Top Ten (-ish) Trends in Value-based Healthcare: Trend #10 – Access to Behavioral Health
(co-authored by Bryan Smith and Beth Anctil )
Premier’s Strategic Collaborative team works with hospitals and health systems from across the country supporting a myriad of efforts focused on optimizing performance in value-based models – from inpatient centric, to episodic to total cost of care. Based on that work, to kick off 2024, we have compiled a list of Top Ten (-ish) Trends in Value-based Healthcare. The next trend in the series, coming in at number ten, is access to behavioral health services. Please like, follow, and subscribe to our SubStack to ensure that you do not miss anything. The first trend, written by our Colleague, Madeleine Biondolillo, MD, MBA, VP Quality & Innovation at Premier Inc. was focused on Healthcare Work Force Challenges: An Urgent Situation.?
A Growing Challenge
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the existing gap between supply and demand for mental health services in the country. Based on a 2022 survey, a large majority of the public – 90 percent - believe that there is a mental health crisis, largely stemming from the opioid epidemic, mental health issues in children and teenagers, and severe mental illness.[1] During the pandemic, as many as four of ten adults reported symptoms of high levels of psychological distress[2], and deaths by drug/alcohol overdose increased tremendously. [3]
Despite the increased need for access and services, there continues to be a shortage of behavioral health providers. A study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that over 165 million Americans (47 percent of the total population) live in a Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) for behavioral health services, across 6,622 HPSA designations[4]. As of Nov. 1, 2023, in order to remove the HPSA designations across the country, there is a need for more than 8,300 more practitioner.
The lack of practitioners translates to just over 27 percent of the country’s needs being met – with significant geographic variation across states from 9 percent at the lowest (Arizona) to 62 percent of needs being met in Rhode Island.[5] Behavioral health demand forecasts indicate that by 2026, 25.2 percent of Americans will require behavioral health services, which is 1.2 percentage points above observed 2021 levels.
Figure 1 - Mental Health Care Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs). Kaiser Family Foundation. (2023, November 6). https://www.kff.org/other/state-indicator/mental-health-care-health-professional-shortage-areas-hpsas/?activeTab=map¤tTimeframe=0&select
Implications for Value-based Care
Bright spots are emerging as the industry attempts to close the gap between supply and demand. Healthcare has seen a rapid increase in the utilization of alternative modalities of care delivery since the beginning of the pandemic. In many cases, this growth was led by behavioral health, especially as it pertains to investment in and utilization of virtual options. Beginning in Q2 2020, for psychologists, psychiatrists and counselors, the percentage of claims billed through telehealth grew to more than 60 percent of encounters at the peak of the pandemic and continues to represent between 40 and 50 percent. The majority of this activity is focused on mental disorders (over 50 percent), while substance use disorders represent 10 percent of claims for services provided via telehealth.[6]
Figure 2 - Mulvaney-Day N, Dean D Jr, Miller K, Camacho-Cook J. Trends in Use of Telehealth for Behavioral Health Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Considerations for Payers and Employers. Am J Health Promot. 2022 Sep;36(7):1237-1241. doi: 10.1177/0890117122111
In addition to leveraging telehealth, many provider organizations are working to integrate behavioral health services into a multi-disciplinary team-based primary care model. The goal is to improve access, allowing each team member to work to the full extent of their professional capacity. This will garner greater efficiencies, effectiveness and ultimately improve clinical outcomes as well as patient experience and the total cost of care.[7]
To further illustrate the importance of the team-based model, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and The Innovation Center has announced an exciting new model to advance integration in behavioral health. The model, The Innovation in Behavioral Health (IBH) Model – is designed to test approaches for addressing the behavioral and physical health, as well as health-related social needs, of people with Medicaid and Medicare coverage. The model will facilitate community-based behavioral health practices to form interprofessional care teams. These teams will consist of behavioral and physical health providers, as well as community-based supports, and are responsible for coordinating care to comprehensively address a patient’s care. The model’s webpage outlines that “…practice participants will conduct an initial screening and assessment, offer treatment or referrals to other care specialists and community-based resources, and monitor ongoing behavioral and physical health conditions and HRSNs. In this value-based care approach, the practice participants will be compensated based on the quality of care provided and improved patient outcomes.” The program is scheduled to launch in the fall of 2024, and will run for eight years.[8] More details are available on the model webpage, found here.
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Conclusion
Behavioral health access will be a key focus area in 2024. Untreated behavioral health conditions are continuing to rise given the dynamics outlined above. Providers participating in value-based care models will need to take on the challenge of leveraging multiple modalities of care – from virtual visits to telehealth and eConsult’s - in order to begin to meet the demand. Additionally, implementing a team-based comprehensive care model that focuses on ‘whole person’[9] and population health helps empower patients to address their chronic disease and comorbidities often associated with these conditions.[10]
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[6] Mulvaney-Day N, Dean D Jr, Miller K, Camacho-Cook J. Trends in Use of Telehealth for Behavioral Health Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Considerations for Payers and Employers. Am J Health Promot. 2022 Sep;36(7):1237-1241. doi: 10.1177/08901171221112488e. PMID: 36003014; PMCID: PMC9412131.
Incredible initiative! As Helen Keller once said, "Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much." Your focus on Access to Behavioral Health truly exemplifies the power of collaboration in tackling prevalent health challenges. ??? For those passionate about making a difference on a grander scale, consider joining our mission for the upcoming sponsorship opportunity in the Guinness World Record of Tree Planting. Together, we can break records and plant seeds for a healthier planet and society. Find out more here: https://bit.ly/TreeGuinnessWorldRecord
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10 个月With nearly 50% of the population residing in areas lacking behavioral health care providers, there’s no denying that America is in need of more robust value-based care solutions focusing on mental health. I especially appreciate your closing sentiment on the interrelatedness of mental health and physical health, and how untreated behavioral health conditions contribute to chronic disease risk. Fantastic work, Seth. I’m looking forward to the upcoming newsletters!