CommonSpirit Health is Awarded Over $2.1 Million
CommonSpirit Health is Awarded Over $2.1 Million to Improve Treatment of Substance Use and Mental Health Disorders in Hospital Emergency Departments.
The Enterprise Population Health team is excited to announce that CommonSpirit Health is an award recipient of over $2.1 million from the California Department of Health Care Services to build capacity for improved treatment of substance use disorder and mental health disorders in hospital emergency departments. This funding will allow CommonSpirit Health (CSH) hospitals to expand the CA BRIDGE model from 11 to 25 CSH hospitals, helping vulnerable patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) connect to and gain access to life-saving treatments for their addiction. Dr. Julian Mitton, System Director for Population Health Policy at CommonSpirit Health, stresses that “opioid use disorder is a treatable chronic disease of the brain that requires long-term supportive treatment, including medications for addiction treatment (MAT) such as buprenorphine.” The CA BRIDGE model has been celebrated as a best-practice addiction care innovation. At its core, the model is about increasing access to evidence-based addiction care for patients with OUD through proactive outreach, patient navigation, and provider education. Thanks to this funding opportunity, this model will now be available in over 90% of CSH hospitals in California.
Many patients, in critical times of need and vulnerability, turn to our emergency rooms for help, and the CA BRIDGE model helps connect those individuals to resources and support to continue on a path to recovery. Behavioral health counselors navigate patients through an often complicated care network. The program staff also proactively addresses systemic barriers due to stigma and health inequities by advocating for patients in their holistic needs for recovery and promoting changes in clinical care through provider education. “[The BRIDGE program] is about more than just offering treatment,” says Dr. Alicia Kurtz, emergency medicine physician and Medical Director at Marian Regional Medical Center, “it’s also fostering a complete culture change within the house of medicine in how we think about and approach patients with substance use issues.”
Candace Fong, CSH System Vice President for Medication Safety, highlights that the award funding will help expand access to evidence-based addiction treatment by “reaching patients using innovative approaches in telemedicine and virtual peer support.” The Covid-19 pandemic has only complicated the way care is provided for individuals with substance use disorder, with patients feeling more isolated from their support structures, trying to manage increased stress, or struggling to access reliable care given ongoing needs for social distancing. But work is being done across the CSH enterprise to address these barriers and added challenges, by “expediting access to MAT programs [and other addiction services] in ways we previously had been unable to do for our patients,” Dr. Fong continues. The CA BRIDGE model is leading the charge on many of these innovations.
Beyond the emergency room, as a Catholic-based health system, CSH is committed to providing compassionate, evidence-based care to patients with addiction by meeting patients in their time of need. Through innovative population health efforts, CSH also aims to take proactive steps to reduce harm from drug use, routinely screen patients for substance use disorder, and change our clinical care model to reduce stigma and provide holistic care “This work aligns with CSH’s vision to create a healthier future for all. We are striving to eliminate disparities of care through strategic and intentional work to eradicate the systematic exclusion that many of our patients face on a day to day basis”, says Dr. Alisahah Cole, System Vice President for Population Health Innovation and Policy. “Our mission is to improve the health of the people we serve, especially those who are vulnerable and this program gives us the opportunity to help people in their greatest time of need.”
CommonSpirit Health Expands Behavioral Health Support
CommonSpirit Health Expands Behavioral Health Support through Primary Care Collaboration in Partnership with Concert Health.
CommonSpirit Health, a national nonprofit health system serving communities at more than 1,000 care sites and 137 hospitals across 21 states, today announced it is offering new access to support for depression and anxiety within the primary care setting through a partnership with Concert Health, a leading behavioral health medical group. This model will place CommonSpirit’s primary care physicians at the center of all physical and behavioral aspects of care by connecting patients with Concert Health’s remotely located behavioral health care managers who provide therapy and develop a behavioral health care plan for each patient.
