Kansas Mental
Health Coalition

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  • April 24, 2014 4:40 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    Panel: Jails can't be 'dumping ground' in a mental health crisis

    Panelists discuss warrantless apprehension of people in mental health crisis

    ANN MARIE BUSH/THE CAPITAL-JOURNAL

    Audience members listen Thursday as panelists speak about warrantless apprehension of people in a mental health crisis.

    By Ann Marie Bush

    Mental health advocates, law enforcement officers and hospital representatives spent two hours Thursday discussing warrantless apprehension of people who are in a mental health crisis.

    About 40 people, including officers from the Topeka Police Department, Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office, Lawrence, Sedgwick County and Kansas City, Kan., gathered in a training room at the Law Enforcement Center from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. for the first Topeka/Shawnee County Crisis Intervention Team roundtable discussion.

    “I’m pleased,” said Topeka police Capt. Bill Cochran, who helped organized the event. “We had great panelists.”

    Often, jails and hospitals become a “dumping ground” for people who need mental health care, Cochran said. CIT plans to host future roundtables to discuss other mental health issues, he said.

    Panelists for Thursday’s presentation included Rick Cagen, executive director of NAMI Kansas; Cindy Hasvold, an emergency department RN case manager for Stormont-Vail Health Care; Shawn Kimble, an officer with TPD; Darren Root, Shawnee County assistant district attorney; Karen Stafford, crisis and intake manager for Valeo Behavioral Health Care; and Bill Rein, chief counsel with the Kansas Department of Aging and Disability Services.

    Rein, who helped write Kansas’ mental health law in 1986 and the Mental Health Reform Act of 1990, talked about the Texas mental health law for emergency detention and how it differs slightly from the Kansas statute for emergency detention.

    “The issues are extremely difficult,” Rein said of mental health and the law.

    Root also spoke about the similarities and differences of the two laws. He said while the wording is different, the “purpose is the same.”

    The Kansas statute addresses care and treatment for mentally ill people and the investigation, emergency detention, and authority and duty of law enforcement officers.

    The Kansas statute states, “Any law enforcement officer who has a reasonable belief formed upon investigation that a person is a mentally ill person and because of such person’s mental illness is likely to cause harm to self or others if allowed to remain at liberty may take the person into custody without a warrant.”

    The Texas law states, “A peace officer, without a warrant, may take a person into custody if the officer has reason to believe and does believe that the person is mentally ill and because of that mental illness there is a substantial risk of serious harm to the person or to others unless the person is immediately restrained.”

    Audience members and panelists discussed how the wording “harm to self” is vague and could be interpreted differently by agencies across the state. Agencies also can interrupt the law differently.

    Amy Campbell, with the Mental Health Coalition of Kansas, said, “We can change the words, but nothing will change on the ground.”

    Several audience members and panelists emphasized that Kansas needs more resources. Some also said a lot of people are being sent to the state hospital when they could be better served in a less-restricted local treatment facility or intermediate program.

    “I think the law works pretty well,” Root said. “It comes down to resources.”

  • April 24, 2014 12:36 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    TOPEKA – Governor Sam Brownback today signed a proclamation designating May as Mental Health Awareness Month in Kansas, calling upon all citizens, government agencies, public and private institutions, businesses, and schools in Kansas to commit to increasing awareness and understanding of mental illness and the need for appropriate and accessible services for all people with mental health conditions.

    “We are here today to remind Kansans that mental illness is a common, painful experience for many people and their families,” Governor Brownback said. “My administration is working to strengthen the community and institutional supports our state offers those in need of help.”

    “Mental illness is often called an invisible illness. Many people are suffering in silence. One in five Americans has experienced mental illness within the past year.  It doesn’t discriminate. Anyone can develop a mental illness,” Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) Shawn Sullivan said at the proclamation signing ceremony.

    “Attitudes around mental illness are beginning to change, but we still have a long way to go toward being able to discuss mental illness as a health challenge,” Secretary Sullivan said. “Our agency is committed to bringing awareness, recognition and education to the issues surrounding behavioral health.”

    KDADS has programs in place to allow all Kansans to play a role in building safe, healthy and supportive communities that support those with mental illness.

    “Community initiatives and individual citizens’ actions are vital to combat mental health misconceptions and stigma.  Let’s all begin by having genuine, open conversations about how mental health issues impact our state, communities and neighborhoods,” Secretary Sullivan said. “We can help stop the discrimination and end the silence about mental health issues.”

