State Health Officials Announce Completion Of Medicaid Unwinding

The West Virginia Department of Human Services Bureau for Medical Services released updated data following the completion of the state’s Medicaid unwinding period.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Medicaid benefits were expanded and restrictions loosened to help immediate needs across the country.

Federal lawmakers reigned in this spending in December 2022 with the passage of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, returning eligibility to pre-pandemic levels.

“Completing the Medicaid unwinding process represents a significant milestone for West Virginia’s health care system,” said Cynthia Beane, West Virginia Department of Human Services (DoHS) Bureau for Medical Services Commissioner. “Throughout this period, the department has remained dedicated to ensuring that every West Virginian received the care they required, when they needed it most.”

The DoHS Bureau for Medical Services released updated data following the completion of the state’s Medicaid unwinding period, from April 2023 to March 2024.

During that time, the bureau conducted 520,729 Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) renewals.

According to a press release, from April 2023 through the end of December 2023, 279,952 individuals were approved for ongoing coverage and 207,674 were not. 

The 90-day follow-up on pending and incomplete renewals from January 2024 through March 2024 is not yet available.

The bureau said that of those not eligible for Medicaid or WVCHIP, 14,561 individuals have been transferred to the federal marketplace to be determined eligible for a health plan.

Medicaid enrollment at the beginning of the COVID-19 public health emergency was 504,760 in March 2020. Due to the continuous eligibility provision, Medicaid enrollment increased to 665,010 in March 2023. Medicaid enrollment as of April 1, 2024, was 516,500.

CHIP enrollment in June 2020 was 22,025; it went down to 18,138 in April 2023. WVCHIP enrollment, as of March 31, 2024, was 25,663 due to a net gain of 6,049 children to the WVCHIP program from the Medicaid program during the unwinding period.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

DHHR To Distribute Federal Funding For Mental Health And Substance Use Services

In a release, the DHHR outlined seven grant programs that will support various health initiatives across the state.

More than $33 million in federal funding was awarded to the Bureau for Behavioral Health (BBH) to enhance mental health and substance use prevention services for West Virginians.

Federal funding from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) will support prevention, early intervention, treatment and recovery services across the state.

“BBH and its partners are seizing every opportunity to meet our state’s behavioral health needs,” said Dawn Cottingham-Frohna, commissioner for the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources’ (DHHR) Bureau for Behavioral Health. “With this funding, we are not only addressing the immediate needs of our communities but also investing in the long-term well-being of West Virginians.”

In a release, the DHHR outlined seven grant programs that will support various initiatives:

  • The Screening and Treatment for Maternal Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders program will provide $750,000 annually for five years from the Health Resources and Services Administration to expand health care provider’s capacity to screen, assess, treat and refer pregnant and postpartum women for maternal mental health and Substance Use Disorder (SUD). BBH is partnering with the West Virginia Perinatal Partnership’s Drug Free Moms and Babies Project to implement the program.
  • The Children’s Mental Health Initiative will provide $3,000,000 annually for four years to provide resources to improve the mental health outcomes for children and youth up to age 21, who are at risk for, or have serious emotional disturbance or serious mental illness and their families with connection to mobile crisis response and stabilization teams and other community-based behavioral health services through the 24/7 Children’s Crisis and Referral Line (844-HELP4WV).
  • The First Responders – Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act Grant will provide $800,000 annually for four years to build upon the Police and Peers program implemented by DHHR’s Office of Drug Control Policy. The activities will be administered by the Bluefield Police Department, Fayetteville Police Department, and the Logan County Sheriff’s Office in collaboration with Southern Highlands Community Mental Health Center, Fayette County Health Department and Logan County Health Department.
  • The Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness grant will distribute $300,000 annually for two years to support the system of care for adults in West Virginia and promote access to permanent housing and referral to mental health, substance abuse treatment and health care services. Grantees are located in areas of the state with the most need, based on the population of individuals experiencing homelessness, including the Greater Wheeling Coalition for the Homeless, Prestera Center, Raleigh County Community Action, the West Virginia Coalition to End Homelessness and Westbrook Health Services.
  • The Promoting the Integration of Primary and Behavioral Health Care grant will provide $1,678,044 annually over five years to serve adults with serious mental illness who have co-occurring physical health conditions or chronic diseases and adults with SUD. Three provider partner agencies have been identified to work on this project including Seneca Health Services Inc., Southern Highlands Community Behavioral Health Center and United Summit Center, covering 16 counties in the state.
  • The Cooperative Agreements for States and Territories to Improve Local 988 Capacity will provide $1,251,440 annually for three years to enhance the capacity of West Virginia’s single 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline center, which is funded by BBH and operated by First Choice Services, to answer calls, chats and texts initiated in the state. In addition to this award, First Choice Services received $500,000 from Cooperative Agreements for 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline Crisis Center Follow-Up Programs and a National Chat and Text Backup Center award from Vibrant Emotional Health to help answer overflow chats and texts from more than 200 local 988 centers nationwide.
  • The Behavioral Health Partnership for Early Diversion of Adults and Youth will provide $330,000 annually for five years to establish or expand programs that divert youth and young adults up to age 25 with mental illness or a co-occurring disorder from the criminal or juvenile justice system to community-based mental health and SUD services.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