Access to behavioral health services in the U.S. is challenging at the best of times, and for patients, the lack of care can have far-reaching consequences. More than 115 million Americans live in an area where there is no access to a mental health professional. As a result, many seek care from their primary care provider, with whom they often have a long-term, trusted relationship. In fact, a study found that primary care providers prescribed 79 percent of antidepressant medications. That strong relationship and lack of access to specialty mental health services often leaves primary care providers managing depression and anxiety, without the professional support they need to address their patients’ conditions. Given the proven connection between physical and mental health, it is essential that patients receive the appropriate care and treatment for all of their health needs — physical and mental — in one place, which is most convenient in primary care.
An integrated approach is particularly critical for patients with multiple health conditions. One recent report found that high-risk patients require up to 6.2 times more spending on medical care when they have an active behavioral health diagnosis.
The partnership between CommonSpirit and Concert Health is based on Collaborative Care Management, an evidenced-based model proven to improve behavioral health conditions such as depression and anxiety within the primary care setting.
CommonSpirit’s primary care physicians will now manage all aspects of patient care by diagnosing depression and anxiety in patients and making warm handoffs to a dedicated group of Concert Health’s behavioral health care managers. The Concert Health care managers develop the behavioral health care plan and serve as a liaison between Concert Health’s psychiatric provider and the primary care physician who both review the patient’s progress and make needed adjustments in care. The primary care physician also prescribes medication recommended by the behavioral health care team. Patients meet regularly with their care manager via phone, video visit, or in-person at their primary care location.
Collaborative Care is already a covered benefit for Medicare, most commercial insurance, and under Medicaid in 18 states. CommonSpirit is already working with Medicaid partners in California to ensure it can offer this care to all patients who need it.
“To bridge long-standing gaps between mental and physical health care, we need to turn to evidence-based models that integrate these areas of care and provide real outcomes. Especially for the vulnerable or underserved, seeking behavioral health care in the community can be challenging due to stigma, lack of access, and prohibitive costs,” said Christine Brocato, vice president of strategic innovation at CommonSpirit Health. “By offering coordinated behavioral health services from Concert Health to CommonSpirit’s patients utilizing the Collaborative Care model, we have one team working together to meet all of the patient’s medical and behavioral health care needs in a matter of hours, rather than fragmenting care through referrals that take weeks. Care simply must be inclusive of mind and body.”
“Concert Health is proud to support CommonSpirit’s commitment to comprehensive, outcome-based care for people with behavioral health conditions,” said Virna Little, LCSW, PsyD, co-founder and chief operating officer of Concert Health. “We are excited to partner with CommonSpirit’s outstanding physicians to make these services available to improve health outcomes for their patients.”
Powered by Concert Health, the following new capabilities will expand CommonSpirit’s primary care services:
Patients are screened for depression and anxiety using evidence-based tools: Without screening, over half of people struggling with behavioral health concerns never get the care they need – either because they lack a diagnosis or don’t realize what it is that they are experiencing.
Instead of external referrals, primary care providers can make warm handoffs to behavioral health providers: CommonSpirit’s primary care providers will work closely with a dedicated team of Concert Health’s behavioral health care managers to provide support in less than 48 hours.
Patients can receive evidence-based psychotherapy interventions at their preferred location: Behavioral health care managers provide a mix of medication management, goal setting, and evidence-based approaches. Patients are given the choice of engaging via video visit, telephone, or in-person care.
The care team is aligned around measurement-based care: A core part of the Collaborative Care model includes regularly assessing behavioral health symptoms, much like is done for diabetes (A1Cs) or hypertension (blood pressure). Concert Health’s team regularly assesses patients’ symptom severity using evidenced-based tools like the Personal Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ9), General Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD7), and Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) and alters patients’ treatment plans.
Psychiatric consultations support the primary care provider: For those patients who need more support, Concert Health’s consulting psychiatrists and psychiatric nurse practitioners speak weekly with the behavioral health team to review information and make written recommendations to the primary care provider to support their decision-making around diagnosis, medications, and dosage.
The organizations have initially launched these integrated services in Bakersfield, California to help address the area’s high unmet need for behavioral and mental health care. The program is expected to scale to additional CommonSpirit care sites across the central California region during the remainder of the year as well as to additional markets in 2021.
