TAMHO - Behavioral Health News & Events Volume 2 Issue 2 | Page 8

Behavioral Health News & Events Volume 2, Issue 2 | April 2014 We Need You in our Courage Beyond Network of Mental Health Providers What is Courage Beyond? Courage Beyond is a community for those facing post-traumatic stress disorder and other invisible wounds of military service. We serve military Americans and their families, ensuring that service men and women and their loved ones have access to the resources and support they need to live a healthy and fulfilling life. What does Courage Beyond Provide? Courage Beyond offers up to 12 individual and/or family counseling services for our military and their families across Tennessee with licensed clinical therapists trained in military culture when families do not have access to or do not want to use their military benefits. Will I get paid for my services? Yes! Through the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (TDMHSAS) Courage Beyond has received state appropriation dollars for our Tennesseans. Courage Beyond offers $100 for the first 4 sessions, $90 with a $10 co-pay for the 2nd 4 sessions, and $80 for the final 4 sessions with a $20 co-pay. Additional sessions may be authorized if the service recipient meets medical necessity. What if I am not trained in military culture? Courage Beyond will provide training for you. "Protecting patients' protected health information is important to all health care providers and the new tool we are releasing today will help them assess the security of their organizations," said Karen DeSalvo, M.D., national coordinator for health information technology. "The SRA tool and its additional resources have been designed to help health care providers conduct a risk assessment to support better security for patient health data." "We are pleased to have collaborated with the ONC on this project," said Susan McAndrew, deputy director of OCR's Division of Health Information Privacy. "We believe this tool will greatly assist providers in performing a risk assessment to meet their obligations under the HIPAA Security Rule." The SRA tool's website contains a User Guide and Tutorial video to help providers begin using the tool. Videos on risk analysis and contingency planning are available at the website to provide further context. The tool is available for both Windows operating systems and iOS iPads. Download the Windows version athttp://www.HealthIT.gov/security-riskassessment. The iOS iPad version is available from the Apple App Store (search under "HHS SRA tool"). The ONC is committed to improving the SRA tool in future update cycles, and is requesting that users provide feedback. Public comments on the SRA tool will be accepted at http://www.HealthIT.gov/ security-risk-assessment until June 2, 2014. How will I get referrals? You can refer a person you are already seeing that may be having difficulty paying or has dropped out of services because they cannot pay. OR Courage Beyond will refer potential service recipients who contact Courage Beyond. How do I become part of your network if am a facility or an individual provider? Contact Kathy Campbell at [email protected] to learn more today! For more information about all of Courage Beyond’s services, call 888.497.0379 or visit www.CourageBeyond.org. treatment (SBIRT), an evidence-based practice, for youth in up to 30 community behavioral health organizations throughout the country. The project will also address how Medicaid, through its Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) mandate, can pay for SBIRT services. “Youth with mental illnesses are at high risk for developing a substance use disorder, and behavioral health providers must take every opportunity to address these concerns,” said Linda Rosenberg, President and CEO of the National Council for Behavioral Health (National Council). “This significant investment in early intervention will help many youth grow into healthy adults.” Mental health and substance use treatment organizations that serve youth will implement the initiative and seek state reimbursement. Sites will develop workflows for the screening to treatment process, including identifying where and how screening will be implemented within the agency, what screening tool will be used, and how information will be collected. “Despite a strong evidence base, the use of SBIRT is still limited among the organizations that have contact with youth most at risk for developing substance use disorders,” continues Rosenberg. “Addressing substance use during this critical time is an important investment into reducing the costly impact of addictions in our society.” The National Council will select participating organizations through a competitive application process beginning this spring, and participants will be announced in the summer. Contact: [email protected] or 202.684.7457 Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Awards National Council $1.3M to Address Early Intervention for Substance Use Grant supports up to 30 behavioral health organizations to adopt SBIRT, motivational interviewing for youth Tobacco Cessation Did you know that people with mental illnesses and addictions can die decades earl