<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>New Health and Fitness &#187; Ezekiel Emanuel Dr</title>
	<atom:link href="http://cft.hol.es/tag/ezekiel-emanuel-dr/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://cft.hol.es</link>
	<description>About Health and Fitness, Acne, and Nutrition</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Thu, 16 Jun 2016 19:29:39 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
		<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
		<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>https://wordpress.org/?v=4.0.38</generator>
	<item>
		<title>Healthcare Reform &#8211; What About Us</title>
		<link>http://cft.hol.es/healthcare-reform-what-about-us/</link>
		<comments>http://cft.hol.es/healthcare-reform-what-about-us/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Nov 2015 05:05:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ezekiel Emanuel Dr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[National Co-morbidity Survey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[National Council]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Richard Frank]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cft.hol.es/?p=111</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>&#013; In recent times, there have been extraordinary events that put a &#013; pause on routine and threw our country into animated conversation but &#013; they have mostly been about bad news &#8211; 9/11, the invasion of Iraq and &#013; most recently the Wall Street bailout. The election was neither bad news&#013; nor a distraction [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es/healthcare-reform-what-about-us/">Healthcare Reform &#8211; What About Us</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es">New Health and Fitness</a>.</p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#013;</p>
<p>In recent times, there have been extraordinary events that put a &#013;<br />
pause on routine and threw our country into animated conversation but &#013;<br />
they have mostly been about bad news &#8211; 9/11, the invasion of Iraq and &#013;<br />
most recently the Wall Street bailout. The election was neither bad news&#013;<br />
 nor a distraction like a celebrity meltdown, it actually mattered. And &#013;<br />
as a result of this incredible election season, America&#8217;s children have a&#013;<br />
 chance to grow up unaware that there&#8217;s anything unusual about an &#013;<br />
African-American President or a woman running for the White House.</p>
<p>2008 Legislative Success&#013;<br />
<br />Now, it&#8217;s over &#8211; the excitement, the soaring and in some cases &#013;<br />
snoring oration, the primaries and the debates &#8211; the Presidential &#013;<br />
campaigns are over. It was my great good fortune to attend the &#013;<br />
Democratic National Convention and to have affirmed in speeches and by &#013;<br />
actions that our community has indeed made progress. We had Senator &#013;<br />
Kennedy&#8217;s bittersweet appearance and his steadfast commitment that was &#013;<br />
so critical to the passage of parity; Michelle Obama&#8217;s unexpected &#013;<br />
reference to mental health when she talked about universal healthcare; &#013;<br />
Bill Clinton&#8217;s description of a mom struggling with her sons&#8217; autism; &#013;<br />
the first ever &#8220;recovery room&#8221; at a convention; and a luncheon honoring &#013;<br />
the Campaign for Mental Health Reform that included A list celebrities &#013;<br />
as well as national and state political leaders all vocal in their &#013;<br />
support of accessible, affordable mental health and addiction &#013;<br />
treatments.</p>
<p>The rhetoric of the convention was matched by an &#013;<br />
extremely successful legislative year: the delay of damaging Medicaid &#013;<br />
rules on rehabilitative services and targeted case management and the &#013;<br />
introduction of the Medicaid Services Restoration Act; the passage of &#013;<br />
Medicare parity; veterans legislation that extends mental health and &#013;<br />
addictions services beyond the VA out to communities; improved &#013;<br />
collaboration between criminal justice and mental health; expansion of &#013;<br />
the disability definition in the ADA making it easier for people with &#013;<br />
disabilities to obtain protection against disability-based &#013;<br />
discrimination; and the passage of parity ending health insurance &#013;<br />
discrimination.</p>