More information about the Collaborative Care Model can be found from the American Psychiatric Association (here) and the University of Washington’s AIMs center (here).
About CommonSpirit Health
CommonSpirit Health is a nonprofit, Catholic health system dedicated to advancing health for all people. It was created in February 2019 through the alignment of Catholic Health Initiatives and Dignity Health. With a team of approximately 125,000 employees and 25,000 physicians and advanced practice clinicians, CommonSpirit Health operates 137 hospitals and more than 1000 care sites across 21 states. In FY 2020, Catholic Health Initiatives and Dignity Health had combined revenues of nearly $29.6 billion and provided $4.6 billion in charity care, community benefit, and unreimbursed government programs. Learn more at www.commonspirit.org.
About Concert Health
Founded in 2016, Concert Health is a leading behavioral health medical group integrating Collaborative Care Management, an evidence based model for treating depression and anxiety, into primary care settings. Concert Health’s clinicians work arm in arm with hundreds of primary care and women’s health medical providers to identify and address the behavioral health needs of all patients.
Headquartered in San Diego, Concert Health, Inc is the management services organization for a group of affiliated professional corporations that deliver medical services. Together, they deliver exceptional care in California, Arizona, New York and Connecticut. Concert Health, Inc and its affiliated medical entities do business under the “Concert Health” brand. To learn more about Concert Health’s approach, visit concerthealth.io.
Building Our Future
We believe in the power of your voice. This time of year, we are reminded of the importance of elections and the role we all play in using our individual voting power to collectively build the future we want.
Dear all CommonSpirit Health colleagues,
We believe in the power of your voice. This time of year, we are reminded of the importance of elections and the role we all play in using our individual voting power to collectively build the future we want.
Elections matter. Your voice matters more.
Through My Voice, My Vote, we are calling on all 150,000 CommonSpirit Health employees to vote this year. My Voice, My Vote is a CommonSpirit resource created to provide you with the important information you need to exercise your right to vote.
Through the My Voice, My Vote website, you can find out if you are registered to vote, get non-partisan information on candidates and policies, and receive official information from your state on how to cast your ballot this year.
As a ministry, we believe in civic engagement and the power our employees have when they vote their beliefs on Election Day. Use your voice to communicate what matters to you, to shape the community you want, and to amplify the call to change things of importance to you – voice it at the polls.
What do you believe in? Vote your conscience on Election Day.
Election Day is November 3, 2020. Click here to access the My Voice, My Voter Resources.
Register. Get Informed. Vote. It’s that simple.
Thank you for all that you have done and will continue to do as we, together, care for the common good.
Sincerely,
Shelly Schlenker
EVP, Chief Advocacy Officer
CommonSpirit Health
Initiative Launched for Addiction Patients
We have launched a broad initiative to support patients struggling with addiction. Meet some of the inspiring clinicians leading this work and expanding access to MAT for opioid use disorder.
Medications for addiction treatment (MAT), such as buprenorphine, is evidence-based, lifesaving care for patients with opioid use disorder. MAT, often in conjunction with mental health services, can help normalize body and social function. It also reduces cravings for illicit opioids, symptoms of opioid withdrawal, and the risk of opioid overdose. Evidence shows that patients benefit from easy to access and longitudinal treatment that supports them in their path to recovery. Healthcare providers, including physicians and advanced care practitioners, can become licensed to provide MAT in their clinical practice, through the DEA x-waiver to prescribe buprenorphine. The x-waiver license is critical in assuring equitable access to evidence-based, compassion care for opioid use disorder; we are obliged to assure that our patients in need can receive the care that they deserve across the CommonSpirit Health enterprise, from our rural clinics in the Midwest to our urban hospitals on the West Coast. You’ll hear from CommonSpirit Health physician champions in this video that x-waiver licensure is relatively easy to get, professionally meaningful, aligns with our shared mission to care for the most vulnerable, and can be incredibly impactful for the next patient you encounter with opioid use disorder. In fact, providing MAT could be the difference between life and death for that next patient struggling with addiction. We encourage you to join the Addiction Network, get x-waivered, and bring your compassionate, evidence-based care to those patients in need.
