Sustaining A-CRA Without Federal Funding: Success Stories from Outpatient and Residential Treatment Programs JMATE 2012 Susan H. Godley, Rh.D., Chestnut.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE EDUCATION-RELATED COMPONENTS OF NOW IS THE TIME.
Advertisements

TREATMENT PLAN REQUIREMENTS
Collaboration The Key to Success. Goals Participants will be able to: Define collaboration Identify win/win situations Identify potential partners Identify.
DDRS Health Homes Initiative: Meeting the Triple Aim through Care Coordination. Shane Spotts Director, Indiana Division of Rehabilitation Services May.
Integrating the NASP Practice Model Into Presentations: Resource Slides Referencing the NASP Practice Model in professional development presentations helps.
ACCESS TO RECOVERY (ATR) Mady Chalk, Ph.D. Director, Division of Services Improvement Center for Substance Abuse Treatment SAMHSA.
Targeted Case Management - A Model in Progress Presentation to PAC October 16, 2009.
Appendix C-6 Partnership for Community Integration Iowas Money Follows the Person Grant.
Department of State Health Services (DSHS) House Human Services Committee August 8, 2006.
Senate Criminal Justice Committee Interim Charge 1 June 21, 2006.
Update on Recent Health Reform Activities in Minnesota.
Briefing July 16, 2001 Judge Kathleen Kearney Kenneth A. DeCerchio Secretary Director of Substance Abuse Substance Abuse Program.
Chicago Police Department University of Illinois at Chicago
Chestnut Health Systems Bloomington-Normal, IL
Care Coordinator Roles and Responsibilities
1 Transitional Services Certification Minnesota Rules
1 NM Behavioral Health Collaborative New Mexico Behavioral Health Plan for Children, Youth and Their Families March 2007.
Research Findings and Issues for Implementation, Policy and Scaling Up: Training & Supporting Personnel and Program Wide Implementation
The Practice of Evidence Based Practice … or Can You Finish What You Started? Ron Van Treuren, Ph.D. Seven Counties Services, Inc. Louisville, KY.
The Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration State Care Coordination 1.
JUVENILE JUSTICE TREATMENT CONTINUUM Joining with Youth and Families in Equality, Respect, and Belief in the Potential to Change.
* You may use your organization’s PowerPoint template to format the information for the following 9 slides * Please do not exceed the 9 slide limit * Bring.
Using medicaid with HUD’s Homeless Assistance Programs
MHSA Full Service Partnership (FSP) For YOUTH (Ages 0-15) and TAY (Transition-Age Youth) (Ages 16-25) Santa Clara County Mental Health Board System Planning.
Bureau of Justice Assistance JUSTICE AND MENTAL HEALTH COLLABORATIONS Bureau of Justice Assistance JUSTICE AND MENTAL HEALTH COLLABORATIONS Presentation.
Chemical Addictions Program, INC. A United Way Member Agency CAP 2009.
CONNECTICUT SUICIDE PREVENTION STRATEGY 2013 PLANNING NINA ROVINELLI HELLER PH.D. UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT.
PARTNERING TO END HOMELESSNESS IN A CHANGING HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT Pamela S. Hyde, J.D. SAMHSA Administrator National Alliance to End Homelessness U.S.
Linking Actions for Unmet Needs in Children’s Health
Our Mission Community Outreach for Youth & Family Services, Inc. is dedicated to improving the quality of life for both the youth and adult population.
Accreditation Planning and Preparation
Bridgeport Safe Start Initiative Update Meeting September 23, 2004 Bridgeport Holiday Inn.
Community Planning Training 1-1. Community Plan Implementation Training 1- Community Planning Training 1-3.
EXCELLENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY BUILDING COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS.
"The Changing Expectations of Juvenile Justice in Texas"
Outpatient Services Programs Workgroup: Service Provision under Laura’s Law June 11, 2014.
Continuing Care for Adolescents with Substance Use Disorders: Opportunities for Health Services Research Thomas M. Brady, Ph.D. Division of Epidemiology,
Creating a service Idea. Creating a service Networking / consultation Identify the need Find funding Create a project plan Business Plan.
Efforts to Sustain Asthma Home Visiting Interventions in Massachusetts Jean Zotter, JD Director, Office of Integrated Policy, Planning and Management and.
Outreach Project East Texas Border Health Clinic.
Participant Choice – Access to Recovery as a Voucher Service Delivery Model Presented to National Summit on Prisoner Re-Entry Sponsored by the White House.
NW Minnesota Council of Collaborative’s: “Our Children Succeed Initiative” Overview 2/7/07.
The Role of Community Resource Mapping in the Mental Health and Schools Together-NH Initiative New Hampshire Center for Effective Behavioral Interventions.
1 Advancing Recovery: Baltimore Buprenorphine Initiative Tucson Presentation July 29, 2009 Baltimore Substance Abuse Systems.
Creating a New Vision for Kentucky’s Youth Kentucky Youth Policy Assessment How can we Improve Services for Kentucky’s Youth? September 2005.
STUDENT ASSISTANCE LIAISON ONLINE QUARTERLY REPORTING Guidance On Understanding and Completing the Quarterly Reporting Form.
Substance Use Disorders and Problem Gambling Pilots Challenge and Success in Rural Settings.
Ohio Justice Alliance for Community Corrections October 13, 2011.
KENTUCKY YOUTH FIRST Grant Period August July
Understanding TASC Marc Harrington, LPC, LCASI Case Developer Region 4 TASC Robin Cuellar, CCJP, CSAC Buncombe County.
Alaska’s Behavioral Health System Presentation to the Idaho Behavioral Health Transformation Workgroup March 24 th 2010 Bill Hogan Commissioner Commissioner.
Building Infrastructures: Supporting School-Based Mental Health Services.
Baltimore Buprenorphine Initiative Advancing Recovery Project Baltimore City, Maryland January 14, 2010.
Case Management to Provide Wrap Around Services Alabama Partnership Robert Wood Johnson Foundation – Advancing Recovery.
ACUTE-CRISIS PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE DC Hospital Association Department of Mental Health June 30, 2004.
Missouri’s State and Provider Partnership Terry Morris Missouri Division of Alcohol & Drug Abuse August 2008 Advancing Recovery in Missouri.
V Implementing and Sustaining Effective Programs that Promote the Social and Emotional Development of Young Children Part II Roxane Kaufmann, Karen Blase,
HIGH POINT TREATMENT CENTER High Point Treatment Center’s (H.P.T.C.) mission is to prevent and treat chemical dependency and provide therapeutic services.
Readiness and Implementation of the GAIN and 7 Challenges At NorthKey Community Care.
Practice Area 1: Arrest, Identification, & Detention Practice Area 2: Decision Making Regarding Charges Practice Area 3: Case Assignment, Assessment &
HN 299 Welcome to our second Seminar. Review Review of first week Review of first week Second week Second week Projects ahead Projects ahead Discussion.
The NC Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic Planning Grant DIVISION OF MH/DD/SAS.
Nova Center for Youth and Family Huntsville, AL Gina Koger, LGSW - Director Susan Smith, LPC – Program Mgr.
Improving Access to Mental Health Services: A Community Systems Approach Leslie Mahlmeister, MBA PhD Student Department of Political Science Wayne State.
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Behavioral Health Services 2013 and Beyond Integrating Mental Health and Addiction Treatment in Maryland Tuerk.
A New Model to Support Youth Aging Out of Foster Care: Incorporating Youth Voice, EBPs, Trauma Informed Care and Assessment Tools Jodi Harding, Clinical.
Behavioral Health Workforce Planning Activities Across the States Anne M. Herron, Director Division of Regional and National Policy Workforce Strategic.
As we reflect on policies and practices for expanding and improving early identification and early intervention for youth, I would like to tie together.
SAMPLE ONLY Dominion Health Center: Your Community Healthcare Home (or another defining message) Dominion Health Center is a community health center.
Presentation transcript:

Sustaining A-CRA Without Federal Funding: Success Stories from Outpatient and Residential Treatment Programs JMATE 2012 Susan H. Godley, Rh.D., Chestnut Health Systems Alison Roark, MSE, LPC, Maryhaven Mychele Kenney, MS, LCPC, Chestnut Health Systems Jennifer Smith Ramey, MS, Ed.S., Central VA Community Services

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Special thanks to Karen Krall, Randy Muck, and Jutta Butler for their work in gathering data or serving as project officers for AAFT 1 & 2 cohorts. Funding for this work has been provided by: SAMSHA/CSAT (HHSS C) AAFT 1 and 2 site staff that responded to an sustainability survey The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect official positions of the contributing grantees project directors or the federal government.

Session Learning Objectives Attendees will be able to: 1. Define sustainment 2. Describe successful approaches for financing the sustainment of an EBT. 3. Describe successful approaches for sustaining fidelity to an EBT.

Definition of Sustainment/Sustainability The ongoing operation of the infrastructure required for continued fidelity and sustainability (e.g., continual training, supervision and coaching, fidelity measures, and outcome data collection). (Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005, p )

How would A-CRA sustainability be assessed? Do current staff have adequate clinical knowledge about A-CRA? Are planned # of sessions at or above the minimum (could be combination of individual/group)? Are certified clinicians delivering A-CRA? A certified A-CRA supervisor? At least bi-weekly supervision that covers critical supervision components? Does supervision include reviews of recorded sessions? Is there a training process that includes components requirements required during implementation? Is there a clinical certification process that mirrors one used during implementation?