<p>It is a hopeful time for people with disabilities.&#013;<br />
 Our string of legislative and policy successes reflects tremendous &#013;<br />
progress. And substance use and mental health advocates &#8211; united by the &#013;<br />
Presidential campaign &#8211; can share a path forward into a new era.</p>
<p>The Economy and Service Capacity&#013;<br />
<br />But times are tough in communities across the country &#8211; and the &#013;<br />
world, people losing their jobs, their homes and their retirement &#013;<br />
savings. Many of us at the National Council have spent these last few &#013;<br />
months traveling from state to state and community to community. And we &#013;<br />
return from these trips filled with anxiety.</p>
<p>As states attempt to &#013;<br />
manage their budgets in a very fragile economy, increased demand for &#013;<br />
mental health services could be on a collision course with impending &#013;<br />
cuts to publicly funded services. Our already tattered mental health and&#013;<br />
 addictions safety net is in grave danger of collapsing as unemployment &#013;<br />
rates soar, anxiety over the future grows and demand for services is at &#013;<br />
an all time high.</p>
<p>We urge states to resist cutting essential &#013;<br />
mental health and addictions services and we&#8217;re lobbying for federal &#013;<br />
stimulus packages that include Medicaid relief and financial supports so&#013;<br />
 that communities can meet treatment demand in the difficult months and &#013;<br />
perhaps years ahead. At the same time, our industry -the behavioral &#013;<br />
healthcare industry &#8211; has to be ready to work with the greatest &#013;<br />
efficiencies and be accountable for every taxpayer dollar. And the &#013;<br />
National Council&#8217;s proud of the initiatives &#8211; our Access and Retention, &#013;<br />
Six Sigma and Process Benchmarking projects -that we&#8217;ve introduced to &#013;<br />
support member efforts to streamline access, creating more treatment &#013;<br />
capacity and more effectively engaging consumers and communities in the &#013;<br />
recovery process.</p>
<p>Our Role in a Progressive Era&#013;<br />
<br />Now the question being asked is what&#8217;s our role in a new &#013;<br />
administration, in a new era? One of President elect Obama&#8217;s challenges &#013;<br />
will be to harness the extraordinary idealism that he inspired in his &#013;<br />
campaign to a larger, national cause. We appear to be leaving behind the&#013;<br />
 conservative agenda and entering a progressive era. A progressive era &#013;<br />
being shaped by the millenniums with their internet culture and by a new&#013;<br />
 breed of the very rich that are using their wealth to support &#013;<br />
progressive causes and demanding accountability in return for &#013;<br />
philanthropy.</p>
<p>But even in a new era, the reality, pace or shape of&#013;<br />
 healthcare reform &#8211; is uncertain. Washington is already abuzz with &#013;<br />
health care groups lobbying their points of view and potential &#013;<br />
candidates for healthcare posts in the new administration polishing &#013;<br />
their resumes. But economics, politics, and history suggest that any &#013;<br />
major overhaul of our healthcare delivery system will be a difficult &#013;<br />
process at best. Healthcare is now bigger than the &#8220;military-industrial &#013;<br />
complex&#8221; about which we were warned in 1950s, 1960s and 1970s; and &#013;<br />
there&#8217;s no sector of the economy with more politically powerful special &#013;<br />
interests.</p>
<p>To date behavioral healthcare&#8217;s progress has received &#013;<br />
little mainstream attention. And our community has a good story to tell.&#013;<br />
 While healthcare costs have skyrocketed, our services, historically &#013;<br />
underfunded, have seen little increases. Richard Frank, Harvard &#013;<br />
economist and co-author of Better But Not Well, uses data from the &#013;<br />
National Co-morbidity Survey to make the case that more money is being &#013;<br />
spent on mental health but mental healthcare&#8217;s share of GDP is constant &#013;<br />
and its share of health spending is declining while access, quality, and&#013;<br />
 supports for people with mental illnesses have increased. We have data &#013;<br />
that tells a compelling story; and science that supports return on &#013;<br />
investment. So what about us?</p>
<p>It&#8217;s almost a sure bet that the next&#013;<br />
