1 / 13

Behavioral Health Integration; Experiences of RIPCPC and RIBHN 2010 - 2013

Behavioral Health Integration; Experiences of RIPCPC and RIBHN 2010 - 2013. A bit on history and background Development of current model Demonstration of point-of-care database referral system Prospects for the future Questions. History of RIPCPC.

kaipo
Download Presentation

Behavioral Health Integration; Experiences of RIPCPC and RIBHN 2010 - 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Behavioral Health Integration;Experiences of RIPCPC and RIBHN2010 - 2013 • A bit on history and background • Development of current model • Demonstration of point-of-care database referral system • Prospects for the future • Questions

  2. History of RIPCPC • RIPCPC formed in 1994 as an Independent Practice Association (IPA) with a focus on quality improvement • Originally formed to: • Challenge insurers that were lowering reimbursement • Combat the trend of hospitals buying up community based practices • RIPCPC is the largest IPA in Rhode Island • 140 Primary Care Physicians (began with 40) • Cover over 300,000 Rhode Island Lives • 25% of Rhode Island’s Pediatricians are Members

  3. RIPCPC’s Focus on the Patient Centered Medical Home • Principals of the PCMH • Personal physician provides care • Physician directed medical practice • Whole person orientation • Care is coordinated and/or integrated • Enhanced access for patients • Focus on safety & quality improvement • Payment appropriately recognizes the added value provided to patients Behavior Health’s Integration is Essential to Improving Outcomes!

  4. Patient Centered Medical Home Model • PCMH effect: • Care delivered by primary care physicians in a Patient-Centered Medical Home is consistently associated with better outcomes: • Reduced mortality • Fewer hospital admissions • Lower utilization • Improved patient compliance • Lower healthcare spending

  5. Collaboration with Specialists/Providers • True patient care coordination can only happen with meaningful & efficient provider collaboration • We can improve outcomes and the effectiveness and efficiency of our care delivery systems by embracing this concept • Our effectiveness and efficiency as clinicians will soon be directly tied to our reimbursement

  6. Behavioral Health Committee Focus • Mission Statement: • To improve the health of our patients by facilitating communication and coordination of care between Rhode Island Primary Care doctors and Behavioral Health Professionals in Rhode Island • We have assembled a team of primary care doctors along with our IT professionals and behavioral health professionals and we have created a forum with regular monthly meetings focused on: • Improving access to Behavioral Health Providers • Improving communication between Behavioral Health Providers and PCP’s • Support the IPA by addressing behavioral health’s role in the PCMH, helping satisfy our behavioral health contract components

  7. Behavioral Health Committee Initiatives • Evaluate/Revise/Approve BCBSRI policies and procedures stated within the three-way contract between BCBSRI, RIPCPC & Behavioral Health Provider • Both the Co-located & Collaborative Model Agreements • Creation of a comprehensive list of Behavioral Health Providers and facilities for our physicians membership • Listing will be compiled and posted on our website • Refine pilot between the Behavioral Health Providers and PCP’s focused on securely exchanging standardized clinical correspondence • Patient Clinical Summaries / Referrals (from PCP) • Behavioral Health Evaluations (from BHP)

  8. Behavioral Health Committee Initiatives • Things to Come (in 2012): • Database to access at point of care to allow for smooth referral of patients to appropriate providers • Collaborative agreements to allow for the majority of our physicians to enter into arrangements that enhance access and improve communication • Network wide ability to use the secure, HIPPA-compliant communication system piloted in 2011.

  9. Goals of Behavioral Health Integration • Improve 2-way communication between clinician and the referring PCP • Better access to BH for our patients • Formation of quality metrics that can prove better outcomes with BH • Delivery quality comprehensive coordinated care to our Patients!

  10. Behavioral Health Integration • Through collaborative agreements spelling out expectations on both sides, a behavioral health pod within RIPCPC was formed: • Timely response to referral (same day for urgent referrals, 72 hours for routine) with willingness to accept patients • Thorough 2-way communication with detailed referral from PCP, and with regular progress notes for ongoing therapy • Emphasis on electronic communication

  11. Point-of-Care Referral Database • A web portal, accessible at the point of care • Allows PCP to appropriately tailor referral to the needs of the individual patient with respect to geography, age, insurance, behavioral or mental health goals and need for comprehensive care. • Can refer to individuals, group practices or facilities • Preferred communication is electronic, but can be via web, fax or phone depending on providers preferences

  12. What we accomplished.. • Formalized an affiliate membership between the RIPCPC physicians and behavioral health providers • Established a RIPCPC Behavioral Health Pod • Created a RIPCPC Behavioral Health provider and facility portal • This is a searchable database of BH providers that RIPCPC member physicians can filter by: • Specialty, insurance, city, hours of availability, insurances accepted & population treated • Utilize ‘Direct’ messaging to communicate with BH providers

  13. Things to Come • A focus on the collaborative model approach • Strengthen network and build lasting relationships • Assist patients in making better choices and measure those patient outcomes (healthier lifestyle = lowered health care costs) • Improve our communication and access with BH specialists for the benefit of our patients, this will help us better manage our patient population in an ACO/AQC/RISK environment • Successful behavioral health integration is vital to containing costs!

More Related