    Information about KDADS’ mental health programs and services, as well as collaborative efforts with community and advocacy groups focused on mental health, is available on the agency website at www.kdads.ks.gov<http://www.kdads.ks.gov> and at http://www.kansasbehavioralhealthservices.org<http://www.kansasbehavioralhealthservices.org/bhs1.0/>.



    For more information, contact:
    Angela de Rocha
    Director of Communications
    Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services
    785-806-7482

    ###

  • April 14, 2014 4:46 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    READ IT HERE.

    Rick Goscha, Co-Chair of the Governor's Mental Health Task Force will be a guest speaker at the KMHC April 23rd meeting to discuss the report.

    The Kansas Mental Health Coalition is pleased the report has been completed and looks forward to seeing Task Force recommendations put into action.  Staff at KDADS is going over the report to prioritize potential action items.  At this point, it is not clear what changes will be implemented or when.


  • April 01, 2014 3:19 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    The Kansas Legislature is in its final week of the regular session and knee-deep in the development of a new K-12 budget proposal.   The Kansas Supreme Court issued a decision March 7, ordering the Legislature to address inequities in its education funding plan prior to July 1.  The Court ruled that cuts in State K-12 spending had resulted in unbalanced funding for wealthy and poor districts that is unconstitutional.  As a result, the House and Senate pulled back their K-12 education plans for re-shuffling.  

    Advocates for other budget issues including behavioral health are waiting to see whether or not the education budget plans will run on their own, or if other budget issues will be rolled into a more traditional "mega-budget" bill.  It is likely these issues may be kept separate for now to avoid floor amendments that draw from one agencies budget to fund another.  Updated consensus revenue estimates are due during the legislative spring break, and the larger budget will likely wait for that information. 

    Last week, the Governor stated that he expected the Legislature would be able to Last week, the Governor stated that he expected the Legislature would be able to resolve the K-12 funding issue by the end of this week, but that is looking like a very difficult goal at this point.

    The development of Senate and House education plans have had some complications.  The House Appropriations Chairman introduced a plan last week that was quickly pulled back by the Speaker of the House.  Speaker Merrick stated that the leadership had not agreed to a plan that included charter school measures and released a plan without those provisions.

    On Monday, Rep. Marc Rhoades quit as Chair of the House Appropriations Committee over disagreement with the Speaker regarding the education funding proposal.  Appropriations is considered the most powerful committee in the House of Representatives.

    As a result, the Vice-Chair Rep. Gene Suellentrop (R-Wichita) moved into the Chair position and Rep. Marvin Kleeb (R-Overland Park) was appointed Vice-Chair.  The Appropriations Committee met most of the last two days and received public testimony on the new House education proposal.  Interestingly, there are Appropriations members who continue to show interest in including charter school policies in the funding bill. Democrats have expressed dismay that these budget bills are loaded with policy and should be heard by the Education Committees rather than budget committees.

    "Drop Dead Day" is April 4 - the deadline for bills to be passed in the regular session.  The Legislature will adjourn for their spring break - when the Governor reviews and signs bills - and will return for the veto session on April 30.  The 90th day of the 2014 Legislative Session is May 15, but legislative leaders have indicated that they hope to wrap-up before then.  

  • February 18, 2014 11:12 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)
    The Governor's Mental Health Task Force held its final meeting February 13.  Governor Sam Brownback, KDADS Secretary Shawn Sullivan, and KDHE Secretary Moser participated in the meeting.  The Task Force is expected to wrap up its report in March.

    The Task Force is essentially Phase 2 of the Governor's Mental Health Initiative announced in January 2013.  Phase 1 is the diversion of funding for new regional priorities conducted by five Regional Recovery Service Centers (RRSC).  The five regions are currently implementing their goals - see more information at http://www.kansasbehavioralhealthservices.org/bhs1.0/ 
  • October 22, 2013 10:58 AM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    [The Nation]

    Published on The Nation (http://www.thenation.com

    Suicide Rate Climbs by 30 Percent in Kansas as Government Slashes Mental Health Budgets 

    Allison Kilkenny | October 21, 2013

    [http://www.thenation.com/sites/default/files/user/255496/kansassuicides_wichitaeagle_img.jpg]

    (Wichita Eagle)

    The Kansas Department of Health and Environment recently released a startling report<http://www.kdheks.gov/hci/as/2012/AS_2012.pdf> [1](PDF) showing a 30 percent increase in suicides from 2011. Nationwide, the number of deaths by suicide surpassed the number of deaths by motor vehicle accidents<http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6217a1.htm?s_cid=mm6217a1_w> [2] in 2009, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided data.