 administration will include treatments for mental illnesses and &#013;<br />
addictions in any expansion of health coverage. We&#8217;ll be included in &#013;<br />
movement towards universal coverage, whether incrementally like the &#013;<br />
re-authorization of SCHIP or as part of more comprehensive reform like &#013;<br />
the plan offered by Ezekiel Emanuel (Dr. Emanuel, who is invited to &#013;<br />
speak at the National Council&#8217;s conference in San Antonio, is the &#013;<br />
brother of Obama&#8217;s new chief of staff Rahm Emanuel) in Health Care &#013;<br />
Guaranteed. But will inclusion in universal coverage strategies or &#013;<br />
general reform solve the fundamental problems we face? At best, reform &#013;<br />
will enable us to begin to solve our own problems.</p>
<p>Mental &#013;<br />
healthcare shares the problems of the larger healthcare system; and like&#013;<br />
 health care suffers unintended policy consequences. We threw medicine &#013;<br />
out with the medical model, now we&#8217;re talking as if we&#8217;ve just &#013;<br />
discovered that mental health is fundamental to health and the result is&#013;<br />
 people with serious mental illnesses are dying far too young. We &#013;<br />
brought Medicaid into every possible service, promoted decentralization &#013;<br />
and the marketplace, and now we&#8217;re faced with the same consequence &#8211; &#013;<br />
fragmentation.</p>
<p>Over the years, risk and responsibility have been &#013;<br />
downloaded from states to community organizations without the resources &#013;<br />
needed to keep pace with mental health, addiction and co-occurring &#013;<br />
treatment advances; without the resources to create organizational &#013;<br />
infrastructure that supports planned change; and without the resources &#013;<br />
needed to coordinate and ensure good general medical care for people &#013;<br />
with serious mental illnesses. Instead of investing in quality services,&#013;<br />
 states have introduced intermediaries to manage what they still call &#013;<br />
their &#8220;system&#8221; &#8211; the result is a deskilled workforce and business as &#013;<br />
usual.</p>
<p>And in some cases, providers have lost the trust of their &#013;<br />
communities. As they&#8217;ve been increasingly relegated to and paid for only&#013;<br />
 the treatment of people with the most serious mental illnesses, their &#013;<br />
communities have been left adrift. Mental health prevention and early &#013;<br />
intervention were very much part of the original concept of community &#013;<br />
based mental health care. We justified eliminating the funding for those&#013;<br />
 services by labeling them as dollars wasted on the &#8220;worried well&#8221;.</p>
<p>Serving&#013;<br />
 your community means running a receptive and responsive organization: &#013;<br />
flexible hours that fit the schedules of people who work; emergency &#013;<br />
availability; and a presence in all aspects of the community where help &#013;<br />
is needed &#8211; schools, jails, senior centers, foster homes, and on and on.&#013;<br />
 It also means offering one stop shopping, sending people to multiple &#013;<br />
sites of service doesn&#8217;t work very well and doesn&#8217;t work at all when &#013;<br />
there is little to no coordination.</p>
<div class="mobile-ad-container"><!-- 0-Test Responsive --><ins class="adsbygoogle" />&#013;
</div>
<p>Can we transform ourselves into organizations that &#013;<br />
will be propelled by a progressive agenda and supported by new &#013;<br />
coalitions? I think the question is answered by another question. Can we&#013;<br />
 offer a vision of communities increasingly free from addictions and &#013;<br />
mentally fit; a vision of communities where those with histories of &#013;<br />
addiction and mental disorders are included not excluded from mainstream&#013;<br />
 life; and can we be accountable for the quality of services we provide -&#013;<br />
 with national standards and practices? Can we do as education has done,&#013;<br />
 combine vision with accountability? If the answer is yes, then perhaps &#013;<br />
the new entrepreneurial philanthropy will be by our side and perhaps one&#013;<br />
 day President-elect Obama will write about the staff in behavioral &#013;<br />
health as he writes about teachers in The Audacity of Hope, &#8220;There&#8217;s no &#013;<br />
reason why an experienced, highly qualified, and effective teacher &#013;<br />
