Grant Partners
Brookline Community Mental Health Center
Healthy Lives: Brookline Community Mental Health Center will serve 200 low-income adults living in Brookline or Boston who present with serious mental illness (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression, severe anxiety, or PTSD) and at least two chronic medical conditions (including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or COPD). The health center will engage patients in their care, help them coordinate the services they receive, provide wellness interventions, offer disease management programs, home visits, and individual and group counseling. The intent of the project is to help patients move from passive recipients to active participants in their health care and by doing so, reduce cost and improve quality.
Boston Medical Center
Boston Medical Center (BMC) will integrate a depression-screning tool into the Re-Engineered Discharge (RED) protocol, an 11-step process for reducing the risk of patients being readmitted to the hospital. Results have shown that patients who receive RED are 30% less likely to be readmitted within 30 days of discharge. Because further research has shown that patients with symptoms of depression are 74% more likely than those without to be readmitted in this same 30-day window, RED-Plus, as the enhanced intervention will be known, will be piloted on BMC's inpatient services for Boston Medical Center HealthNet patients, whose primary care providers are located in the 15 community health centers affiliated with BMC.
Steppingstone, Inc.
Steppingstone, Inc. will partner with Stanley Street Treatment and Resources (SSTAR) to create a new program called MyCare, an effort to promote a more pro-active approach to health care for those in Steppingstone’s residential recovery programs. The target population for MyCare is persons in early recovery from chronic substance abuse and mental health disorders. Over 70% of this population has recent histories of homelessness and more than 70% have chronic conditions, in addition to their substance abuse or mental health disorders. The project will begin with residents of its Fall River women’s program in year one and will incorporate the Fall River men’s program in the second year, and its Stone Residence for chronically homeless individuals in the third year. The program projects to serve 465 clients over the three years with one-on-one assistance and intervention.
Lynn Community Health Center
Lynn Community Health Center will develop and evaluate its Integrated Care Project, an effort that integrates primary care and behavioral health care. It will also develop a universal care plan supported by an electronic health record. The project will create new models of care management and coordination for the health center’s highest-risk patients. The health center believes that more appropriate services and increased treatment compliance will result in fewer emergency room visits and inpatient hospital care, reducing overall health care costs. Over the three-year project, the health center will target 1,000 patients who have the highest rates of emergency room visits and inpatient hospital care. To serve these patients, Lynn will develop an intensive care management team in which primary and behavioral health providers will work together.
Holyoke Health Center
Holyoke Health Center will serve 300 patients at high-risk for preventable hospitalization, re-hospitalization, unnecessary emergency department visits, or adverse drug events due to diabetes. The project will begin with identifying patients with diabetes with an unnecessary emergency room visit and recent hospitalization at Holyoke Medical Center, or eight or more prescriptions for diabetes. A partnership with the Massachusetts Medicaid program will identify high-cost patients and work to understand how to predict which are amenable to disease management programs, leading to more effective, lower-cost services.
Community Healthlink, Inc.
MyLink: Community Healthlink and its hospital partners will identify 300 “high user” patients and provide them with a MyLink community support worker who will meet them in the emergency room, maintain regular telephone and in-home contact, provide assistance in meeting basic needs, help anticipate crises, and connect the patient with the appropriate level of care (primary care, home health services, or behavioral healthcare). The project expects to expand to Health Alliance Hospital in Leominster and St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester, and collaborate with dispatchers and EMTs to provide additional insight into the needs of the patients they treat and transport.
Brockton Neighborhood Health Center
Brockton Neighborhood Health Center (BNHC) will target high risk patients, defined as those having had two or more emergency department visits and/or psychiatric hospitalizations within six months, and/or patients presenting to the urgent care department two or more times within six months without consistent follow-up with a primary care provider. BNHC’s Primary Care Behavioral Health Model aims to increase patient access to behavioral health services, enhance coordination between primary care and behavioral health, and improve health outcomes. Partners include Good Samaritan Medical Center and Brockton Hospital, inpatient psychiatric units, community mental health clinics, and insurance companies.
Alliance Foundation for Community Health
A Collaborative Practice Model for Improving Pediatric Mental Health Value: The Alliance Foundation for Community Health will develop a new method of identifying youth at risk for low quality/high cost mental health treatment. The sample for this study will be drawn from the 101,000 youth under age 20 insured by Network Health. The project will also look within diagnosis groups to compare treatments and expenditures across race/ethnicity, language, geography, and other characteristics. In the second phase of the effort, the project will identify primary care providers who have the largest number of high-expenditure youth and work with them and families to develop more cost-effective approaches to treatment.