    The Wichita Eagle reports<http://www.kansas.com/2013/10/20/3068874/suicide-rate-climbs-by-30-percent.html#storylink=cpy> [3] that the largest increase in suicides in Kansas occurred among white males, who already were the segment of the population most likely to take their own lives. More than 80 percent of suicides in Kansas last year were men, like Scott Dennis, a 42-year-old fitness company owner.

    Last year, Dennis was busy getting ready for an industry convention in Las Vegas.

    Dennis had already paid for a $20,000 sponsored dinner, booked his flight, hotel and rental car and sent out some work e-mails.

    He showered and shaved. He packed his bag.

    “He wrote a note that said, ‘I can’t live like this anymore,’ and left his wallet and his watch on his desk, drove to Wal-Mart down the street and shot himself in the chest,” said Brook Phillips, a friend of Dennis for 35 years.

    Nationally, the CDC reported<http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/jan-june13/suicide_05-03.html> [4] a spike in suicide rates in 2010 among the middle-aged, a 28 percent rise overall, a 40 percent jump among white Americans, and among men in their 50s, suicides increased by more than 48 percent. Guns remained the leading method used in all suicides, followed by poisoning, overdoses, and suffocation.

    Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the CDC told PBS: “We don’t know what specifically is causing [the suicide spike], but the trend has been consistent, and if anything our numbers would underestimate the gravity of the problem.”

    Frieden also commented that more people die from prescription opiates today than from heroin and cocaine combined, and called alcohol a “significant contributor to depression and to mental health problems.”

    But many people consume opiates and alcohol to self-medicate, or to escape their dire economic circumstances. One popular theory floated to explain the suicide epidemic is that the recession has caused emotional trauma in individuals.

    Pat Smith<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/02/suicide-rate-rises-middle-aged_n_3203936.html> [5], the violence-prevention program coordinator for the Michigan Department of Community Health, told The Huffington Post the recession may have pushed already troubled people over the edge. Being unable to find a job or settling for one with lower pay or prestige could add “that final weight to a whole chain of events,” she said.

    There does appear to be a correlation between the recession and increasing suicide rates. For example, calls to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline increased by 36 percent<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/26/suicide-rates-up-since-re_n_658668.html> [6] in 2008, and another 15 percent in 2009.

    Data compiled by The Wall Street Journal<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125892118623059701.html> [7] in late 2009 showed increases in several states. Of 19 states surveyed, 13 saw marginal increases in suicide rates. Tennessee had the highest rate of increase, with over 15 percent more suicides in 2008 than 2007. Across the 19 states, the average increase was 2.3 percent.

    And as The Huffington Post notes, this same trend was also seen during the Great Depression, when the suicide rate increased by 21 percent in the early 1930s (about 17 of every 100,000 people<http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/great-depression.htm> [8]).

    Even though there have been horrific stories in the news related to the nation’s poor mental health care of its citizens (Aaron Alexis’ attack in Washington’s Navy Yard and Miriam Carey’s murder by DC police), officials seem determined to continue slashing funding. From 2009 to 2011, states cut mental budgets by a combined $4 billion<http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2013/10/10/mental-health-loses-funding-as-government-continues-shutdown/> [9], the largest single combined reduction to mental health spending since de-institutionalization in the 1970s.

    In Chicago alone, state budget cuts combined with reductions in county and city mental health services led to shutting six of the city’s 12 mental health clinics, Forbes reports.

    Threats of sequestration<http://blog.usa.gov/post/44071444149/what-is-sequestration> [10] in 2013 had a significant impact on people’s ability to access mental health services and programs, including children’s mental health services, suicide prevention programs, homeless outreach programs, substance abuse treatment programs, housing and employment assistance, health research, and virtually every type of public mental health support. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration<http://www.samhsa.gov/> [11] (SAMHSA) claimed it alone would be cutting $168 million from its 2013 spending, including a reduction of $83.1 million in grants<http://careforyourmind.org/how-the-federal-government-sequestration-impacts-mental-health-services/> [12] for substance abuse treatment programs.

    Please support our journalism. Get a digital subscription for just $9.50!<https://subscribe.thenation.com/servlet/OrdersGateway?cds_mag_code=NAN&cds_page_id=122425&cds_response_key=I12SART1> [13]

    Since 2009, a community health center in Sedgwick County, Kansas, has lost 53 percent of its state funding, according to Marilyn Cook, executive director of Comcare of Sedwick County. She told The Wichita Eagle the county is trying to appeal to the state to replace some of that money.

