OBJECTIVE: This study examined implementation factors associated with addiction and mental health treatment program improvement in services to persons with co-occurring substance use and psychiatric disorders. There were two primary aims: (a) to articulate factors associated with successful program change and (b) to determine whether the effective factors are different by program type. METHODS: Eighty-six programs (addiction treatment n = 54; mental health treatment n = 32) were assessed at baseline and 18-month follow-up using the Dual Diagnosis Capability in Addiction Treatment (DDCAT; McGovern, Matzkin, & Giard,
This survey suggests that one reason that more clients may not be referred to IPS programs is that clinicians do not view employment or financial self-sufficiency as important factors in recovery, further compounding the historical view that these persons are unable to, and uninterested in, working. Such findings call for a provider education and training campaign to highlight the fact that most persons with SMI - like most persons in general - do want to work and, with supports, most are capable of doing so.
Florida, like many other states, has embarked on an experiment with managed mental health care for Medicaid enrollees. Under a 1915(b) waiver, the state's Medicaid agency began a mental health carve-out demonstration in March 1996 in the Tampa Bay area. This qualitative case study seeks to ascertain the impact of the carve-out (and, by comparison, HMO arrangements) on the public mental health sector. Findings suggest that the carve-out demonstration has succeeded in creating a fully integrated mental health delivery system with financial and administrative mechanisms that support a shared clinical model. However, other findings raise concerns about the HMO model in terms of stability, access to care, efficiency, and more generally about the shifting of risk and public responsibility "downstream" to private organizations without sufficient governmental oversight. These findings may offer guidance for other states implementing major managed care policy initiative for disabled Medicaid enrollees.
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