shouldn&#8217;t earn $100,000 &#8230; teachers in such critical fields as math and&#013;<br />
 science &#8211; as well as those willing to teach in the toughest urban &#013;<br />
schools &#8211; should be paid even more.&#8221;</p>
<p>An Actionable Agenda&#013;<br />
<br />But even as we think big thoughts about health care reform, the &#013;<br />
National Council remains practical and ready to move an actionable &#013;<br />
agenda.</p>
<p>We need to be accountable for continuity of care for &#013;<br />
people with serious mental illnesses and addictions. The National &#013;<br />
Council&#8217;s Health care Collaborative Project successfully brings together&#013;<br />
 behavioral health and primary care organizations offering a &#013;<br />
bi-directional approach for care, addressing the integration of primary &#013;<br />
care services in behavioral health settings as well as the need for &#013;<br />
behavioral health services in primary care. But far too often when the &#013;<br />
patient walks out the door, our responsibility ends &#8211; from hospital to &#013;<br />
community, from mental health to addiction treatment center to primary &#013;<br />
care, from the streets to the jails &#8211; we&#8217;ve created an array of &#013;<br />
disconnected even if well intentioned services. People with chronic &#013;<br />
illnesses and chronic problems need a home; and science has taught us &#013;<br />
that mental and addiction disorders are often chronic conditions. The &#013;<br />
patient-centered medical home &#8211; that provides care management; shifts &#013;<br />
the focus from episodic acute care to managing the health of those &#013;<br />
living with chronic health conditions; and emphasizes self-care that &#013;<br />
resonates with our recovery and resilience orientation &#8211; is a model we &#013;<br />
can embrace. And at the community level the idea of behavioral health &#013;<br />
care organizations providing a &#8220;health care home&#8221; for people with &#013;<br />
serious mental illnesses and addictions makes a lot of sense.</p>
<p>We &#013;<br />
need cost based plus financing that supports clinical excellence &#8211; &#013;<br />
skilled staff delivering nationally recognized practices within &#013;<br />
organizations that live by the rule, if you don&#8217;t measure it you can&#8217;t &#013;<br />
improve it. People want and deserve high quality services but services &#013;<br />
depend on the staff skill, and skilled staff must be adequately &#013;<br />
compensated. Low salaries have created-and are perpetuating-a &#013;<br />
recruitment and retention as well as a quality crisis for behavioral &#013;<br />
health care. We need organizations and staff that can provide state of &#013;<br />
the science behavioral health interventions, can treat and triage &#013;<br />
general health disorders and can lead site of service performance  &#013;<br />
improvements. The public increasingly accepts that mental illnesses and &#013;<br />
addictions are treatable disorders and that recovery is possible. Now we&#013;<br />
 must be sure that there are effective organizations and skilled &#013;<br />
practitioners.</p>
<p>We need a federal mental health funding stream &#013;<br />
dedicated to mental health and integrated treatment services for the &#013;<br />
uninsured. The uninsured have exceptionally high rates of untreated &#013;<br />
mental illnesses with co-occurring addiction disorders and there is no &#013;<br />
safety net. State general fund mental health dollars were reallocated to&#013;<br />
 the Medicaid match. And now state plans to cover the uninsured are &#013;<br />
floundering. We have large numbers of individuals with treatable mental &#013;<br />
illnesses in our overburdened emergency rooms, in jails and on the &#013;<br />
streets &#8230;and without access to the services that can engage them, &#013;<br />
treat them and return them to work. We&#8217;re denying our economy productive&#013;<br />
 taxpayers. We&#8217;re wasting human lives.</p>
<p>We need a pool of funds to &#013;<br />
support investments by behavioral health care organizations in &#013;<br />
information technology. We talk about information technology and service&#013;<br />
 transparency yet organizations that move forward to automate their &#013;<br />
clinical systems find little available support, funding, or technical &#013;<br />
assistance. A September 2006 National Council poll of community &#013;<br />
