Study on State Strategies for Expanding Systems of Care National Evaluation of the Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and Their Families Program CCC Meeting – March 2, 2011 Beth A. Stroul, M.Ed. Robert M. Friedman, Ph.D.
Dec 25, 2015
Study on State Strategies for Expanding Systems of Care
National Evaluation of the Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and Their
Families Program
CCC Meeting – March 2, 2011Beth A. Stroul, M.Ed.
Robert M. Friedman, Ph.D.
Background
• SOC concept introduced in mid 1980s as part of CASSP (Child and Adolescent Service System Program) funded by NIMH
• Concept included a set of values and principles and a general approach to serving children with serious emotional challenges and their families
• Emphasis on individualized and family-driven care; strength-based care in home and community; cultural and linguistic competence; interagency collaboration; and alignment of policy, principles, and practice
Background• All states received CASSP grants to
enhance capacity to develop and implement SOCs – funds for capacity-building, not direct services
• Other initiatives to support SOCs – block grant requirements, class action lawsuits, and new programs of private foundations
• With CASSP phase out, the CMHI (Children’s Mental Health Initiative) was launched in 1993
• Provides funds to communities, states, tribes and territories to reform their systems in accordance with the SOC approach and to build service capacity
Background
• Implicit goal of the CMHI – to use the time-limited demonstration grants and accompanying TA and evaluation to produce system change that will be maintained after grants end and will have a statewide impact
• In 2002, a study was initiated to determine the success of grantees in sustaining their SOC infrastructure and services post grant and to identify strategies for accomplishing this
• Identified effective sustainability strategies were and explored the role of states in sustainability
Background
• In 2008, a CCC workgroup was created to focus on bringing SOCs to scale—essentially expanding them statewide
• Through CMHI national evaluation, a study was initiated in 2009 to explore strategies to expand SOCs statewide in states that have made progress toward statewide system development
• This presentation is a report of the methods used in this study, the findings, and preliminary conclusions
Study Method
Phase 1: Develop a conceptual framework to guide the study
Phase 2: Select a sample of 9 states that have made significant progress in sustaining and expanding SOCs to study
Phase 3: Contact state director of children’s mental health in these states and jointly identify key informants to interview
Phase 4: Develop semi-structured interview protocol based on conceptual framework and use it to gather data from informants via phone interviews
Study Method
Phase 5: Gather additional information from interviewees on strategies they believed to be most important
Phase 6: Prepare summary report of each statePhase 7: Review findings from each state and develop
preliminary overall conclusionsPhase 8: Share preliminary conclusions with panel of
experts to assist in interpreting findings and determining implications
Phase 9: Prepare report and TA resources and disseminate findings
Site Selection
Step 1: Nomination of states for inclusion by group of knowledgeable individuals who work in multiple states
Step 2: Conduct screening interview with state children’s mental health director to obtain additional information
Step 3: Selection of 9 states based on information and considerations of geographic and demographic diversity
A Caveat
• Not an independent evaluation to document the outcomes of these states’ SOCs
• Focus on identifying strategies they used and the effectiveness of these strategies as judged by key informants
• Other states could have been included, but study was limited to a sample of 9 and we sought diversity in the sample
States in Study Sample
Arizona
Hawaii
Maine
Maryland
Michigan
New Jersey
North Carolina
Oklahoma
Rhode Island
State CharacteristicsState Population # Counties
Arizona 6,412,700 15
Hawaii 1,366,862 3
Maine 1,333,074 16
Maryland 5,789,929 23 + Baltimore City
Michigan 9,911,626 83
New Jersey 8,807,501 21
North Carolina 9,565,781 100
Oklahoma 3,764,882 77
Rhode Island 1,005,247 5
SOC Grants in States
30 Total Grants• 13 State• 13 Local• 4 Tribal
State # SOC Grants
Grant Recipients
Arizona 2 1 Local, 1 Tribal
Hawaii 3 3 State
Maine 3 2 State, 1 Tribal
Maryland 4 4 Local
Michigan 6 5 Local, 1 Tribal
New Jersey 1 1 Local
North Carolina 5 3 State, 2 Local
Oklahoma 3 2 State, 1 Tribal
Rhode Island 3 3 State