Data from Prior Cohorts Plans for sustainment (33 sites): 28 (85%) of the sites reported they had plans to sustain A-CRA after federal grant funds ended. 23 (82%) of those sustaining had a trained/certified/or almost certified supervisor at the end of the grant period. 25 (89%) of those sustaining had at least one certified clinician at the end of the grant period. 19 (68%) of those who planned to sustain said they had plans for regular supervision 12 of the above (63%) had plans to review recorded therapy sessions to some degree

Sources of Funding for Sustainment 16 (48%) had a combination including new federal grants (6), private insurance, Medicaid, drug court/probation 3 (9%) reported sustaining with funds for serving those with dual diagnoses 2 (6%) were sustaining with a new fed grant only 1 (3%) were sustaining with a foundation grant only 1( 3%) were sustaining with state funding only 5 (15%) said they were sustaining, but did not specify a funding source

Facilitators & Barriers Facilitators 1 or more sources of funding (23) Found treatment effective/helpful/useful/had positive experience (11) Has trained/certified staff with valuable skills/certified supervisor (8) Other (4) Barriers State Medicaid plan/county does not reimburse for substance use tx/or only group tx (4) Attrition/turnover (3) Difficulty in getting reimbursed for supervision or other aspects of training (2) Other (5)

Sustaining A-CRA Through Change: An Outpatient Treatment Approach Alison Roark, MSE, LPC A-CRA/ACC Supervisor Maryhaven Columbus, OH

Program and Target Population Maryhaven is a not-for-profit agency which provides integrated behavioral healthcare services, with a specialization in addiction recovery care to adults and children suffering from addictions and mental illness. The adolescent outpatient department offers three evidence based programs: A-CRA, MDFT, and ACC. All programs serve youth ages and their families. Primary referral source are Franklin County Childrens Services and the Franklin County Juvenile Court System.

Funding/Impetus for Implementation and Implementation Experience Maryhaven was a part of the AAFT2 (Assertive Adolescent and Family Treatment) and received funding from the Alcohol, Drug, and Mental Health Board in Columbus. The grant period was 10/1/07 to 3/31/11 and enabled Maryhaven to implement community-based ACC for youth leaving our residential program. Maryhaven also provides IOP groups for court-referred youth; clinicians worked in both programs and therefore were trained in A-CRA and began using A-CRA procedures and techniques with groups and individuals.

Factors Related to Decision to Sustain Prior outcome data for IOP groups was poor and Juvenile Court asked us to overhaul the program; we stopped running groups and began A-CRA community based services in March of Since then, outcomes have improved greatly. Most recent data suggests a success rate of between 65 and 70%. In 2009, Childrens services released an RFP for residential aftercare emphasizing evidenced based programs. We submitted an RFP based on ACRA/ACC, which we had already implemented through AAFT. Childrens services accepted our proposal and we were able to expand our aftercare program beginning in January of 2010.

Finances and Marketing Efforts Since AAFT ended, all referrals come directly from court or childrens services. If client is Medicaid eligible, Medicaid is billed for services. If not, referral source is responsible for payment. There are some consultation services which are not Medicaid eligible and are always paid directly by the referral source. We do not currently accept any private insurance as payment. We market to our referral sources and this includes attending provider fairs and staff meetings to inform probation officers and caseworkers of services.

Maintaining Fidelity and Training New Staff After Turnover Original providers were trained by Chestnut via AAFT. In September 2010, we purchased additional training from Chestnut to train a new clinician and supervisor. Since then, all training and certification has been done on site by certified A-CRA supervisor. Training agendas are approved by Chestnut. The supervisor conducts monthly fidelity checks by listening to and rating DSRs for each clinician. Supervision occurs on a weekly basis for case review. We have maintained our relationship with Chestnut in order to further ensure fidelity to the model. To date, all clinicians have received final A-CRA certification through Chestnut.

External and Internal Supports Champions of the model include previous and current supervisors. Administration is also very supportive of evidenced based treatments. We strive to maintain good relationships with referral sources on both an administrative and clinical level. Clinicians work very closely with probation officers and caseworkers to provide the best possible care to the clients. It is a true collaboration between all involved parties.

Recommendations for Provider Organizations and Policymakers Relationship with referral and funding sources are key! Keep an open dialogue and be willing to compromise. Use outcome data and studies promoting evidence based practices if possible. Team mentality. Help clinicians to feel supported and work together to provide best possible care to clients. Champion the model. If you believe in it, others will too!