behavioral health care providers across the country indicated that 8 &#013;<br />
percent had implemented an EHR system with clinical components fully &#013;<br />
functioning. Technology offers critical support to the service &#013;<br />
improvement process; promotes the application of protocols and &#013;<br />
guidelines; helps maintain contact with individuals who move through &#013;<br />
complex systems; and holds the promise to reduce the enormous financial &#013;<br />
burden of paperwork and reporting duplication-all efficiencies that &#013;<br />
improve service quality. The time has come to walk the technology talk.</p>
<p>We&#013;<br />
 must have increased emphasis on and greater funding for research-based &#013;<br />
education and prevention practices. We have prevention and education &#013;<br />
programs that work. Research-based prevention programs that reduce the &#013;<br />
risk of childhood serious emotional disturbance by treating maternal &#013;<br />
depression; and the Nurse-Partnership Program that has an array of &#013;<br />
consistent positive effects across multiple trials. We have &#013;<br />
research-based education programs that increase mental health literacy &#013;<br />
like Mental Health First Aid. The National Academies Institute of &#013;<br />
Medicine report to be issued later in 2008 is expected to underscore the&#013;<br />
 importance of greater emphasis on prevention and health-promotion &#013;<br />
practices that can impede the onset or reduce the severity of mental &#013;<br />
health and substance-use disorders in children, youth and young adults. &#013;<br />
This report presents an excellent opportunity to place prevention &#013;<br />
practices on the new Administration&#8217;s table.</p>
<p>The &#8220;Key Contact&#8221; Club&#013;<br />
<br />We can provide healthcare homes for people with serious mental and &#013;<br />
addictive disorders; we can ensure a skilled workforce, effective &#013;<br />
organizations and quality care; we can help those that are mentally ill &#013;<br />
and uninsured become productive members of their communities; we can &#013;<br />
employ the promise of technology; and we can bring research-based &#013;<br />
prevention and education to our communities. But we know from our &#8217;08 &#013;<br />
successes that we cannot do any of these things without the leadership &#013;<br />
of our members &#8211; members that have real impact, tackling what can appear&#013;<br />
 to be intractable problems. We have a vision, we have an agenda, and we&#013;<br />
 have a &#8220;key contact&#8221; strategy.</p>
<p>Under the direction of Chuck &#013;<br />
Ingoglia, our VP, Public Policy, our strategy is to establish and track a&#013;<br />
 key contact system &#8211; a network of members, their boards, consumers and &#013;<br />
families who have good, and soon to be better, relationships with &#013;<br />
members of Congress. Key contacts must be committed to meeting with the &#013;<br />
elected officials and to keeping us updated on these contacts. Our plan &#013;<br />
is to have a key contact in every congressional district. We&#8217;re taking &#013;<br />
what has been an ad hoc arrangement of our members reaching out to &#013;<br />
Congress and nurturing what we hope will be a formidable rolodex.</p>
<p>When&#013;<br />
 change is being debated in Congress, we will be there. We&#8217;ll leave &#013;<br />
behind references to a system in shambles; we&#8217;ll lead with data; with &#013;<br />
our history as good managers of public dollars; and with an actionable &#013;<br />
agenda. But we need you at our side, as John F. Kennedy said so very &#013;<br />
long ago, &#8220;Political action is the highest responsibility of a citizen.&#8221;</p>
<p>I look forward to hearing from you and to your involvement in the &#8220;key contact&#8221; club.</p>
<div class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app-id='12564813' data-app-id-name='category_below_content' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Healthcare Reform - What About Us' data-link='http://cft.hol.es/healthcare-reform-what-about-us/' data-summary=''></div><div class="mads-block"></div><p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es/healthcare-reform-what-about-us/">Healthcare Reform &#8211; What About Us</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es">New Health and Fitness</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://cft.hol.es/healthcare-reform-what-about-us/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
