6th Behavioral Health Assessment ä Training for teachers and school health professionals statewide in behavioral health issues ä Website development as training and resource model-www.nmsmhi.org ä Developing of screening and assessment tools for K-6th grade use statewide ä Focus on student support team system development for schools ä Funded by state legislature through SDE
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New Mexico Screening and Early Identification Models ä Early identification and intervention as prevention ä Public health screenings vs. selective screenings in SBHCs ä Piloting computer-based models for early identification and suicide prevention ä Expanded interest by schools to utilize screening tools on larger scale
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New Mexico School-Based Health Center Mental Health Program Development ä Expanded funding for mental health and substance abuse services 17 SBHC programs ä One cluster wide Medicaid Managed Care School Behavioral Health Pilot Program ä Standards and protocols for MH/SA services in schools ä Four “Exemplary” School Mental Health Sites looking at mental health and educational outcomes
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New Mexico Medicaid Managed Care SBHC Pilot Projects ä Pilot with Center for Health Care Strategies ä Reimbursement through Medicaid for mental health and substance abuse services ä 5 Medicaid Managed Care SBHC pilots ä Developing depression, ADHD and substance abuse protocols for MH/SA services in schools ä “Enhanced Mental Health Services” code for some sites
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New Mexico School Mental Health Initiative ä Statewide efforts to link families, communities, schools and behavioral health programs ä Phone: 505-841-5879 ä Fax: 505-841-5885 ä Email: stevea@doh.state.nm.usstevea@doh.state.nm.us ä Website: http://www.nmsmhi.org
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University of Maryland Center for School Mental Health Assistance ä Provide technical assistance and consultation ä Provide national training and education ä Disseminate and develop knowledge ä Promote communication and networking ä phone: 410-706-0980 (888-706-0980 toll free) ä email: csmha@psych.umaryland.edu ä web: http://csmha.umaryland.edu
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UCLA Center for Mental Health in Schools ä Directed by Howard Adelman and Linda Taylor ä Phone: 310-825-3634 ä Enews: listserv@listserv.ucla.edu ä web: http://smhp.psych.ucla.edu
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