Philadelphia Behavioral Health Services Transformation: Practice Guidelines for Recovery and Resilience Oriented Treatment - Softcover

White, William L.

 
9781491828908: Philadelphia Behavioral Health Services Transformation: Practice Guidelines for Recovery and Resilience Oriented Treatment

Inhaltsangabe

Philadelphia has a long history of innovation in the behavioral health field, including the work of Dr. Benjamin Rush (1746-1813), the closing of the state hospitals in the late 1980s and the formation of Community Behavioral Health (CBH), the nation's largest city-controlled managed behavioral healthcare organization. This document represents the next step in the evolution of Philadelphia's efforts to create a more effective and efficient system of care. This system is based on the latest thinking in the field, empirical evidence and the preferences of the individuals and families receiving services. In keeping with the comprehensive system-transformation efforts in the health care arena, the guidelines outlined in this document are meant to help providers implement services and supports that promote resilience, recovery and wellness in children, youth, adults and families. They apply to all treatment providers and all levels of care. They are not intended to encapsulate all possible services or supports that promote recovery and resilience. The strategies in this document are examples of activities and services that providers can implement. These strategies are not intended to be a laundry list of new activities that must now be incorporated into all service settings. The suggested strategies are examples of the kinds of activities that can help organizations achieve these goals. These strategies should be modified and adopted based on the preferences, cultures and needs of people being served and the community context in which they live. The practice guidelines have direct implications for staff in all roles. They are framed by the notions of recovery and resilience. This framework should be the basis for service delivery.

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PHILADELPHIA BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVICES TRANSFORMATION

PRACTICE GUIDELINES FOR RECOVERY AND RESILIENCE ORIENTED TREATMENT

By Ijeoma Achara Abrahams, OmiSadé Ali, Larry Davidson, Arthur C. Evans, Joan Kenerson King, Paul Poplawski, William L. White

AuthorHouse

Copyright © 2014 The City of Philadelphia
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4918-2890-8

Contents

Letter from Arthur C. Evans, Jr., PhD, 6,
Acknowledgments, 8,
Section I: Introduction,
History, 15,
Momentum from National Trends, 16,
Section II: Overview of the Framework,
Philadelphia's Approach to Transformation, 25,
The Practice Guidelines, 29,
Components of the Framework, 33,
Section III: Strategies in theFour Domains,
Using This Section, 43,
Domain 1: Assertive Outreach and Initial Engagement, 45,
Domain 2: Screening, Assessment, Service Planning and Service Delivery, 65,
Domain 3: Continuing Support and Early Re-intervention, 95,
Domain 4: Community Connection and Mobilization, 111,
Appendices,
Appendix A: References, A-3,
Appendix B: Toward a Clear Understanding of Recovery and Resilience, A-5,
Appendix C: Implementing Evidence-based Practices, A-7,
Appendix D: Trauma-informed Care: Form Survival to Thriving, A-13,
Appendix E: Diversity of Strengths, A-23,
Appendix F: Areas of Inquiry When Concucting a Person-first Assesment, A-24,
Appendix G: DBHIDS Policy on Services to LGBTQI People, A-25,
Appendix H: Blue Ribbon Commission Goals and Recommendations, A-29,
Appendix I: Family Resource Network Family Involvement Best Practice Guidelines, A-32,
Appendix J: Person-first Best Practice Guidelines, A-35,


CHAPTER 1

Section I: Introduction

History

Philadelphia has had a long history of innovation in the behavioral health field, beginning with the work of Dr. Benjamin Rush (1746-1813), the first to propose a disease concept of "chronic drunkenness" and to advocate specialized treatment services for this condition. The city's leadership role continued with the closing of the state hospitals in the late 1980s and the more recent formation of Community Behavioral Health (CBH), the nation's largest city-controlled managed behavioral healthcare organization. This document represents the next step in the evolution of Philadelphia's efforts to create a more effective and efficient system of care. This system is based on the latest thinking in the field, empirical evidence and another essential element: the preferences of the individuals and families receiving services.

These practice guidelines are framed by the notions of recovery and resilience. It is this framework, and an unwavering belief in recovery and resilience in behavioral health, that should be the basis for service delivery. The document is presented in three sections:

I. Introduction

II. Overview of the Framework

III. Strategies in the Four Domains


The guidelines presented in this report represent the collective vision of many people. Hundreds of stakeholders—including people in recovery, providers, family members, advocates and staff of the Philadelphia Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual disAbility Services (DBHIDS)—participated in focus groups across the behavioral health system, contributing their ideas and perspectives about existing strengths, best and promising practices and opportunities for growth.

Their feedback has been blended with the lessons learned from Philadelphia's transformation efforts over the past 30 years, several exciting national trends and the empirically informed practices documented in the literature. Together they form the foundation for Philadelphia's new practice guidelines.


Momentum from National Trends

Several national trends are propelling the dramatic changes unfolding within the City of Philadelphia's behavioral health system. These trends include national health care reform efforts, mental health transformation processes, the recovery advocacy movement in the addiction field, the emphasis on resilience in children's behavioral health and findings published in the Institute of Medicine's Quality Chasm report.


Health Care Reform: Quality, Outcomes and Accountability

The historic health care reform legislation enacted on March 23, 2010 holds the potential to transform the landscape on which all healthcare services are delivered. In addition to extending health care coverage to an estimated 32 million more Americans, health care reform promises to improve the quality of care and increase the focus on outcomes and accountability.

Some of the implications of health care reform for behavioral health include:

• an increased focus on the coordination between and integration of specialty behavioral health services and primary care;

• a greater focus on comprehensive, "whole health" approaches that address the full range of needs of individuals receiving services;

• increased focus on supporting people in lower levels of care (e.g., services in community-based settings) rather than higher, more restrictive services (e.g., residential, inpatient, partial hospitalization programs);

• greater attention to treatment outcomes and provider accountability; and

• a focus on measures that will enhance the infrastructure (service systems and providers) to support the delivery of effective services (e.g., greater utilization of health information technology).


Mental Health Transformation: A Place in the Community

These substantive reforms in behavioral health policy and practice are not occurring in a vacuum. In recent years, behavioral health systems around the country have initiated efforts to transform their service systems by realigning their policies, services and structures to promote resilience and recovery. In the mental health arena, the work of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health prompted much of this restructuring. Created in April of 2002, this Commission was charged with the task of examining the problems and gaps in mental health service delivery systems nationwide and recommending solutions to finally achieve the promise of "a life in the community" first made when the deinstitutionalization movement began half a century earlier. Following several years of study and input from thousands of people nationwide, the Commission concluded that existing mental health systems were not organized to reach the single most important goal for people receiving services, the goal of recovery. To address that challenge, the Commission articulated the following vision:

"We envision a future when everyone with a mental illness will recover, a future when mental illnesses are detected early, and a future when everyone with a mental illness at any stage of life has access to effective treatment and supports—essentials for living, working, learning and participating fully in the community" (DHHS, 2003).

Neither the Commission's findings nor its vision was surprising to many people receiving mental health care. Over the previous two decades, the nation's mental health consumer movement had grown and advocated just these kinds of changes in the nature of service delivery. What was new was that their vision of recovery and community inclusion had now been adopted by the nation's mental health system.


New Recovery Advocacy Movement: Resources for a Lifetime Journey

While the transition from segregation and...

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9781491828892: Philadelphia Behavioral Health Services Transformation: Practice Guidelines for Recovery and Resilience Oriented Treatment

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ISBN 10:  1491828897 ISBN 13:  9781491828892
Verlag: Authorhouse, 2014
Hardcover