Behavioral Health and Primary Care Integration
Meeting Summary - 5/23/07 (pdf)
The Addictions and Mental Health Division (AMH), Division of Medical Assistance Programs (DMAP), and the Public Health Division (PHD) have been working with many partners on a variety of initiatives that relate to behavioral health and primary care. In particular the need for these two areas of care to be more closely linked and integrated has been recognized for some time. Whether you are a client/consumer, clinic, managed care, mental health, emergency room, or primary care practitioner you will have experienced some of the issues and challenges in the current system of care.
Directors' Integration Letter (pdf)
Background Information (pdf)
Resources
Below are some helpful resources for information and guidance. They describe the consequences to patients of a system that is not well integrated or coordinated; high level thinking about the structure of the entire health system and the need for change; specific thinking regarding the nature of barriers to linking and integration; conceptual and clinical tools that can help facilitate the change process, and specific examples of what others across the nation are doing. We also anticipate learning and sharing more information about activities already underway in Oregon. DHS will organize a workgroup and public meetings as needed in the near future.
- Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care Services: Opportunities and Challenges for State Mental Health Authorities
This "report focuses separately on the need for overall system coordination, the needs of persons with serious mental illness, and the needs of populations in primary care." The report provides "two conceptual models that assist in thinking about population-based and systemic responses", The Four Quadrant Model and The Care Model.
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- DHS Recommendations for Linking and Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care
Recommendations were developed by a workgroup that included representatives of fully capitated health plans, mental health organizations, community health centers, rural health centers and state staff. The work of this group provided the foundation for initiatives to promote behavioral health and primary care integration. The report identifies populations to be served as well as barriers to integration and coordination. It also identifies key principles for various aspects of integration and makes specific recommendations for a process to promote statewide integration of care using different approaches to care.
Download Word® doc
- Integrating Publicly Funded Physical and Behavioral Health Services: A Description of Selected Initiatives
This report produced for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation "illustrates the variety of integration goals and approaches undertaken by providers, payers, and public agencies in the pursuit of improved service integration....highlights commonalities across initiatives, including the existence of a common framework, the use of communication tools and processes, the consistent use of screening tools, collaboration in the use of identified clinical approaches, the identification of funding mechanisms, and the need for sustainability planning."
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