Posts Tagged ‘Providers’

The NCCBH proposed model for the clinical integration of health and behavioral health services starts with a description of the populations to be served. This Four Quadrant Model builds on the 1998 consensus document for mental health (MH) and substance abuse/addiction (SA) service integration, as initially conceived by state mental health and substance abuse directors (NASHMHPD/ NASADAD) and further articulated by Ken Minkoff and his colleagues.


This model for a Comprehensive, Continuous, Integrated System of Care (CCISC) describes differing levels of MH and SA integration and clinician competencies based on the four-quadrant model, divided into severity for each disorder:


Quadrant I: Low MH-low SA, served in primary care


Quadrant II: High MH-low SA, served in the MH system by staff who have SA competency


Quadrant III: Low MH- high SA, served in the SA system by staff who have MH competency


Quadrant IV: High MH-high SA, served by a fully integrated MH/SA program


The Four Quadrant Clinical Integration Model


Behavioral Health Risk/Status

Quadrant I

PCP (with standard screening tools and BH practice guidelines)

PCP-based BH*


Quadrant II

Case Manager w/ responsibility for coordination w/ PCP

PCP (with standard screening tools and BH practice guidelines)

Specialty BH

Residential BH

Crisis/ER

Behavioral Health IP

Other community supports


Quadrant III

PCP (with standard screening tools and BH practice guidelines)

Care/Disease Manager

Specialty medical/surgical

PCP-based BH (or in specific specialties)*

ER

Medical/surgical IP

SNF/home based care

Other community supports

Physical Health Risk/Status


Quadrant IV

PCP (with standard screening tools and BH practice guidelines)

BH Case Manager w/ responsibility for coordination w/ PCP and Disease Manager

Care/Disease Manager

Specialty medical/surgical

Specialty BH

Residential BH

Crisis/ ER

BH and medical/surgical IP

Other community supports


*PCP-based BH provider might work for the PCP organization, a specialty BH provider, or as an individual practitioner, is competent in both MH and SA assessment and treatment

Stable SPMI would be served in either setting. Plan for and deliver services based upon the needs of the individual, consumer choice and the specifics of the community and collaboration.


The Behavioral Health / Primary Care integration model above assumes this competency-based MH/SA integration concept within the behavioral health (BH) services offered and builds on the MH/SA integration model to describe the subsets of the population that Behavioral Health/ Primary Care integration must address.


Each quadrant considers the behavioral health and physical health risk and complexity of the population and suggests the major system elements that would be utilized to meet the needs of the individuals within that subset of the population.


The Four Quadrant model is not intended to be prescriptive about what happens in each quadrant, but to serve as a conceptual framework for collaborative planning in each local system. Ideally it would be used as a part of collaborative planning for each new HRSA BH site, with the CHC and the local provider(s) of public BH services using the framework to decide who will do what and how coordination for each person served will be assured.


The use of the Four Quadrant Model to consider subsets of the population, the major system elements and clinical roles would result in the following broad approaches:


QUADRANT I

Low BH-low physical health complexity/risk, served in primary care with BH staff on site; very low/low individuals served by the PCP, with the BH staff serving those with slightly elevated health or BH risk.

The PCP provides primary care services and uses standard BH screening tools and practice guidelines to serve most individuals in the primary care practice.


Use of standardized BH tools by the PCP and a tracking/registry system focuses referrals of a subset of the population to the BH clinician. The role of the primary care based BH clinician is to provide formal and informal consultation to the PCP as well as to provide BH triage and assessment, brief treatment services to the patient, referral to community and educational resources, and health risk education.


BH clinical and support services may include individual or group services, use of cognitive behavioral therapy, psycho-education, brief SA intervention, and limited case management. The BH clinician must be competent in both MH and SA assessment and service planning.


The PCP prescribes psychotropic medications using treatment algorithms and has access to psychiatric consultation regarding medication management.


The consumer of care, by seeking care in primary care, has selected a clinical home. Consistent with appropriate clinical practice, that should be honored. The primary care and specialty BH system should develop protocols, however, that spell out how acute behavioral health episodes or high-risk consumers will be handled.


This will also lead to clarity regarding the clinical home of consumers with SPMI who are currently stable, which should be based upon consumer choice and the specifics of the community collaboration.


QUADRANT II

High BH-low physical health complexity/risk, served in a specialty BH system that coordinates with the PCP.

The PCP provides primary care services and collaborates with the specialty BH providers to assure coordinated care for individuals.


Psychiatric consultation for the PCP may be an element in these complex BH situations, but it more likely that psychotropic medication management will be handled by the specialty BH system. The role of the specialty BH clinician is to provide BH assessment, arrange for or deliver specialty BH services, assure case management related to housing and other community supports, assure that the consumer has access to health care, and create a primary care communication approach (e.g., e-mail, v-mail, face to face) that assures coordinated service planning, especially in regard to medication management.