Individuals InterviewedRole of Interviewees # Interviewees
State Children’s MH Directors 9
Other State MH Agency Representatives 10
Other State Agency Representatives 3
Family Leaders 11
Local SOC and Children’s MH Leaders 16
Youth Leaders 1
University Representatives 2
TOTAL52
4-7 per state
Expanding What?Elements of Systems of Care
Strategic Framework: Roadmap for System Change
1. Implementing Policy, Administrative, Regulatory Changes
2. Developing or Expanding Services and Supports, Care Management, and Individualized Approach
3. Providing Training, TA, and Coaching
4. Generating Support and an Advocacy Base
5. Creating or Improving Financing Strategies
Implementing Policy and Regulatory Changes
Strategies
Infusing and “institutionalizing” SOC approach
• Creating an ongoing focal point of accountability at the state and local levels
• Developing and implementing strategic plans
• Strengthening interagency partnerships for coordination and financing
• Enacting legislation
• Promulgating rules, regulations, standards
• Incorporating in RFPs and contracts
• Incorporating in monitoring protocols
Findings
Most Effective Strategies Across States• Creating a locus of accountability for SOCs at
state and local levels• Developing a strategic plan – formal or informal• Requiring SOC approach in RFPs, contracts,
regulations, and standards
Emerging or Neglected Strategies• Incorporating SOC approach into monitoring
protocols
Establish Locus of Accountability & Management
New Jersey:• State – Div. of Child Behavioral Health
Services, Dept. of Children and Families and Contracted Systems Administrator as an Administrative Services Organization
• Local – Care Management Organization (CMO) in each region for accountability and care management for high-need children
Oklahoma:• State – OK Dept. of MH and SA Services• Local – Local multi-sector coalitions
Establish Locus of Accountability & Management
Arizona:• State – Children’s SOC Office, Div. of Behavioral Health
Services, Dept. of Health Services• Local – Regional Behavioral Health AuthoritiesMaryland:• State – Children’s Cabinet Governor’s Level and Office of
Child and Adolescent Services, Mental Hygiene Admin.• Local – Local Management Boards and Regional Care
Management Entities for high-need children Maine• State – State Dept. of HHS• Local – 3 regional collaboratives staffed by
state regional leaders (government)
Develop & Implement a Strategic PlanHawaii:• 4-year strategic plan for children’s MH required by
legislature• Priorities for 2007 – 2010 were to increase access to
care, practice development program, financial plan• Includes thresholds, benchmarks
Maryland:• Blueprint for Children’s Mental
Health, Children’s CabinetOklahoma:• Action plans and logic models (not
called “strategic plan”)• Local plans required
Promulgate Rules, Regulations, Standards, Guidelines, Practice Protocols
Maryland:• SOC language is in Medicaid and Mental Hygiene Admin.
regulations
New Jersey:• Practice manual based on SOC approach
Michigan:• Adopted family-driven, youth-guided policy
Arizona:• Provider manual and practice
protocols
Incorporate SOC Approach in ContractsNew Jersey:• Required by contracts with RHBAs and
providers to align with SOC goals and demonstrate with performance measures
Maryland:• SOC approach reflected in contracts with CMEs
Michigan:• Required in contracts with prepaid health plans (MCOs)
and community MH agenciesOklahoma:• SOC approach required in RFPs and contracts with
local coalitions and their contracts with providers
Developing or Expanding Services and Supports
StrategiesCreating a Broad Array of Effective, Individualized,
Coordinated Home and Community-Based Services and Supports
• Creating or expanding array of services and supports• Creating or expanding care management• Creating or expanding individualized approach• Expanding family and youth involvement• Creating or expanding evidence-informed services• Creating or expanding provider network• Improving cultural/linguistic competence of services• Reducing disparities
Findings
Most Effective Strategies• Creating a broad array of services and supports –
adding nontraditional home and community-based services and supports
• Implementing an individualized, “wraparound” approach to service delivery – operationalizes the SOC approach at the service level
Emerging or Neglected Strategies• Expanding the use of evidence-informed and
promising practices• Creating “care management entities” to manage and
coordinate care for high-need youth and their families
Create or Expand Array of ServicesMichigan:• Incorporated broad array into Medicaid – wraparound,
home-based, respite, peer-to-peer, community living supports, infant MH, etc.