Real Talk Podcast
The Real Talk Podcast brings stories to life from the front lines of medicine. Real Talk is a safe space to share and process these stories, honoring the human experience of working in medicine.
https://realtalk.transistor.fm/
Humans are storytellers by nature. We share the happenings of our lives – the happy, sad, infuriating, overwhelming, stressful, and miraculous – by telling stories that inspire and entertain.
The Real Talk Podcast brings stories to life from the front lines of medicine. As providers, we have experiences that are not well understood by others, and we often do not take time to share our stories together in a meaningful way. Real Talk is a safe space to share and process these stories, honoring the human experience of working in medicine.
"Air Traffic Control" Virtual Care Program
Dr. Alisahah Cole and Royal Tuthill explain their "air traffic control" virtual care program which helps vulnerable patients navigate the best opportunities to receive the finest care possible.
Today’s focus is on caring for the vulnerable. CommonSpirit and Docent Health's program to help underserved communities will have you at hello. Are we talking about client-facing technology? Are we putting something on a phone? Are we talking about technology that’s connecting housing, transportation and education needs? Dr. Alisahah Cole from CommonSpirit and Royal Tuthill from Docent Health join us to explain their “air traffic control” virtual care program which helps vulnerable patients navigate the best opportunities to receive the finest care possible. In the words of Dignity Health’s hello humankindness campaign "Aim for nothing less than to inspire change in health care that leads to more empathy, listening, and respect."
Key Points:
● CommonSpiritt and Docent Health are expanding their virtual care navigator program to build on the program’s success in improving health outcomes for maternity and orthopedic patients [00:09:01]
● CommonSpirit Health Closes Care Gaps with Personalized, Community-Based Care Navigation in Partnership with Docent Health
● The program’s technology enables the scaling of teams, care managers, social workers and community health workers [00:13:15]
● AI capabilities help scale communications to understand when it’s appropriate for a human to intervene [00:16:15]
● How do we make sure we don’t put any additional burdens on our frontline clinical staff? [00:18:55]
● Excellent results including decreasing the length of stay and decreasing readmission [00:19:30]
5 Ways Health Systems Can 'Advance to the New Normal': CommonSpirit ePH leader Dr. Nick Stine and Rich Roth outline the steps hospitals and health systems can take to thrive in a post-COVID environment
5 Ways Health Systems Can 'Advance to the New Normal': CommonSpirit ePH leader Dr. Nick Stine and Rich Roth outline the steps hospitals and health systems can take to thrive in a post-COVID environment
LISC Elects ePH leader Dr. Alisahah Cole to its Board of Directors, which helps guide the organization's investments in housing, businesses, health and jobs
LISC Elects ePH leader Dr. Alisahah Cole to its Board of Directors, which helps guide the organization's investments in housing, businesses, health and jobs
My Proposal for a Cure
by Dr. Jude Verzosa
In the practice of medicine, there are different levels of suffering.
There is suffering ascribed by genetics as a result of what one is born with.
There is that which is acquired because of a lifetime of poor choices.
There is that kind that occurs when a patient is not given the right care; and there is the kind that occurs when the patient is not provided the opportunity and time to choose the right care.
Then there is the worst kind of suffering. The kind when one is not accorded compassion worthy of the respect befitting of a human being. This kind may transpire because it is inadvertently caused by another. It sells itself as an expected condition of being in need of care. It numbs the care provider, the patient, and those who stand in the sidelines who can, in fact, do and say something about it. Silent and propagating, it deprives the person of one's God given dignity and encourages its acceptance as the norm.
I wish to call this organization to see the worst kind and to invoke compassion as a cure. Compassion compels us all to speak up, to act, and to change ourselves.
Works of compassion need to be proclaimed so that it can inspire regardless of the judgment of others who choose to be complacent in the pretense that the compassion in providing patient care should just be kept within the confines of the examination room.
We may question the reason as to why there is so much emphasis on the patient’s experience. But we need to keep in mind, that in being called to be healers and to be the light to those around us, we are tasked to stand up and be exposed ourselves.
In the end, it can be compassion that unites us all.