Specialty BH clinical and support services will vary based upon state and county level planning and financing; some localities may encompass the full range of services offered by specialty BH systems including:


Specialty MH Services

Crisis respite facilities

24/7 crisis telephone

Crisis residential facilities

Mobile crisis team

Crisis observation 23 hour beds

Urgent care walk in clinic

Locked sub-acute residential

Inpatient (voluntary and involuntary)

Dual diagnosis inpatient

Hospital discharge planning

Partial hospitalization

In-home stabilization

Outreach to homeless shelters

Outreach to jail/corrections

Outreach to other special populations

Individual/family treatment /counseling

Group treatment/counseling

Dual diagnosis treatment groups

Multifamily groups

Psychiatric evaluation/consultation

Psychiatric prescribing/management

Advice nurse (medication issues)

Psychological testing

Services for homebound frail or disabled

Specialized services for older adults

Brokerage case management

24/7 intensive home /community case management (ACT teams)

School-based assessment and treatment

Supported classroom

Stabilization classroom

Day treatment (adult, adolescent, child)

Supported employment /supported education

Transitional services for young adults

Individual skill building /coaching

Intensive peer support

After school structured services

Summer daily structure and support

Specialty SA Services

Sobering sites

Social detoxification/residential

Outpatient medical detoxification

Inpatient medical detoxification

Pre-treatment groups

Intensive outpatient treatment

Outpatient treatment

Day treatment

Aftercare/12 step groups

Narcotic replacement treatment

Residential Services

Boarding homes

Adult residential treatment

Child/adolescent residential treatment

Transitional housing

Adult family homes

Treatment foster care

Low income housing (dedicated to BH consumers)

Supports for SPMI / SED Populations

Representative payee/financial services

Time limited transitional groups

Parent support groups

Youth support groups

Dual diagnosis education/support groups

Caregiver/family support groups

Youth after school normalizing activities

Youth tutors/mentors


The BH clinician must be competent in both MH and SA assessment and service planning. A specific standard of practice should be adopted that defines the methods and frequency of communication with PCPs. Note that this quadrant is where most public sector BH consumers currently can be found.


QUADRANT III

Low BH-high physical health complexity/risk, served in the primary care/medical specialty system with BH staff on site in primary or medical specialty care, coordinating with all medical care providers including disease managers.


The PCP provides primary care services, works with medical specialty providers and disease managers (e.g. diabetes, asthma) to manage the physical health issues of the individual and uses standard BH screening tools and practice guidelines to serve most individuals in the primary care practice.


Use of standardized BH tools by the PCP and a tracking/registry system focuses referrals of a subset of the population to the BH clinician. The role of the primary care or medical specialty based BH clinician is to provide BH triage and assessment, consultation to the PCP or treatment services to the patient, referral to community and educational resources, and health risk education.


BH clinical and support services may include individual or group services, use of cognitive behavioral therapy, psycho-education, brief SA intervention, and limited case management. The BH clinician must be competent in both MH and SA assessment and service planning. The PCP prescribes psychotropic medications using treatment algorithms and has access to psychiatric consultation regarding medication management.


Depending on the setting, the BH clinician may also serve as a health educator regarding lifestyle and chronic health conditions found in the general public (diabetes, asthma) or conditions found in at-risk populations (Hepatitis C, HIV). T


These population-based services, as articulated by Bob Dyer, would include: patient education, activity planning; prompting; skill assessment; skill building; and, mutual support.iii In addition to these disease management services, the BH clinician might serve as a physician extender, supporting efficient use of physician time by problem solving with acute or chronic patients, as well as working with patients on medication compliance issues.


Specialty healthcare and disease management programs could also integrate depression screening into a wide array of self management and rehabilitation programs, building on current research findings regarding the frequency and impact of depression in cardiovascular or diabetes populations.


QUADRANT IV

High BH-high physical health complexity/risk, served in both the specialty BH and primary care/medical specialty systems; in addition to the BH case manager, there may be a disease manager, in which case the two managers work at a high level of coordination with one another and other members of the team.


The PCP works with medical specialty providers and disease managers (e.g. diabetes, asthma) to manage the physical health issues of the individual, while collaborating with the BH system in the planning and delivery of BH clinical and support services, which include those listed in Quadrant II.


Psychiatric consultation is a key element in these most complex situations. The role of the specialty BH clinician is to provide BH assessment, arrange for or deliver specialty BH services, assure case management related to housing and other community supports, and collaborate at a high level with the healthcare system team. The BH clinician must be competent in both MH and SA assessment and service planning.


In some settings, BH services may be integrated with specialty provider teams (for example, Kaiser has BH clinicians in OB/GYN working with substance abusing pregnant women). With the extension of disease management programs into Medicaid health plans, there is the likelihood of coordinating with disease managers in addition to healthcare providers.


The BH clinician and disease manager should assure they are not duplicating tasks, but working together to support the needs of the consumer. A specific standard of practice should be adopted that defines the methods and frequency of communication.

The author is the Director of Marketing and Communications at The National Council. The National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) association. For more information, visit http://www.thenationalcouncil.org.