Child Mental Health Program Showing Positive Results

Department of Health and Human Services studies show one in four West Virginia adults have a mental illness, but more than one in three adolescents report feeling sad or hopeless and one in five have considered suicide.

Department of Health and Human Services studies show one in four West Virginia adults have a mental illness, but more than one in three adolescents report feeling sad or hopeless, and one in five have considered suicide. 

Christina Mullins, the DHHR Deputy Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders, said the causes are, unfortunately, well known.

“A lot of what pushes what’s happening with kids are adverse childhood experiences, which are pretty traumatic,” Mullins said. “Many of our children live in families with individuals with substance use disorder. Our child welfare data shows that kids, when they’re exposed to those serious situations, end up in foster care, and then they’re without their parents.”

Mullins said the expanded school mental health programs instituted specifically for junior high and high school kids focuses on an uplifting environment, support and intervention.

“It starts with the way that the child is greeted at the school,” Mullins said. “The school environment is where mental health professionals can identify a problem early and maybe put a behavioral support program in place. If things do escalate, then that school can then provide therapeutic interventions, or counseling services at the school, either in person or via telehealth.”

Mullins said the program looks at the total environment and supports the kids, the families, the teachers, and everybody that’s interacting and intersecting there.  She said it’s making a difference.

“The kids who have that program in school are more likely to have better attendance in school, less behavioral disruptions, more likely to be on grade level and more likely to graduate,” she said.

Mullins said more than 90 schools now have expanded school mental health programs, but there is still a long way to go in getting the comprehensive effort expanded statewide.

Children’s Crisis Center Will Offer ‘Safe Haven’ Treatment

A proposed Children’s Crisis Center is intended to offer a safe alternative to the use of hospital emergency departments and hotel rooms for children experiencing a behavioral health crisis and who have been removed from their homes.

A proposed Children’s Crisis Center is intended to offer a safe alternative to the use of hospital emergency departments and hotel rooms for children experiencing a behavioral health crisis and who have been removed from their homes.

The Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) plans to build the facility in Elkins, on the current site of the West Virginia Children’s Home.

The target population of the new center is children and youth under the age of 21. It is intended for young people that need to be urgently evaluated, stabilized, and then referred to the most appropriate level of care, including community and home-based services.

DHHR Secretary Bill Crouch said the center will offer a safe alternative to using hospital emergency rooms as crisis treatment facilities.

“We’ve had multiple instances of children being in emergency rooms of hospitals for days and even weeks and this needs to stop,” Crouch said.

The proposed facility will operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and will offer private patient rooms to provide services with stays up to 14 days. It will offer services that begin with initial triage and includes crisis assessment, stabilization and intervention, nursing assessment and intervention, psychiatric intervention, peer support, observation, ongoing assessment, and disposition and discharge planning.

“DHHR, out of sheer necessity, has had to have staff stay with children who are difficult to place and difficult to care for in hotel rooms due to the lack of an appropriate facility,” Crouch said. “We expect this facility to alleviate that need to provide the necessary and appropriate care and treatment of West Virginia’s youth.”

A request for proposal will be issued by DHHR for the construction of the new facility.

