Working to Improve Mental Health Services: The North Carolina Advocacy Effort

Author:

Foy Jane Meschan1,Earls Marian F.2,Horowitz David A.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

2. UNC-Chapel Hill, the Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital Pediatric Teaching Program and Guilford Child Health, Greensboro, North Carolina

3. UNC-Chapel Hill, Triangle Pediatric Center, Cary, North Carolina

Abstract

Poor reimbursement of pediatricians for behavioral and developmental services and the disarray of children’s mental health services in the state led leaders of the North Carolina chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics to organize an advocacy effort with the following objectives: 1) to articulate pediatricians’ perspective on the current crisis in delivering and coordinating children’s behavioral health services; 2) to represent the collective voice of both academic and community pediatricians in dialogue with mental health providers, Medicaid leaders, and the health and mental health segments of state government; 3) to build consensus about an achievable plan of action to address pediatricians’ reimbursement and systems issues; 4) to develop a full and appropriate role for pediatricians as providers and, potentially, coordinators of behavioral health care; and 5) to facilitate implementation of Medicaid changes, as a first step in carrying out this plan. This article describes the 24-month process that achieved these objectives.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference13 articles.

1. Comprehensive Child Health Plan: 2000–2005.Report to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. Chapel Hill, NC: North Carolina Institute of Medicine; May 23, 2000:86

2. Burns BJ, Costello EJ, Angold A, et al. Children’s mental health service use across service sectors. Health Aff.1995;14:147–159

3. Comprehensive Child Health Plan: 2000–2005. Report to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. Chapel Hill, NC: North Carolina Institute of Medicine; May 23, 2000:77

4. Data on the Mental Health Benefit. Prepared by the North Carolina Psychological Association from data supplied by the North Carolina State Health Plan Office. April 1999

5. Sturm R. How expensive is unlimited mental health coverage under managed care?JAMA.1997;278:1533–1537

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