New Jersey:• Expanded array to include mobile crisis response, in-
home, behavioral supports, TFC, mentoring, flex funds, family support, etc.
Arizona:• Direct support services covered
within capitationMaine:• Incorporated broad array of community based services,
care management, trauma-focused services, family partners, etc.
Create or Expand Individualized ApproachArizona:• Child and family teams (CFTs) implemented for all
children, more extensive for children with complex needsNew Jersey:• All CMOs use wraparound approach to engage, plan,
and deliver servicesMichigan:• Wraparound critical building block,
embodies SOC principles in servicesMaine:• Implemented Wraparound MaineOklahoma:• Wraparound is major part of strategy for high-need, high-
cost youth
Providing Training, TA, and Coaching
Strategies
Preparing Skilled Providers to Provide Effective Services and Supports in SOCs
• Providing training and TA on SOC philosophy and approach
• Providing training, TA, and coaching on effective services
• Creating the capacity for ongoing training and TA on SOCs and effective services
Findings
Most Effective Strategies• Providing ongoing training, TA, and coaching on
SOC approach• Creating the capacity for ongoing training and
TA on SOC approach
Neglected or Emerging Strategies• Providing ongoing training on evidence-
informed and promising practices
Provide Ongoing Training on SOC Approach and Develop Training Capacity
New Jersey:• Statewide training institute at Univ. of Medicine and
Dentistry of NJ• Regional and county training for CMOs and providers
on SOC philosophy• Statewide wraparound training and coaching• Care manager trainingMaryland:• Innovations Institute at Univ. of Maryland• Virtual website training center
• Training and coaching statewide• Wraparound certification program under
development
Provide Ongoing Training on SOC Approach and Develop Training Capacity
Oklahoma:•Annual training and wraparound training plus coaching
North Carolina:• Collaborated with universities to provide training
and current SOC grant• State-level collaborative has training committeeMichigan:• Skilled local community MH agencies trainMaine:• SOC community provides training
Generating Support and an Advocacy Base
Strategies
Generating Support from Key Stakeholders and High-Level Decision Makers
• Establishing strong family and youth organizations• Cultivating partnerships with key stakeholders (e.g.,
provider agencies, MCOs)• Generating support among high-level administrators
and policy makers• Using data on outcomes and cost avoidance to
“make the case” for expanding SOCs• Creating an advocacy base through social
marketing• Cultivating leaders
Findings
Most Effective Strategies• Establishing a strong family organization to
advocate, support, and be involved in expanding SOCs
• Generating policy-level support among high-level administrators and decision makers at the state level
Emerging or Neglected Strategies• Establishing a strong youth organization• Using data on outcomes and cost avoidance to
make the case for expansion
Establish a Strong Family OrganizationNew Jersey:• Contract with NJ Alliance of Family Organizations• Family Support Organizations (FSOs) in countiesMaryland:• Contract with MD Coalition of Families for Children’s MH
which has been critical to survive changes in administrationArizona:• Contract with Family Involvement Center and MIKID• FIC is Medicaid provider of family support servicesHawaii:• $800 K contract with HI Families as AlliesNorth Carolina:• Uses Block Grant funds to support family organizationRole is to policy participation and advocacy in system expansion efforts plus family and peer-to-peer support, training, etc.
