Keywords

ambulatory care, Behavioral HealthCare, institutional management teams, Medicaid policy development, mental health, public health

 

Authors

  1. Mims, Susan MD MPH

Abstract

The need for behavioral healthcare for the poor and indigent is well documented in rural North Carolina, and integrated behavioral healthcare-that is, mental health screening and treatment offered as part of primary care services-has proven a very effective and efficient method to improve patients' health. In 2000, the Buncombe County Health Center (BCHC) began a grant-funded program treating depressed patients in its public health clinics and school health programs. The Health Center used the opportunity to send a team to the Management Academy for Public Health to learn business principles that could be applied to the challenge of sustaining this program as part of its ongoing public health service delivery for the county. Using their business plan from the Management Academy, the BCHC sought funding from various stakeholders, and, through their support, was able to institute a fully integrated behavioral health program in 2004. The BCHC has now joined forces with other partners in the state to address statewide policy changes in support of such programs. These efforts are an example of how a community health center can apply entrepreneurial thinking and strategic business planning to improve healthcare and effect wide-ranging change.