Committing to Evidence-Based Programming in a Residential Setting Mychele Kenney, MS, LCPC Director of Youth Services Chestnut Health Systems Bloomington, IL

Program and Target Population Chestnut Health Systems is a not-for-profit behavioral healthcare facility. Our core service areas are addiction, mental health, applied research and training, and employee assistance/workplace services. Our youth program serves ages in two locations, Central Illinois (Bloomington) and Metro-East St. Louis (Maryville). Our clients range from rural to urban, 60% male, 72% Caucasian, 76% involved in criminal justice system. We provide school-based early intervention services, OP, IOP, and residential levels of care, as well a recovery home in our Bloomington location for youth.

Funding/Impetus for Implementation and Implementation Experience Engagement and retention issues arose in our Bloomington young womens residential unit. We were aware of A-CRA because of the Cannabis Youth Treatment (CYT) and Assertive Continuing Care (ACC) randomized clinical trial studies, and knew our research and training division was involved in training in the model. We decided to implement with no set-aside funding specific to this project.

Factors Related to Decision to Sustain We always planned to implement and sustain. Regional Manager bought into plan for program improvement and resource commitment of existing staff. We proceeded with implementation/sustainability plans slowly, introducing A-CRA to residential units one at a time. We recognized the impact that the model was having on our first unit (Blm. Girls unit) and the improvements in retention, as well as the confidence in our line staff.

Finances and Marketing Efforts Our use of A-CRA is included in all of our marketing materials. Have received praise/reinforcement from our state licensure/funders as well as from Joint Commission. Our services are primarily paid by Medicaid and Insurance. We have some state funding available for indigent clients. Have been able to secure funding for additional programming with Juvenile Court Services to provide A- CRA to high-risk youth in their homes.

Maintaining Fidelity and Training New Staff After Turnover Started out slow and gradually spread the intervention (currently have all units using A-CRA after 6 years). Planning for available supervision and rating is key. Sent staff to Chestnut A-CRA training when possible, but developed our own internal training. Trained all supervisors and additional raters (8 certified supervisors, two additional raters currently). Built recording and certification expectations into both job descriptions and policy. Continuous A-CRA trainings are offered (both individually and group/inservice). Provide Quality Improvement measures and feedback to staff regarding how they are doing on the certification/fidelity process.

External and Internal Supports Commitment from CEO and Regional Manager to support Youth Director. Cheerleaders – not always chosen from the obvious fits. Chestnuts Lighthouse Institute – training, consultation and ongoing support/encouragement. Joint Commission & State Licensing agent (DASA).

Recommendations for Provider Organizations and Policymakers Plan, plan, plan (understand what you are committing to and what it will mean to your program) Coach, coach, coach (use your cheerleaders and existing staff to mentor, encourage and keep the spirit alive; make sure you can stay on top of fidelity) Integrate, integrate, integrate (the more you can incorporate A-CRA into all of your programming, the better – groups, bulletin boards, treatment planning, family programming)

Life After Our Grant: Sustaining (and Spreading!) A-CRA Jennifer Smith Ramey, MS, Ed.S. Program Manager Central Virginia Community Services, Lynchburg, VA Elizabeth McGarvey, Ed.D. Associate Professor of Public Health Sciences University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA

Program and Target Population Central Virginia Community Services is behavioral healthcare organization, providing substance abuse, mental health, and intellectual disability services Youth ages with a substance use disorder Assessment, outpatient therapy, case management, crisis intervention

Funding/Impetus for Implementation and Implementation Experience In 2004, we received a SAMHSA Targeted Capacity Expansion (TCE) grant through the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment Our 2 nd SAMHSA TCE grant to deliver evidence- based services for youth with SUD We targeted two areas (urban city/Lynchburg and rural county/Amherst County)

Factors Related to Decision to Sustain Outcome data Client, clinician satisfaction with the program Flexibility of the treatment model Relationship with our stakeholders Model well-suited to address co-occurring disorders

Finances and Marketing Efforts Medicaid/insurance reimbursement Community-based funding Communication with stakeholders, agency administrators Sharing outcome data Newsletters, tv/media outlets

Video

Maintaining Fidelity and Training New Staff After Turnover Local certified supervisor All staff on co-occurring team trained in model In-house training of staff in other departments Mentoring new staff, interns Random fidelity checks, case staffings, review of progress notes

External and Internal Supports Top-down, bottom-up agency support Champion or Cheerleader Juvenile and Domestic Court judges, probation officers Department of Social Services Alternative schools Truancy officers

Recommendations for Provider Organizations and Policymakers Communication with key stakeholders Use of outcome data Enthusiastic, flexible staff Willingness to think outside the box

Contact Us Susan Godley, Alison Roark, Mychele Kenney, Jennifer Smith Ramey,