Skip to main content

New Programs Show Value of Health and Behavioral Health Integration

A Kaiser Health News sampling of the latest headlines about Obamacare reflects our continuing anxiety over the law just months before it is fully implemented.

The most interesting to me was this one.  According to a new CNN poll, only 43 percent of the public favors Obamacare.  But of those who oppose it, only 35 percent do so because it is too liberal.  Sixteen percent say that it is not liberal enough!

No matter how you feel about Obamacare, one of the most significant changes it facilitates will be the integration of health and behavioral health care – meaning that care for both physical and mental illnesses will soon be delivered together.

This only makes sense.  People with cancer, for example, often develop depression or anxiety that complicates their care.  And people with mental illness often develop physical conditions – sometimes as a side effect from the medications they take – that can cut twenty-five years from their lives.

Integrating health and behavioral health care has not been the norm over the past century. 

In a nutshell, this is because regular health care evolved from an acute care model – the idea that we could cure disease with aggressive, short-term interventions.  Mental health care evolved from a chronic care model – that mental illnesses could be managed, but not prevented or cured.

What we have learned in the last 20 to 30 years shows that both models can be useful in treating all diseases.

So we began to manage some diseases that we could not cure using a newer chronic disease model.  HIV/AIDS treatment is an example, but so are today’s treatments for many chronic conditions, including cancers, heart diseases, diabetes, and hypertension.  And we began to use an acute care model to treat mental illness, offering short-term stabilization in addition to longer-term therapies.

With diseases co-occurring and treatments often intersecting, care integration was the logical next step.

In its 2010 document, Evolving Models of Behavioral Health Integration in Primary Care, the Milbank Memorial Fund offered numerous examples of the care integration approaches that have evolved over the past twenty years. 

And while care integration has been slow to gain traction, that is about to change as a result of the Affordable Care Act.

Access to insurance despite pre-existing conditions, prohibitions on rescinding coverage after a person gets a chronic disease, and greater parity in health and behavioral health benefits are three reasons why, from a consumer perspective. 

More billing options and better reimbursement rates for primary care providers offering behavioral health screening and support services are two reasons why, from a provider perspective.

And the call for early intervention to prevent future tragedies is one big reason why, from a purely political perspective.

This week and next, I have the good fortune of being witness to two cutting-edge integration initiatives that reflect our changing environment. 

I serve on the Board of Directors of the Jerome Golden Center for Behavioral Health, and this week attended the grand opening of its new primary care clinic.

For the first time in its forty year existence, this safety net community mental health center will offer formal primary care services in the same location in which it offers behavioral health services.  Patients will benefit from one-stop shopping, and receive monitoring and treatment for health conditions as they are treated for behavioral illnesses. 

Integrating health services into behavioral health services in this way is a far less common approach to integration than doing it the other way around.  HRSA, for example, notes that 70 percent of community health centers offer at least some mental health services.  But some people – especially those with serious mental illnesses – often access only behavioral health providers, because they are reluctant or unable to seek out care in multiple locations.

And in the coming week, I’ll be at the annual meeting of Mental Health America for a presentation by the Mental Health Association of Palm Beach County about its Be Merge initiative.  Through Be Merge and related initiatives, MHAPBC is training primary care and mental health providers to work together in any model to integrate health and behavioral health services.

The initiative has won Mental Health America’s 2013 Innovation in Programming Award, and is clearly ready for prime time.  MHAPBC has made the training and toolkit available online through the University of South Florida, for use by agencies and providers throughout the nation.

As these two initiatives show, integration has finally arrived.  Better late than never.

Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com.  Twitter: @pgionfriddo.  Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo.  LinkedIn:  www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/ 

Comments

  1. This post is very nice. Great information for this post. Policy for health is better health for our life. That's very interesting information. I glad to read ti and thanks for sharing it...

    Working at Heights Training

    ReplyDelete
  2. Well-explained and very easy to follow because of the image you included on your post. Good job I really appreciate your effort.


    Kind regards,
    Jenny @ Granuflo Lawsuits

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Missing Mental Health Element in the Ferguson Story

By now, everyone has heard the news from Ferguson, Missouri.  An unarmed 18 year old named Michael Brown was shot and killed by a police officer.  Michael Brown was black. Some of the events surrounding the shooting are in dispute.  But what isn’t in dispute is that for the past two weeks, a community has been torn apart by race – a community that until recently was best known for its proximity to St. Louis and its designation as a Playful City, USA . Picture credit: Health Affairs Media reports since the August 9 th shooting have focused almost entirely on one angle – race relations.  We’ve heard about unrest in the city, the National Guard, police in riot gear, and danger in the streets.  We’ve heard about the District Attorney’s ties to law enforcement, and concerns that a too-white Grand Jury may be racially motivated not to indict the police officer involved in the deadly shooting. But the media have been strangely silent about a different angle – this comm

Veterans and Mental Illness

On a sultry June morning in our national’s capital last Friday, I visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial .   Scores of people moved silently along the Wall, viewing the names of the men and women who died in that war.   Some stopped and took pictures.   One group of men about my age surrounded one name for a photo.   Two young women posed in front of another, perhaps a grandfather or great uncle they never got to meet. It is always an incredibly moving experience to visit the Wall.   It treats each of the people it memorializes with respect. There is no rank among those honored.   Officer or enlisted, rich or poor, each is given equal space and weight. It is a form of acknowledgement and respect for which many veterans still fight. Brave Vietnam veterans returned from Southeast Asia to educate our nation about the effects of war and violence. I didn’t know anything about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder when I entered the Connecticut Legislature in the late 1970s.   I had only vag

Celebrating Larissa Gionfriddo Podermanski Five Years Later

My daughter Larissa died of Metastatic Breast Cancer five years ago, in May of 2018.  She had only two wishes at the end. One was that we plant a tree for her. We did - in a Middletown CT city park - and it has grown straight and tall. The other was that she not be forgotten. Larissa's family and friends took pains to reassure that she could not be forgotten. If you were fortunate enough to know Larissa, you would know why. Still, I wondered how I might celebrate her a little more now that some years have passed, while sharing some of her memorable spirit with others (some who knew her and others who did not), while reminding us why she was such an extraordinary woman. In early 2017, Larissa started a blog called Metastatically Speaking, through which she chronicled her life with MBC. Unfortunately - and through no one's fault - her blog disappeared some time after her death. So, if you search for it now, you can't find it.  However, I was fortunate enough to see and retain