CEO Update 191
House Ways and Means Committee Hearing Examines U.S. Child Welfare System
and RTFs
The House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday held a hearing about strengthening America’s child welfare system and protecting America’s children through reauthorizing Title IV-B, a child and youth foster-care program.
Although committee members focused primarily on improving the nation’s child foster care system, they also asked several questions of witness Paris Hilton, who testified about Residential Treatment Facilities (RTFs) and offered support for S.1351/H.R.2955, The Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act. Members and witnesses acknowledged the need for RTFs and also called for greater state and federal oversight, an expanded workforce, additional mental healthcare for children in the youth foster-care system outside RTFs, and more community-based care.
The hearing was one of several this Congress held to explore reauthorizing the Social Security Act’s Title IV-B program, which provides flexible funding for states to support family preservation, reunification, adoption, and permanency for children in foster care. Congress has not reauthorized the program since 2008.
In addition to potentially reauthorizing Title IV-B, several committee members discussed legislation they have drafted related to RTFs, which the committee could examine in a future mark-up session. These bills include:
H.R. 8817, the Promoting Accountability, Reporting, Information Sharing, and Health Act, by Reps. Steube (R-Fla.) and Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.), which directs the U.S. Health and Human Services Department, the U.S. Education Department, the Administration for Children and Families, the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and the U.S. Justice Department, to develop guidance on best practices for federal agencies and states. The guidance would focus on collecting data collection and sharing information related to youth well-being in RTFs, improving data on maltreatment, and enhancing oversight of youth residential programs receiving federal funding.
H.R. 8643, the Foster Youth Mental Health Support Act, by Rep. Michelle Steel (R-Calif.), which amends subpart 1 of Title IV part B of the Social Security Act to strengthen state plan requirements to include comprehensive mental health and well-being for children and youth in foster care.
Both bills were recently introduced, and NABH will share the bill language with members as soon as it is available. NABH sent the Ways and Means Committee comments about RTFs and our new youth RTF fact sheet, which highlights 10 essential facts about youth RTFs.
NABH Congratulates Board Chair Frank Ghinassi for AHRQ Technical Expert Panel Position
NABH is pleased to announce NABH Board Chair Frank Ghinassi, Ph.D., A.B.P.P., president and CEO of Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care and vice president of the behavioral health and addictions service line at RWJBarnabas Health, is serving on a behavioral health technical expert panel (TEP) that the Office of the Assistant Secretary, or ASPE, convened in partnership with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
ASPE and AHRQ engaged research firm Mathematica to identify and recommend behavioral health integration measure concepts for further development. In Phase 1 – completed in March 2024 – the team conducted an environmental scan and gathered feedback from key stakeholders about priorities for measures related to the integration of behavioral and physical healthcare.
In Phase 2, the current phase, the team will develop draft measure specifications based on further review of the literature and interviews with key stakeholders. The TEP will provide feedback on the draft measure specifications as well as the face validity of the measures, according to a memo from Mathematica, which said it will use the TEP feedback to refine the measure specifications.
ICYMI: Surgeon General’s Op-Ed on Why Social Media Platforms Should Carry Warning Labels
U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, M.D., M.B.A., last week penned an op-ed in The New York Times urging social media platforms to carry warning labels.
“The mental health crisis among young people is an emergency— and social media has emerged as an important contributor,” Murthy wrote. “Adolescents who spend more than three hours a day on social media face double the risk of anxiety and depression symptoms, and the average daily use in this age group, as of the summer of 2023, was 4.8 hours. Additionally, nearly half of adolescents say social media makes them feel worse about their bodies,” he continued. “It is time to require a surgeon general’s warning label on social media platforms, stating that social media is associated with significant mental health harms for adolescents.
Murthy added that a surgeon general’s warning label – which requires congressional action – would regularly remind parents and adolescents that social media has not been proved safe. He recognized that a warning label alone will not keep kids safe and added that the advisory he issued last year includes specific recommendations for policymakers, platforms, and the public to make social media safer for kids.