Changing our Approach to Children's Mental Health

A California advocacy organization is trying to reinvent America’s approach to children’s mental health. The idea is to remove mental health care from the traditional medical system and instead integrate resilience and community supports into the very fabric of society.

 

Kara Lofton spoke with Alex Briscoe of the California Children’s Trust — one of the speakers at the annual Association of Health Care Journalists Conference. They discussed what reshaping mental health would look like in practical terms and how it could be applied on a national scale.

Lofton: What does that mean to transform children’s mental health in California?

Briscoe: Well first, it means make sure a lot more happens than currently does, but also reinvent what it means. We strongly believe that behavioral health is not just a response to pathology, but it’s a tool for healthy development and health equity.

But it [also] means removing it from the traditional frame, which is medicalized and, frankly, pathologizes, many low-income people — sometimes out of necessity — to justify the reimbursement that Medicaid provides.

Lofton: So if you remove mental health from the traditional system, what is the alternative?

Briscoe: Yeah, I mean, a wellness and resilience frame that focuses on the adaptive capacities that all of us are born with, that helps build and elicit the positive wisdom and intelligence that is our birthright. So if mental health is done right, it celebrates our successes in the face of challenge. As many people now ask ‘us , not what’s wrong with us, but what happened to us, so how are we coping?’

So effective mental health services do have a clinical frame. There are seriously mental ill children who need cognitive behavioral therapy, narrative practices and sometimes even medication.

But the vast majority of young people, their behavioral health challenges are a function of growing up either poor or in difficult circumstances. And we need to celebrate the ways that they’re surviving despite.

And that’s one of the great challenges of traditional health care [ideas about] mental health is that young people are resilient. If you kick them, they’ll get back up. And that, unfortunately, perversely incentivizes healthcare not to serve. And what we can do is flip that frame and show that spending resources on the health and welfare of children is not only essential, but important from a health care outcome perspective.

Lofton: Okay, so what does that mean in terms of like actual implementation?

Briscoe: So what it would mean is that you wouldn’t just go see a therapist because your PCP, your primary care provider, gave you a piece of paper and said, “you have a problem. You need help.” Our behavioral health supports would be embedded in the lives of children where they live, work and play. In their homes, in their schools and their rec-centers, in their social networks.

Meaning that we would embed behavioral health principles and practices in every aspect of a child’s life, because it’s something that all children benefit from. Whether you have teenagers like me, or whether you just know kids, you know that to be young is to have to decide and do and live and work and play without [the] full information that life provides. This is anxiety producing in and of itself, but our current culture has exacerbated it.

And whether it’s structural racism, the stabilization of poverty, the extension of adolescence — it takes longer to get to the workforce — or the advent of social media. There are increasing drivers of anxiety and depression that are showing up in the lives of our children at striking rates. And we think that in order to address those, you can’t wait for kids to get sick. You need to, frankly, treat them in the state that they experience these challenges in and give them tools to adapt.

Lofton: Is California implementing this idea in tangible ways?

Briscoe: The answer is, you know, no. Because right now we don’t pay for it. And that’s why we are unabashedly focused on the underlying financing and administration of Medicaid. 6 million of California’s 10 million children are now eligible for an entitlement that guarantees them everything they need. That’s this thing called EPSDT,, the initials stand for Early Periodic Screening Diagnostic Treatment, and it’s one of Medicaid’s oldest benefits.

One way I like to describe it so people could understand it, is think about immunizations, which are another benefit of EPSDT, one of the original set of benefits defined in the Social Security Act. And then within immunization, we’ve made a decision as a culture that giving you an MMR shot of measles, mumps and rubella, even though it’s unlikely you will contract measles is to the benefit of our health care system and the population’s health.

I think behavioral health should be considered more like immunization and less like a specialty care service. It’s closer to an immunization than it is orthopedics or nephrology. And if we treat it that way, and apply it at scale, I think we’ll see the changes in population health outcomes that we all want.

Lofton: Is this an idea that could be implemented across any state?

