97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2011 and 2012
HB2982

 

Introduced 2/23/2011, by Rep. Joe Sosnowski

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Regional Integrated Behavioral Health Networks Act. Provides that the Department of Human Services shall establish Regional Integrated Behavioral Health Networks for the purpose of ensuring and improving access to appropriate mental health and substance abuse services throughout Illinois by providing a platform for the organization of all relevant health, mental health, substance abuse, and other community entities and a mechanism to use and channel financial and other resources efficiently and effectively. Provides that the goals of the Networks shall include, but not be limited to, enabling persons with mental and substance use illnesses to access clinically appropriate, evidence-based services, regardless of where they reside in the State and particularly in rural areas; and improving access to mental health and substance abuse services throughout Illinois, but especially in rural Illinois communities. Contains provisions concerning the establishment of a Steering Committee and Network Councils; the development of Regional Integrated Behavioral Health Network Plans, and the timeline for such plans; and required reports. Effective immediately.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

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1    AN ACT concerning health.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Regional Integrated Behavioral Health Networks Act.
 
6    Section 5. Legislative Findings. The General Assembly
7recognizes that an estimated 25% of Illinoisans aged 18 years
8or older have experienced a mental or substance use disorder,
9an estimated 700,000 Illinois adults aged 18 years or older
10have a serious mental illness and an estimated 240,000 Illinois
11children and adolescents have a serious emotional disturbance.
12And on any given day, many go without treatment because it is
13not available or accessible. Recent federal and State fiscal
14crises have exacerbated an already deteriorating mental health
15and substance abuse (behavioral health) treatment system that
16is characterized by fragmentation, geographic disparities,
17inadequate funding, psychiatric and other mental health
18workforce shortages, lack of transportation, and overuse of
19acute and emergency care by persons in crisis who are unable to
20obtain treatment in less intensive community alternatives. The
21failure to treat mental and substance use illnesses has human
22and financial consequences: human suffering and loss of
23function; increased use of hospital emergency departments;

 

 

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1increased use of all medical services; increased unemployment
2and lack of productivity; lack of meaningful engagement in
3family and communities; school failure; homelessness;
4incarceration; and, in some instances, death. The citizens of
5Illinois with mental and substance use illnesses need an
6organized and integrated system of care that recognizes
7regional differences and is able to deliver the right care to
8the right person at the right time.
 
9    Section 10. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to require
10the Department of Human Services to establish Regional
11Integrated Behavioral Health Networks for the purpose of
12ensuring and improving access to appropriate mental health and
13substance abuse (hereinafter "behavioral health") services
14throughout Illinois by providing a platform for the
15organization of all relevant health, mental health, substance
16abuse, and other community entities, and by providing a
17mechanism to use and channel financial and other resources
18efficiently and effectively. Regional networks may be located
19in each of the Department of Human Services geographic regions.
 
20    Section 15. Goals. The goals of the Networks shall include,
21but not be limited to, the following: enabling persons with
22mental and substance use illnesses to access clinically
23appropriate, evidence-based services, regardless of where they
24reside in the State and particularly in rural areas; improving

 

 

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1access to mental health and substance abuse services throughout
2Illinois, but especially in rural Illinois communities, by
3fostering innovative financing and collaboration among a
4variety of health, behavioral health, social service, and other
5community entities and by supporting the development of
6regional-specific planning and strategies; facilitating the
7integration of behavioral health services with primary and
8other medical services, advancing opportunities under federal
9health reform initiatives; ensuring actual or
10technologically-assisted access to the entire continuum of
11integrated care, including the provision of services in the
12areas of prevention, consumer or patient assessment and
13diagnosis, psychiatric care, case coordination, crisis and
14emergency care, acute inpatient and outpatient treatment and
15habilitation, support services, and community residential
16settings; defining the respective roles and relationships
17between public and private providers, preserving continued
18access to State-operated hospitals while enhancing acute care
19alternatives in private hospitals and other community
20providers; identifying funding for persons who do not have
21insurance and do not qualify for State and federal healthcare
22payment programs such as Medicaid or Medicare; improving access
23to transportation in rural areas.
 