Establish a Strong Youth Organization
New Jersey:• Each FSO houses a youth partnershipMichigan:• Funds a community MH agency in Detroit to support a
youth organizationArizona:• Funds youth advocates through contracts with family
organizationsHawaii:• New youth organization embedded in
family organizationMaine• Strong Youth MOVE
Generate Support Among High-Level Decision Makers
High-Level Administrators, Policy Makers, and Decision Makers at State and Local LevelsNew Jersey:• Strong support for expansion from Governor’s Office
and MH CommissionerMichigan:• Brought high-level decision makers to national SOC
meetings, Policy Academies Maryland:
• Work with agency executives through Children’s Cabinet
Oklahoma:• Support from all Commissioners has been
critical
Use Outcome Data to “Make the Case”
Michigan:• Outcome data available by individual children,
caseloads, agencies, statewide• Web-based CAFAS used by all community MH
agencies – provides immediate feedback for management, QI, and to support expansion
Oklahoma: • Use of data with legislature has been
highly effective• University of Oklahoma involved in
evaluation
Use Cost Avoidance Data to “Make the Case”
Data on Cost Avoidance or Comparison with High-Cost Services
Michigan:• Data from SOCs used to demonstrate prevention of out-
of-home placements in CW and cost avoidance
Oklahoma:• Data has been used on reduction in out-of-home care
and translated into financial implications
Developing or Improving Financing Strategies
StrategiesCreating Long-Term Financing Mechanisms for
SOC Infrastructure, Services, and Supports• Increasing ability to use Medicaid financing• Obtaining new or increased state MH funds• Obtaining new or increased funds from other child-
serving systems• Blending or braiding funds across systems• Redeploying funds• Obtaining new or increased local funds• Increasing use of other federal entitlements• Obtaining federal grants
FindingsMost Effective Strategies• Increasing ability to obtain Medicaid financing
– waivers, adding new services, changing existing definitions, using rehab option, etc.
Emerging or Neglected Strategies• Redeploying funds from higher cost to lower
cost services• Obtaining, braiding, or blending funds with
other child-serving systems
Increase the Use of Medicaid
Cover an Extensive Array of Services and Supports in State Medicaid Plans in Addition to Traditional Services – New Services, Revised Definitions
Arizona, New Jersey, Michigan, Maryland, Hawaii, Maine:• Intensive home-based, intensive outpatient substance
abuse, respite, family and peer support, treatment planning, wraparound process, therapeutic foster care, supported housing and employment, mobile crisis response, crisis stabilization, behavioral aides, skills training, traditional Native health, EBPs, ACT teams, targeted care management
Increase the Use of MedicaidUse Multiple Medicaid Strategies to Expand Covered Populations and Home and Community-based Services
Michigan:• 1915(b) Managed Care Specialty Supports & Services
Waiver; 1915(c) Home & Community-Based SED Waiver; 1915(c) Children’s Waiver; 1915(c) Habilitation Supports Waiver, Clinic; Rehab; Targeted Case Management; Psych Under 21; EPSDT; Family of One
North Carolina:• Rehab option, expanded coverage, revised
service definitions
Arizona:• System is primarily Medicaid funded
Increase the Use of Medicaid
Generate Medicaid Match by Using Funds from Both Mental Health and Other Child-serving Systems
New Jersey:• Pools funds across MH, CW, and Medicaid to make services
match-able (included RTCs and group home resources)• Brought in $30 m in state offsets
Michigan:• CW funds blended with BH have created Medicaid match
and expanded resources for services outside of capitation
Increasing the Use of Funds from Partner Child-Serving Systems
Obtain New or Increased Funds and/or Braid, Pool FundsMaryland:• Pools funds across systems through Children’s Cabinet• Slots in CMEs for children in CW and JJ, JJ funds MST• CFTs eligible for funds from partner agenciesMichigan:• Joint initiative with CW blending with BH, redirecting
funds to home and community-based services for children needing intensive services
• Pilot in 8 urban counties, will be statewideMaine:• CW provides funds for Wraparound Maine• Start-up funds from JJ for MST, FFT, MTFC
Redeploy FundsArizona:• Promoted use of home and community-based,
direct support and rehab services resulting in decreased utilization of residential (1115 waiver)
Maryland:• Child welfare funds redirected and blended with MH funds to
draw down additional Medicaid funds Michigan:
• Residential not covered in BH system, but extensive use in CW. New pilot to divert or discharge from RTCs with full array of intensive, community-based services
Maine:• Decrease in residential population used to fund
Wraparound Maine
Roles of SOC Communities in Expansion Efforts
Role of Communities• Test, pilot, and explore feasibility of approaches• Assist in “replicating” similar
approaches• Provide data to “make the case”• Provide training and TA• Participate in planning for statewide SOC development• Generate support and commitment among high-level
decision makers• Contribute to the development of statewide organizations• Provide seasoned leaders who then contribute to future
SOC expansion efforts at state and/or local levels
Findings
Most Effective Strategies• Testing, piloting, exploring the feasibility of
approaches• Providing training and TA to other communities• Providing data on outcomes to “make the case”• Contributing to the development of family
organizations Emerging or Neglected Strategies• Providing seasoned leaders who contribute to
future expansion efforts
Barriers
Barriers• Fiscal crises and budget cuts • Changes in administration that result in policy changes• Lack of “institutionalization” in legislation, plans,
regulations, and other policy instruments • Shift in focus to health care reform and parity that is not
linked to SOC approach• Inability to obtain Medicaid financing for services and
supports • Inability to obtain or redirect other funds for
services and supports• Lack of ongoing training • Lack of data to make the case for statewide
development of SOCs
Barriers
• Lack of a children’s mental health workforce trained in SOC approach
• Insufficient “buy-in” among high-level decision makers at state and local levels
• Insufficient “buy-in” among managed care organizations, program managers, provider agencies, clinicians, etc.
