ATTACHMENT
H
DEMONSTRATION MIDPOINT TELEPHONE INTERVIEW
PROTOCOL
STATE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH OFFICIALS
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In spring of 2018, follow-up telephone interviews will be conducted with state behavioral health officials to obtain feedback regarding CCBHC implementation in their state. Telephone interviews will address specific factors that shape CCBHC policies and implementation, and will focus on changes in key CCBHC implementation domains since the first (year 1) interview. The interviewer will transfer the information gathered from the interviews into a Debrief Template that organizes data by criteria domain and corresponding research questions. The general protocol for demonstration midpoint telephone interviews is presented below.
a. What are the major differences between the way that CCBHCs are administered compared with how non-CCBHC community behavioral health clinics are currently administered in your state?
a. What kind of feedback have you received from CCBHCs since [insert month and year of baseline interview] (e.g., since the first year of the demonstration)?
b. What are some of the key successes that CCBHCs have had?
c. What factors have played a role in CCBHC successes?
d. What problems or barriers have CCBHCs in your state faced since [insert month and year of baseline interview]? Were these barriers anticipated or unexpected?
e. What steps have been taken to address or resolve these problems? Have these actions been effective?
f. How could these problems be avoided or managed by other CCBHCs in the future?
Mental health clinics
Substance use disorder clinics
a. Has this changed since [insert month and year of baseline interview]?
b. Have any challenges arisen for CCBHCs in maintaining certification or continuing to meet all of the certification criteria?
a. What were the critical issues they raised?
b. How did their input influence the demonstration implementation?
Cultural competence for specific populations
Workforce limitations
Licensing
Monitoring staff in
designated collaborating organizations (DCOs)
Staffing for new services offered at CCBHCs
Probe about the following:
Expanding hours of service
Increasing number of locations for accessing care
Outreach efforts (community-based; print advertising; online social networks; etc.) to specific underserved groups, such as children or homeless
Telemedicine
Internet/text/app based access
Probe separately for:
Mental health services
Substance use disorder services
a. Substance use disorder treatment
b. Services across the lifespan (e.g., child and adolescent; adult; geriatric)
c. Specific EBPs and evidence-based medications listed in the state demonstration application. For example:
Motivational Interviewing; Cognitive Behavioral individual, group and on-line Therapies (CBT); Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT); addiction technologies; recovery supports; first episode early intervention for psychosis; Multi-Systemic Therapy; Assertive Community Treatment (ACT); Forensic Assertive Community Treatment (F-ACT)
Medications for psychiatric conditions; medication assisted treatment for alcohol and opioid substance use disorders; prescription long-acting injectable medications for both mental and substance use disorders; smoking cessation medications
Community wrap-around services for youth and children; and specialty clinical interventions to treat mental and substance use disorders experienced by youth
Duration of efforts to ensure access to services regardless of ability to pay (e.g., Are these programs/policies/procedures new or longstanding?)
Provision of services on a sliding scale basis or provision of services regardless of ability to pay
Protocols regarding addressing the needs of consumers who do not live close to a CCBHC or within the CCBHC catchment area as established by the state
Crisis services
Substance use disorder services, recovery-oriented care
CMS or health reform demonstrations
Health homes
Behavioral health-related waiver or demonstration activity
Olmstead
Medicaid expansion
ACA
a. What types of funding sources currently support these efforts (e.g., existing grants, county-specific services funded through county taxes, 1115 waivers, general revenue)?
b. Do efforts/funding vary by region within the state?
c. How do these efforts interact with CCBHC efforts?
a. Which services required by the CCBHC criteria were not historically provided in community behavioral health clinics in your state?
b. Have DCO arrangements been important to providing the full scope of services by CCBHCs? If so, which services in particular are being provided by DCOs?
c. What are the barriers that clinics in your state might face in providing the full CCBHC scope of services?
d. Have CCBHCs experienced any challenges surrounding care coordination for
individuals who are dually eligible/enrolled in both Medicaid and Medicare?
e. Have CCBHCs experienced any challenges surrounding care coordination for individuals who recipients of 1915(c) Waivers?
a. If different, how are they different? What changes were required to meet the CCBHC standard?
b. If not different, how are those services paid for in other settings?
Probe about the following:
Schools
Hospitals (e.g., to obtain discharge notifications for inpatient/ED care)
Child welfare agencies
Juvenile and criminal justice agencies and facilities (including drug, mental health, veterans and other specialty courts)
Active military/VA facilities
Indian Health Service youth regional treatment centers
State licensed and nationally accredited child placing agencies for therapeutic foster care service
FQHCs
Other social and human services
a. Has demonstration funding been used to upgrade electronic health record capabilities?
a. Are quality measures data being collected according to plan? Have there been any changes to plans for collecting quality measures data?
a. CCBHC reported measures (9 required)
New clients – days until initial evaluation/percent of new clients evaluated within 10 days
Preventive care and screening: BMI
Preventive care and screening: Tobacco
Preventive care and screening: Alcohol
Weight assessment/nutrition counseling; Phys Activity for child/adolescent
Child/adolescent: MDD-Suicide risk
Adult: MDD-Suicide risk
Depression screening and follow-up plan
Depression remission- 12 months
b. State reported measures (12 required)
Housing status
Follow-up after discharge from ED for mental health
Follow-up after discharge from ED for substance use disorders
Plan all-cause readmission rate
Diabetes screening for individuals with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder using antipsychotic meds
Adherence to antipsychotic medication for individuals with schizophrenia
Adult (21+): Follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness
Child/adolescent: Follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness
Follow-up for children prescribed ADHD medication
Antidepressant medication management
Initiation/engagement of substance use disorder treatment
Patient/family experience of care (Survey Measures)
c. Who is responsible for collecting quality data when care is covered by an MCO or provided by a DCO?
Probe for:
-Have there been any changes in this arrangement (i.e., who is responsible for collecting this quality data) since the beginning of the demonstration?
-How is this process working so far? Any challenges or barriers to collecting quality data when care is covered by an MCO or provided by a DCO?
a. Reporting to CCBHC?
b. Compliance monitoring?
c. Quality bonus payment?
d. Public reporting?
e. Other benchmarking?
a. How has CCBHC quality data been shared between clinics, managed care organizations, state Medicaid offices and state mental health departments?
Which measures
Which providers
What is done with the information
a. If so, how?
b. Which measures are monitored?
c. How is the information used?
d. How does your state collect data on the National Outcomes Measures (NOMs) to meet your block grant reporting obligations?
a. What are the data sources for the Office of Mental Health (OMH)?
b. Who receives information on the CCBHCs and how do they respond?
c. Does monitoring for CCBHCs differ from other community behavioral health clinics in the state?
d. Does the state OMH monitor utilization of care at DCOs?
a. How burdensome has the PPS been for CCBHCs in your state?
b. Have CCBHCs encountered any issues regarding use of the PPS (e.g., payment of DCOs)?
c. If yes, what steps have been taken to address/resolve these issues? Please describe.
a. How do costs compare with those under the previous payment system?
b. How do costs vary across CCBHCs? Is the PPS appropriate/fair for different CCBHCs in your state?
a. If yes, what type/agency (e.g., CARF, COA, TJC) is required?
b. Have CCBHCs encountered any issues with accreditation?
Probe for the following:
a. Perspectives of behavioral health consumers, families, and communities are represented in CCBHC governance?
b. Representation of consumer/family/community perspectives in CCBHCs?
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Dorothy Bellow |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-21 |