24    Section 20. Steering Committee and Network Councils.
25    (a) Towards achievement of these ends, the Department of

 

 

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1Human Services shall convene a Steering Committee comprised of
2State agencies involved in the provision, regulation, or
3financing of health, mental health, substance abuse,
4rehabilitation, and other services. These include, but shall
5not be limited to, the following agencies:
6        (1) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
7        (2) The Department of Human Services and its Divisions
8    of Mental Illness and Alcoholism and Substance Abuse
9    Services.
10        (3) The Department of Public Health, including its
11    Center for Rural Health.
12    This Steering Committee shall provide consultation,
13advice, and leadership to the Network in the development of a
14comprehensive, regional plan; in identifying sources of and
15securing funding for the Integrated Behavioral Health
16Networks; in facilitating communication within and across
17multiple agencies; and in removing regulatory barriers that may
18prevent the Network from accomplishing its goals. The Steering
19Committee collectively or through one of its member Agencies
20shall also provide technical assistance and staff training to
21the Network or its individual component entities.
22    (b) There also shall be convened a Regional Network
23Advisory Council in each of the Department of Human Services'
24regions comprised of representatives of community stakeholders
25represented in the Network, as well as relevant trade and
26professional associations, hospitals, and community providers,

 

 

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1including, but not limited to, the following: NAMI Illinois,
2the Illinois Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependence Association,
3the Illinois Association of Rehabilitation Facilities, the
4Community Behavioral Health Association of Illinois, the
5Illinois Hospital Association, the Illinois Primary Health
6Care Association, the Illinois Sheriff's Association, the
7Illinois Critical Access Hospital Network, the Governor's
8Rural Affairs Council, the Illinois Psychiatric Society,
9Prevention First, the Illinois Rural Health Association, the
10Illinois State Ambulance Association, the Illinois Public
11Health Association, the Illinois Homecare and Hospice Council,
12the Healthcare Council of Illinois, the Farm Resource Center,
13and others designated by the Network Steering Committee or
14members of the Network.
 
15    Section 25. Development of Regional Integrated Behavioral
16Health Network Plans. Each Regional Integrated Behavioral
17Health Network Council shall develop a strategic plan for its
18respective region that addresses the following:
19    (a) Inventory of all mental health and substance abuse
20treatment services, primary health care facilities and
21services, private hospitals, State-operated psychiatric
22hospitals, long term care facilities, social services,
23transportation services, and any services available to serve
24persons with mental and substance use illnesses.
25    (b) Identification of unmet community needs, including,

 

 

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1but not limited to, the following:
2        (1) Waiting lists in community mental health and
3    substance abuse services.
4        (2) Hospital emergency department use by persons with
5    mental and substance use illnesses, including volume,
6    length of stay, and challenges associated with obtaining
7    psychiatric assessment.
8        (3) Difficulty obtaining admission to inpatient
9    facilities, and reasons therefore.
10        (4) Availability of primary care providers in the
11    community, including Federally Qualified Health Centers
12    and Rural Health Centers.
13        (5) Availability of psychiatrists and mental health
14    professionals.
15        (6) Transportation issues.
16        (7) Other.
17    (c) Identification of opportunities to improve access to
18mental and substance abuse services through the integration of
19specialty behavioral health services with primary care,
20including, but not limited to, the following:
21        (1) Availability of Federally Qualified Health Centers
22    in community with mental health staff.
23        (2) Development of accountable care organizations or
24    other primary care entities.
25        (3) Availability of acute care hospitals with
26    specialized psychiatric capacity.

 

 

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1        (4) Community providers with an interest in
2    collaborating with acute care providers.
3    (d) Development of a comprehensive plan to address
4community needs, including a specific timeline for
5implementation of specific objectives and establishment of
6evaluation measures. The comprehensive plan should include the
7complete continuum of behavioral health services, including,
8but not limited to, the following:
9        (1) Prevention.
10        (2) Client assessment and diagnosis.
11        (3) An array of outpatient behavioral health services.
12        (4) Case coordination.
13        (5) Crisis and emergency services.
14        (6) Treatment, including inpatient psychiatric
15    services in public and private hospitals.
16        (7) Long term care facilities.
17        (8) Community residential alternatives to
18    institutional settings.
19        (9) Primary care services.
 
20    Section 30. Timeline. The Network strategic plans shall be
21prepared within 6 months of establishment of the Regional
22Behavioral Health Network Council. The Regional Integrated
23Behavioral Health Networks Steering Committee shall assist the
24Regional Network councils in the development of regional plans
25by providing technical expertise and in identifying funding

 

 

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1support and opportunities for the development of services
2identified under each of the regional plans.
 
3    Section 35. Report to Governor and General Assembly. The
4Steering Committee shall report to the Governor and General
5Assembly the status of each regional plan, including the
6recommendations of the network councils to accomplish their
7goals and improve access to behavioral health services. The
8report shall also contain performance measures, including
9closure or reduction of any facilities with behavioral health
10services capacity in the region; any waiting lists for
11community services; volume and wait times in hospital emergency
12departments for access to behavioral health services;
13development of primary care-behavioral health partnerships or
14barriers to their formation; and funding challenges and
15opportunities. This report shall be submitted on an annual
16basis.
 
17    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
18becoming law.