    “This is a community problem and a public health problem, not just a mental health problem,” Cook said. “Treatment dollars have gone down and more and more people are coming to us, a growing number without any other payment for services.”

    She said they’ve seen an increase in the number of calls to the crisis program and more law enforcement officers have been trained in crisis intervention, which is a good thing, she said, but “without adequate funding, it’s difficult for us to get to everybody who needs care and help.”

    In 2012, Sedgwick County 911 dispatch received more than 2,400 calls related to suicide threats or attempts and more than 61,000 crisis phone calls for suicide risk or urgent mental health help.

    Liz McGinness, a member of the Sedgwick County Suicide Prevention Coalition and a retired school psychologist and mental health crisis team director for USD 259, says the suicides may be related to social stigmas and the economy.

    “I think one of the biggest things we can rally around is reducing stigma and talking about getting help,” McGinness said.

    “There has been an uptick in suicides in middle-class, white professional men.… We do likely attribute that incidence as being related to the economy, for men particularly. So much of their identity is tied up in their job, and they lose their moorings.”

    Greg Kaufmann wrote about what defunding Obamacare<http://Even%20though%20suicide%20%20rates%20are%20climbing,%20the%20government%20continues%20to%20slash%20mental%20health%20%20budgets.> [14] really means for those in need.

    ________________________________

    Source URL: http://www.thenation.com/blog/176745/suicide-rate-climbs-30-percent-kansas-government-slashes-mental-health-budgets

    Links:

    [1] http://www.kdheks.gov/hci/as/2012/AS_2012.pdf

    [2] http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6217a1.htm?s_cid=mm6217a1_w

    [3] http://www.kansas.com/2013/10/20/3068874/suicide-rate-climbs-by-30-percent.html#storylink=cpy

    [4] http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/jan-june13/suicide_05-03.html

    [5] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/02/suicide-rate-rises-middle-aged_n_3203936.html

    [6] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/26/suicide-rates-up-since-re_n_658668.html

    [7] http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125892118623059701.html

    [8] http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/great-depression.htm

    [9] http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2013/10/10/mental-health-loses-funding-as-government-continues-shutdown/

    [10] http://blog.usa.gov/post/44071444149/what-is-sequestration

    [11] http://www.samhsa.gov/

    [12] http://careforyourmind.org/how-the-federal-government-sequestration-impacts-mental-health-services/

    [13] https://subscribe.thenation.com/servlet/OrdersGateway?cds_mag_code=NAN&amp;cds_page_id=122425&amp;cds_response_key=I12SART1

    [14] http://Even though suicide rates are climbing, the government continues to slash mental health budgets.


    [The Nation]

    Published on The Nation (http://www.thenation.com) ________________________________ Suicide Rate Climbs by 30 Percent in Kansas as Government Slashes Mental Health Budgets Allison Kilkenny | October 21, 2013

    [http://www.thenation.com/sites/default/files/user/255496/kansassuicides_wichitaeagle_img.jpg]

    (Wichita Eagle)

    The Kansas Department of Health and Environment recently released a startling report<http://www.kdheks.gov/hci/as/2012/AS_2012.pdf> [1](PDF) showing a 30 percent increase in suicides from 2011. Nationwide, the number of deaths by suicide surpassed the number of deaths by motor vehicle accidents<http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6217a1.htm?s_cid=mm6217a1_w> [2] in 2009, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided data.

    The Wichita Eagle reports<http://www.kansas.com/2013/10/20/3068874/suicide-rate-climbs-by-30-percent.html#storylink=cpy> [3] that the largest increase in suicides in Kansas occurred among white males, who already were the segment of the population most likely to take their own lives. More than 80 percent of suicides in Kansas last year were men, like Scott Dennis, a 42-year-old fitness company owner.

    Last year, Dennis was busy getting ready for an industry convention in Las Vegas.

    Dennis had already paid for a $20,000 sponsored dinner, booked his flight, hotel and rental car and sent out some work e-mails.

    He showered and shaved. He packed his bag.

    “He wrote a note that said, ‘I can’t live like this anymore,’ and left his wallet and his watch on his desk, drove to Wal-Mart down the street and shot himself in the chest,” said Brook Phillips, a friend of Dennis for 35 years.

    Nationally, the CDC reported<http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/jan-june13/suicide_05-03.html> [4] a spike in suicide rates in 2010 among the middle-aged, a 28 percent rise overall, a 40 percent jump among white Americans, and among men in their 50s, suicides increased by more than 48 percent. Guns remained the leading method used in all suicides, followed by poisoning, overdoses, and suffocation.

    Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the CDC told PBS: “We don’t know what specifically is causing [the suicide spike], but the trend has been consistent, and if anything our numbers would underestimate the gravity of the problem.”

    Frieden also commented that more people die from prescription opiates today than from heroin and cocaine combined, and called alcohol a “significant contributor to depression and to mental health problems.”

    But many people consume opiates and alcohol to self-medicate, or to escape their dire economic circumstances. One popular theory floated to explain the suicide epidemic is that the recession has caused emotional trauma in individuals.

    Pat Smith<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/02/suicide-rate-rises-middle-aged_n_3203936.html> [5], the violence-prevention program coordinator for the Michigan Department of Community Health, told The Huffington Post the recession may have pushed already troubled people over the edge. Being unable to find a job or settling for one with lower pay or prestige could add “that final weight to a whole chain of events,” she said.

    There does appear to be a correlation between the recession and increasing suicide rates. For example, calls to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline increased by 36 percent<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/26/suicide-rates-up-since-re_n_658668.html> [6] in 2008, and another 15 percent in 2009.

    Data compiled by The Wall Street Journal<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125892118623059701.html> [7] in late 2009 showed increases in several states. Of 19 states surveyed, 13 saw marginal increases in suicide rates. Tennessee had the highest rate of increase, with over 15 percent more suicides in 2008 than 2007. Across the 19 states, the average increase was 2.3 percent.

    And as The Huffington Post notes, this same trend was also seen during the Great Depression, when the suicide rate increased by 21 percent in the early 1930s (about 17 of every 100,000 people<http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/great-depression.htm> [8]).

    Even though there have been horrific stories in the news related to the nation’s poor mental health care of its citizens (Aaron Alexis’ attack in Washington’s Navy Yard and Miriam Carey’s murder by DC police), officials seem determined to continue slashing funding. From 2009 to 2011, states cut mental budgets by a combined $4 billion<http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2013/10/10/mental-health-loses-funding-as-government-continues-shutdown/> [9], the largest single combined reduction to mental health spending since de-institutionalization in the 1970s.

    In Chicago alone, state budget cuts combined with reductions in county and city mental health services led to shutting six of the city’s 12 mental health clinics, Forbes reports.

    Threats of sequestration<http://blog.usa.gov/post/44071444149/what-is-sequestration> [10] in 2013 had a significant impact on people’s ability to access mental health services and programs, including children’s mental health services, suicide prevention programs, homeless outreach programs, substance abuse treatment programs, housing and employment assistance, health research, and virtually every type of public mental health support. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration<http://www.samhsa.gov/> [11] (SAMHSA) claimed it alone would be cutting $168 million from its 2013 spending, including a reduction of $83.1 million in grants<http://careforyourmind.org/how-the-federal-government-sequestration-impacts-mental-health-services/> [12] for substance abuse treatment programs.

    Please support our journalism. Get a digital subscription for just $9.50!<https://subscribe.thenation.com/servlet/OrdersGateway?cds_mag_code=NAN&cds_page_id=122425&cds_response_key=I12SART1> [13]

    Since 2009, a community health center in Sedgwick County, Kansas, has lost 53 percent of its state funding, according to Marilyn Cook, executive director of Comcare of Sedwick County. She told The Wichita Eagle the county is trying to appeal to the state to replace some of that money.

    “This is a community problem and a public health problem, not just a mental health problem,” Cook said. “Treatment dollars have gone down and more and more people are coming to us, a growing number without any other payment for services.”

    She said they’ve seen an increase in the number of calls to the crisis program and more law enforcement officers have been trained in crisis intervention, which is a good thing, she said, but “without adequate funding, it’s difficult for us to get to everybody who needs care and help.”

    In 2012, Sedgwick County 911 dispatch received more than 2,400 calls related to suicide threats or attempts and more than 61,000 crisis phone calls for suicide risk or urgent mental health help.

    Liz McGinness, a member of the Sedgwick County Suicide Prevention Coalition and a retired school psychologist and mental health crisis team director for USD 259, says the suicides may be related to social stigmas and the economy.

    “I think one of the biggest things we can rally around is reducing stigma and talking about getting help,” McGinness said.

    “There has been an uptick in suicides in middle-class, white professional men.… We do likely attribute that incidence as being related to the economy, for men particularly. So much of their identity is tied up in their job, and they lose their moorings.”