Visiting Nurse Association of Greater Lowell, Inc.
Visiting Nurse Association of Greater Lowell will deliver home health care services, self-care education and coaching, and tele-monitoring to high-cost patients identified by the Lowell General Physician Hospital Organization (PHO) and Lowell Community Health Center. The project will serve 100 “high utilizers” in its first year and will triple in size by its third year. Targeted patients will be those diagnosed with congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or diabetes. In-home assessment, coaching, and monitoring will be provided to patients who do not qualify for these services under current payment and benefit guidelines because they are not homebound and do not have acute, but rather chronic conditions. The project’s goal is to demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of these services.
Brookline Community Mental Health Center
Healthy Lives: Brookline Community Mental Health Center will serve 200 low-income adults living in Brookline or Boston who present with serious mental illness (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression, severe anxiety, or PTSD) and at least two chronic medical conditions (including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or COPD). The health center will engage patients in their care, help them coordinate the services they receive, provide wellness interventions, offer disease management programs, home visits, and individual and group counseling. The intent of the project is to help patients move from passive recipients to active participants in their health care and by doing so, reduce cost and improve quality.
Boston Medical Center
Boston Medical Center (BMC) will integrate a depression-screning tool into the Re-Engineered Discharge (RED) protocol, an 11-step process for reducing the risk of patients being readmitted to the hospital. Results have shown that patients who receive RED are 30% less likely to be readmitted within 30 days of discharge. Because further research has shown that patients with symptoms of depression are 74% more likely than those without to be readmitted in this same 30-day window, RED-Plus, as the enhanced intervention will be known, will be piloted on BMC's inpatient services for Boston Medical Center HealthNet patients, whose primary care providers are located in the 15 community health centers affiliated with BMC.
Steppingstone, Inc.
Steppingstone, Inc. will partner with Stanley Street Treatment and Resources (SSTAR) to create a new program called MyCare, an effort to promote a more pro-active approach to health care for those in Steppingstone’s residential recovery programs. The target population for MyCare is persons in early recovery from chronic substance abuse and mental health disorders. Over 70% of this population has recent histories of homelessness and more than 70% have chronic conditions, in addition to their substance abuse or mental health disorders. The project will begin with residents of its Fall River women’s program in year one and will incorporate the Fall River men’s program in the second year, and its Stone Residence for chronically homeless individuals in the third year. The program projects to serve 465 clients over the three years with one-on-one assistance and intervention.
Lynn Community Health Center
Lynn Community Health Center will develop and evaluate its Integrated Care Project, an effort that integrates primary care and behavioral health care. It will also develop a universal care plan supported by an electronic health record. The project will create new models of care management and coordination for the health center’s highest-risk patients. The health center believes that more appropriate services and increased treatment compliance will result in fewer emergency room visits and inpatient hospital care, reducing overall health care costs. Over the three-year project, the health center will target 1,000 patients who have the highest rates of emergency room visits and inpatient hospital care. To serve these patients, Lynn will develop an intensive care management team in which primary and behavioral health providers will work together.
Holyoke Health Center
Holyoke Health Center will serve 300 patients at high-risk for preventable hospitalization, re-hospitalization, unnecessary emergency department visits, or adverse drug events due to diabetes. The project will begin with identifying patients with diabetes with an unnecessary emergency room visit and recent hospitalization at Holyoke Medical Center, or eight or more prescriptions for diabetes. A partnership with the Massachusetts Medicaid program will identify high-cost patients and work to understand how to predict which are amenable to disease management programs, leading to more effective, lower-cost services.
Community Healthlink, Inc.
MyLink: Community Healthlink and its hospital partners will identify 300 “high user” patients and provide them with a MyLink community support worker who will meet them in the emergency room, maintain regular telephone and in-home contact, provide assistance in meeting basic needs, help anticipate crises, and connect the patient with the appropriate level of care (primary care, home health services, or behavioral healthcare). The project expects to expand to Health Alliance Hospital in Leominster and St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester, and collaborate with dispatchers and EMTs to provide additional insight into the needs of the patients they treat and transport.