• Insufficient “buy-in” and shared financing from other child-serving system partners
• Lack of support and advocacy among families, family organizations, youth, youth organizations, and advocacy groups
Findings
Most Significant Barriers• Fiscal crises and budget cuts• Changes in administration that resulted in policy
changesModerately Significant Barriers• Loss of federal funding and accompanying supports
for SOCs• Lack of a children’s MH workforce trained in SOC
approach• Insufficient buy-in among provider agencies, clinicians• Insufficient buy-in and financing from other child-
serving systems
Federal Supports
Findings
Opportunities to Obtain Information, Resources, and Support for Planning and Implementation• SOC Community Meetings• Training Institutes• Policy Academies• Data from Research and Training CentersDesired Future Supports• Continued opportunities listed above• TA in strategic planning for expanding SOCs• TA on financing
Preliminary Interpretations and Conclusions
Preliminary Conclusions
Foundation in SOC Concept• Importance of a foundation in SOC
philosophy and approach – work often began 25+ years ago with CASSP
Synergy of Strategies and Opportunities• Need for a plan whether called a strategic plan or
something else – expansion doesn’t just happen• Expansion doesn’t result from just a few strategies –
cumulative aggregate impact of strategies over time• Synergistic effect of having multiple components in
place and their interaction
Preliminary Conclusions
• Expansion occurs within different contexts and with different pathways
• States making progress have been skilled in adapting to changes in political, economic, and other contextual changes
• Influence of requirements for children’s MH plan as part of Block Grant plan can support expansion and strategic use of Block Grant funds in some states
Preliminary Conclusions
Impetus• Lawsuits have often been the impetus for
SOC expansion efforts (AZ, MI, HI, NC)• Concept of family-driven services and systems and
family organizations have supported expansion
Strategies• Implementation of individualized, wraparound
approach has become the mechanism for operationalizing the SOC approach in service delivery
• Less emphasis on strategies involving interagency partnerships in most states
Preliminary Conclusions
• Links to other system initiatives not significant in most states
• Major role of Medicaid financing• At this time, there generally are no
state MH funds to support expansion
Role of SOC Grants• Importance of leveraging SOC grants to expand impact
beyond individual communities• States have used SOC grants as a basis for making
major system changes
Preliminary Conclusions
Federal Supports for SOC Expansion• Importance of dissemination of information
and resources from the national level
General Observations• Most states are continuing SOC expansion efforts and
making progress even in an environment of fiscal crises and budget cuts
• Disproves previous skepticism about whether states were expanding SOCs – these 9 states are undertaking initiatives to accomplish this and other states have made significant progress
Preliminary Conclusions
• Expansion can inform SAMHSA efforts to make sustainable changes in states and communities resulting from its efforts
• Unknown potential impact of implementation of health care reform and parity legislation – change in direction?
• System change may appear more planful than it is – combination of planned sequence of strategies and an opportunistic approach
• No state is all the way there• Role of exceptional leadership?