    Greg Kaufmann wrote about what defunding Obamacare<http://Even%20though%20suicide%20%20rates%20are%20climbing,%20the%20government%20continues%20to%20slash%20mental%20health%20%20budgets.> [14] really means for those in need.

    ________________________________

    Source URL: http://www.thenation.com/blog/176745/suicide-rate-climbs-30-percent-kansas-government-slashes-mental-health-budgets

    Links:

    [1] http://www.kdheks.gov/hci/as/2012/AS_2012.pdf

    [2] http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6217a1.htm?s_cid=mm6217a1_w

    [3] http://www.kansas.com/2013/10/20/3068874/suicide-rate-climbs-by-30-percent.html#storylink=cpy

    [4] http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/jan-june13/suicide_05-03.html

    [5] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/02/suicide-rate-rises-middle-aged_n_3203936.html

    [6] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/26/suicide-rates-up-since-re_n_658668.html

    [7] http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125892118623059701.html

    [8] http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/great-depression.htm

    [9] http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2013/10/10/mental-health-loses-funding-as-government-continues-shutdown/

    [10] http://blog.usa.gov/post/44071444149/what-is-sequestration

    [11] http://www.samhsa.gov/

    [12] http://careforyourmind.org/how-the-federal-government-sequestration-impacts-mental-health-services/

    [13] https://subscribe.thenation.com/servlet/OrdersGateway?cds_mag_code=NAN&amp;cds_page_id=122425&amp;cds_response_key=I12SART1

    [14] http://Even though suicide rates are climbing, the government continues to slash mental health budgets.

  • July 22, 2013 3:04 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)
     - Kansas Medicaid officials are preparing for a new phase of KanCare that will target services to the seriously mentally ill.

    They will be using a “health home” model that appears to be producing good undefined though preliminary undefined results in other states and which will allow Kansas to draw additional federal aid dollars as part of the Affordable Care Act.

    Among the goals of federal and state officials in using the model is to reduce emergency room visits and hospital readmissions among Medicaid enrollees.   Read KHI Article.
  • July 19, 2013 3:03 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    TOPEKA - State welfare officials are seeking recommendations on what to do with Rainbow Mental Health Facility in Kansas City. The hospital has been mostly closed since November 2011 after failing state fire marshal inspections. The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, which oversees the four state hospitals, is publishing a formal Request for Information or RFI to get ideas or proposals for how to move forward with the facility.

    The public has until August 5th to submit recommendations.  Read KHI Article.

  • June 02, 2013 2:00 AM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)
     
    The Budget Bill - H Sub for SB 171

    After adopting the one and only budget bill of the 2013 Legislative Session, the Kansas Senate adjourned around 2:00 a.m. Although June 2nd would technically be the 100th day, it counts as 99 since they worked straight through from Saturday, June 1st.

    Both the House and Senate had to have a Call to adopt the one and only budget bill of the 2013 session, where the doors are locked and everyone is supposed to report to the chamber to vote, while hesitant legislators are cajoled and/or more forcefully convinced to vote for the bill at hand. Each chamber was then able to manage to get just the majority needed to pass the bill - House Substitute for SB 171. In the House, the vote was 63-51. In the Senate, 21-15. No Democrats supported the bill.

    It is an ugly budget - every legislator could easily name at least one objectionable facet of the bill. The items that garnered the most attention were cuts to higher education - the Regents Institutions, cuts to the Department of Corrections that one senator suggested would create a "catch and release" policy, large sweeps of funds from Transportation and other agencies - including $9.5 million from tobacco dollars that are supposed to be earmarked for children's programs, and the fact that the budget bill did not include a carveout for the long term services and supports for intellectually and developmentally disabled populations from KanCare. $202 million in additional bonding debt was included over the protests of many legislators, to fund a larger than expected state share of the NBAF project in Manhattan.

    The policy that may end up having the most impact is a House created salaries and wages cap based on funding spent up to March of this fiscal year. That policy is certain to prevent agencies - such as State Hospitals - from being able to fill important staff positions that have been held open to hold down expenses. Some of these positions have been unfilled for months or years now.

    See budget bill description here.

  • May 21, 2013 1:05 PM | Amy Campbell (Administrator)

    The Hospital and Home Team, convened by the Kansas Department on Aging and Disability Services, released a report this month reviewing the Mercer Study and making recommendations on alternative uses of the Rainbow Mental Health Facility.

    Read the report here.


(c) Kansas Mental Health Coalition, P.O. Box 4744, Topeka, KS  66604  785-969-1617

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