Current through December 10, 2024
Rule 24-2-54.26 - Program Requirement Four (4): Scope of Services - Intensive, Community-Based Mental Health Care for Members of the Armed Forces and VeteransA. The CCBHC is responsible for providing directly, or through a DCO, intensive, community-based behavioral health care for certain members of the U.S. Armed Forces and veterans, particularly those Armed Forces members located 50 miles or more (or one (1) hour's drive time) from a Military Treatment Facility (MTF) and veterans living 40 miles or more (driving distance) from a VA medical facility, or as otherwise required by federal law. Care provided to veterans is required to be consistent with minimum clinical mental health guidelines promulgated by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), including clinical guidelines contained in the Uniform Mental Health Services Handbook of such Administration. The provisions of these criteria are designed to assist the CCBHC in providing quality clinical behavioral health services consistent with the Uniform Mental Health Services Handbook. Note: Refer to the program requirement regarding coordination of services and treatment planning.B. All people inquiring about services are asked whether they have ever served in the U.S. military. Current Military Personnel: Persons affirming current military service will be helped in the following manner:1. Active-Duty Service Members (ADSM) must use their servicing MTF, and their MTF Primary Care Managers (PCMs) are contacted by the CCBHC regarding referrals outside the MTF.2. ADSMs and activated Reserve Component (Guard/Reserve) members who reside more than 50 miles (or one (1) hour's drive time) from a military hospital or military clinic enroll in TRICARE PRIME Remote and use the network PCM or select any other authorized TRICARE provider as the PCM. The PCM refers the member to specialists for care they cannot provide and works with the regional managed care support contractor for referrals/authorizations.3. Members of the Selected Reserves, not on Active Duty (AD) orders, are eligible for TRICARE Reserve Select and can schedule an appointment with any TRICARE-authorized provider, network or non-network. Veterans: Persons affirming former military service (veterans) are offered assistance to enroll in VHA for the delivery of health and behavioral health services. Veterans who decline or are ineligible for VHA services will be served by the CCBHC consistent with minimum clinical mental health guidelines promulgated by the VHA. These include clinical guidelines contained in the Uniform Mental Health Services Handbook as excerpted below. Note: Refer to the program requirement requiring coordination of care across settings and providers, including facilities of the Department of Veterans Affairs.
C. The CCBHC ensures there is integration or coordination between the care of substance use disorders and other mental health conditions for those veterans who experience both, and for integration or coordination between care for behavioral health conditions and other components of health care for all veterans.D. Every veteran seen for behavioral health services is assigned a Principal Behavioral Health Provider. When veterans are seeing more than one (1) behavioral health provider and when they are involved in more than one (1) program, the identity of the Principal Behavioral Health Provider is made clear to the veteran and identified in the health record. The Principal Behavioral Health Provider is identified on a tracking database for those veterans who need case management. The Principal Behavioral Health Provider ensures the following requirements are fulfilled: 1. Regular contact is maintained with the veteran as clinically indicated if ongoing care is required.2. A psychiatrist or such other independent prescriber as satisfies the current requirements of the VHA Uniform Mental Health Services Handbook reviews and reconciles each veteran's psychiatric medications on a regular basis.3. Coordination and development of the veteran's treatment plan incorporates input from the veteran (and, when appropriate, the family with the veteran's consent when the veteran possesses adequate decision-making capacity or with the veteran's surrogate decision-maker's consent when the veteran does not have adequate decision-making capacity).4. Implementation of the treatment plan is monitored and documented. This activity must include tracking progress in the care delivered, the outcomes achieved, and the goals attained.5. The treatment plan is revised, when necessary.6. The principal therapist or Principal Behavioral Health Provider communicates with the veteran (and the veteran's authorized surrogate or family or friends when appropriate and when veterans with adequate decision-making capacity consent) about the treatment plan, and for addressing any of the veteran's problems or concerns about their care. For veterans who are at high risk of losing decision-making capacity, such as those with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, such communications need to include discussions regarding future behavioral health care treatment (Reference Source: Refer to information regarding Advance Care Planning Documents - VHA Handbook).7. The treatment plan reflects the veteran's goals and preferences for care and that the veteran verbally consents to the treatment plan in accordance with the VHA Handbook - Informed Consent for Clinical Treatments and Procedures. If the Principal Behavioral Health Provider suspects the veteran lacks the capacity to make a decision about the mental health treatment plan, the provider must ensure the veteran's decision-making capacity is formally assessed and documented. For veterans who are determined to lack capacity, the provider must identify the authorized surrogate and document the surrogate's verbal consent to the treatment plan.E. Behavioral health services are recovery oriented. The VHA adopted the National Consensus Statement on Mental Health Recovery in its Uniform Mental Health Services Handbook. SAMHSA has since developed a working definition and set of principles for recovery updating the Consensus Statement. Recovery is defined as "a process of change through which people improve their health and wellness, live a self-directed life, and strive to reach their full potential." The following are the 10 guiding principles of recovery: 9. Strengths/responsibility.10. Respect (Reference Source: SAMHSA's Recovery Definition).As implemented in VHA recovery, the recovery principles also include the following:
3. Honor. Veteran care must conform to that definition and those principles to satisfy the statutory requirement of veteran care adhering to the guidelines promulgated by the VHA.
F. All behavioral health care is provided with cultural competence.1. Any staff who is not a veteran has training about military and veterans' culture to be able to understand the unique experiences and contributions of those who have served their country.2. All staff receive cultural competency training on issues of race, ethnicity, age, sexual orientation, and gender identity.G. There is a behavioral health treatment plan for all veterans receiving behavioral health services. 1. The treatment plan includes the veteran's diagnosis or diagnoses and documents consideration of each type of evidence-based intervention for each diagnosis.2. The treatment plan includes approaches to monitoring the outcomes (therapeutic benefits and adverse effects) of care, and milestones for reevaluation of interventions and of the plan itself.3. As appropriate, the plan considers interventions intended to reduce/manage symptoms, improve functioning, and prevent relapses or recurrences of episodes of illness.4. The plan is recovery oriented, attentive to the veteran's values and preferences, and evidence-based regarding what constitutes effective and safe treatments.5. The treatment plan is developed with input from the veteran and, when the veteran consents, appropriate family members. The veteran's verbal consent to the treatment plan is required pursuant to the VHA Handbook.24 Miss. Code. R. 2-54.26