Briscoe: Absolutely. In fact, the EPSDT benefit, from my perspective, is an entitlement that all low-income children enjoy. And it’s a promise that’s been made since 1967, and largely unfulfilled. Now, fulfilling it is more than it just existing as it existed for 50 years. To activate it, we have to both fund the nonfederal share of Medicaid, and this is really important thing for folks to understand because we talk about Medicaid as if it’s a monolithic thing. It’s not. It’s not just one thing.

Medicaid not only has multiple ways that it flows dollars into health systems, but it’s almost always split between a federal dollar and a state or local dollar. And so the challenge with the EPSDT is accessing the nonfederal dollar and then spending it differently. So we want to see EPSDT used as the foundation for health reform for children.

Lofton: West Virginia has one of the highest rates of Medicaid enrollment in the country. e also have very high rates of school-based health centers already. hat would it take for West Virginia to utilize these principles in the coming years?

Briscoe: Well, it’s a great framework. So to the fact that it exists already means some good work has already been done. But part of what the Children’s Trust is promoting is a redefinition of what behavioral health practice is.

It doesn’t have to be a 50-minute session with a therapist. In fact, having worked in a lot of school-based health centers myself, you can tell the quality of a school based health center almost right away, by the depth and scope of its Peer Health Education program. Are their young people on campus who are fronting the services of the clinic? Who are legitimizing the brokerage or a bridge between adult allies and children who need access to special support. But also, does a school itself have a broader approach to social/emotional health? Is it part of every classrooms experience? Is it there on the playground or in the school yard? Do teachers and children talk to each other in a certain way? Like the idea that you build a healing community, it’s not just a healing service is an essential component of a re-understanding of behavioral health.

So what I mean by that is like if the principles of the Children’s Trust were adopted in West Virginia, there would be peer health education programs in every high school. In fact, I would argue that half of all high school graduates would have had an experience as a peer health educator at some point in their high school career.

There would be cascading mentorship programs, where seniors will be working with freshmen to ensure that they understood the classes and their work out of them. You will be building a social connection and social cohesion, which is the most important protective factor for social [and] emotional health.

It doesn’t always [need to be] a clinical service, behavioral health, we have to open our minds and hearts and expand our definition understanding what is social and emotional support, and connections between people are the essential component of that.

So that can take the form of peers, it can take the form of adult allies, it can take the form of social models or affinity groups. There’s a lot that the traditional mental health system can learn from the recovery community. Whatever your critique may be of 12-step programs, and abstinence only and as Christian spaces in Christianity, a beautiful thing will happen tonight when millions of people will come together, free of charge, joined only by their common experience of suffering. There are numerous affinity opportunities where simply by sharing our common experience, we can build social and emotional health and wellness. And I think that behavioral health should take that as its charge, not just funding per minute per unit, diagnostic criteria-type of services.

I think our nation faces an opportunity to heal itself, and  we have historically come together on the issue of the experience of children. Many people forget that as CHIP was passed in the Reagan and Bush era, the health and welfare of low-income children has been a cross aisle issue in our nation’s history. And we need an opportunity to talk about the social contract in America, we haven’t done it.

And whether it’s in the experience of the seriously mentally ill or the homeless population or other marginalized communities, we need a place to reopen a conversation about what we owe each other as a culture. And I think the place to start that conversation is this one. The data is incredibly compelling, and the financing opportunity is before us. I think we need something to reinvent our trust and belief in our culture to solve big problems, and I think children’s mental health is an opportunity

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from Marshall Health and Charleston Area Medical Center.

Report: West Virginia Childhood Adversity Tops US Average

The analysis looked at the percentage of children with Adverse Childhood Experiences – commonly known as ACEs. West Virginia scored higher than the national average of 46 percent.

The analysis looked at the percentage of children with Adverse Childhood Experiences – commonly known as ACEs. West Virginia scored higher than the national average of 46 percent.

Adverse Childhood Experiences include:

·         Having a parent or guardian who died or served jail time

·         Having parents that are divorced or separated.

·         Living in households with violence or in households that are struggling financially.

·         Childhood exposure to neighborhood violence. 

·         Living with someone mentally ill, suicidal, depressed or addicted.

·         Being mistreated due to race or ethnicity.

Experts say ACES contribute to high stress levels that derail healthy development and raise risks for unhealthy behaviors.

The analysis was produced by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Child & Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative in collaboration with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

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