SAMHSA Accepting Nominations for First ‘SAMHSA Trailblazers in Advancing Recovery’ Awards
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) announced this week it has started accepting nominations for the inaugural SAMHSA Trailblazers in Advancing Recovery (STAR) awards, which honor leaders with lived experience of mental health and/or substance use condition, including family members whose lives have been affected.
The new STAR awards will also recognize organizations that have demonstrated a commitment to promoting equitable and inclusive access to wellness and recovery supports for individuals with mental health and/or substance use conditions.
Last year SAMHSA published Recovery from Substance Use and Mental Health Problems Among Adults in the United States, which reports that more than 70% of people, or about 50 million people, identified as ever having a mental health and/or substance use problem were in recovery.
Nominations opened June 26 and will remain open through July 18. SAMHSA is planning an awards ceremony that it will livestream in September as part of National Recovery Month.
Click here to learn about the award categories, eligibility requirements, and nominating process.
SAMHSA Announces Funding Opportunity to Enhance Capacity of Women’s Behavioral Health Providers
SAMHSA is accepting applications for its Women’s Behavioral Health Technical Assistance Center to enhance capacity of women’s behavioral health providers, general healthcare providers, and others involved in the holistic care of women with or at risk for mental health and substance use conditions—including women who were greatly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The agency said it has a total of $12.5 million for five years and anticipates granting one award. Applications are due by Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2024. Click here to learn more.
Reminder: ONC Funding Opportunity Seeks to Accelerate BHIT
HHS’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) last month announced a funding opportunity totaling $2 million for fiscal year 2024 under the Leading Edge Acceleration Projects (LEAP) in Health Information Technology (Health IT).
ONC is seeking applications that address two areas of interest. The first area seeks to develop innovative ways to evaluate and improve the quality of healthcare data used in artificial intelligence (AI) tools in healthcare to improve electronic health record technologies.
The second area is focused on designing, developing, and piloting lightweight health IT solutions that can enhance health IT capabilities in behavioral healthcare settings and improve care coordination between behavioral healthcare and clinical healthcare settings.
“These two areas of interest are a natural extension of ONC’s work,” Steve Posnack, deputy national coordinator for health information technology and an NABH 2024 Annual Meeting speaker, said in a statement. “We look forward to receiving innovative applications and seeing the impacts generated by selected awardees.”
Click here to learn more about the grant opportunity; ONC will accept applications through July 12, 2024.
Reminder: Please Submit Data to NABH’s Denial-of-Care Portal
We urge all NABH members to join those already submitting data to our Denial-of-Care Portal.
We are beginning to use aggregated portal data to illustrate and compare prior authorization practices for commercial, Medicare Advantage, and Medicaid managed care denials.
Policymakers have expressed particular interest in our aggregate estimate on days of uncompensated charity care, as well as the length of delayed health plan responses to prior-authorization requests.
To support this advocacy push, we strongly encourage all NABH members to submit data to the portal. Please contact NABH Associate Manager for Congressional Affair Emily Wilkins with questions about the data metrics that we are collecting and/or the data-submission process.
Fact of the Week
A study published in JAMA last week found that, despite their known association with reduced risk of a fatal drug overdose, only a small percentage of Medicare beneficiaries (4.1%) received medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) or filled a naloxone prescription (6.2%) in the 12 months after a nonfatal drug overdose. “Efforts to improve access to behavioral health services; MOUD; and overdose-prevention strategies, such as prescribing naloxone and linking individuals to community-based health care settings for ongoing care, are needed,” the study noted.
Happy Independence Day from NABH!
NABH will not publish CEO Update on Friday, July 5 and will resume on Friday, July 12. The NABH team wishes you, your families, and your teams a happy and safe Independence Day weekend!
For questions or comments about this CEO Update, please contact Jessica Zigmond.