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Working Together to Improve Community Health MIKELLE MOORE - VICE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Working Together to Improve Community Health MIKELLE MOORE - VICE PRESIDENT, COMMUNITY BENEFIT Grant opportunity to help cities adopt active lifestyles 16 week DPP curriculum Personalized health coaching Small-group support


  1. Working Together to Improve Community Health MIKELLE MOORE - VICE PRESIDENT, COMMUNITY BENEFIT

  2. Grant opportunity to help cities adopt active lifestyles

  3. • 16 week DPP curriculum • Personalized health coaching • Small-group support • Digital tracking tools

  4. Behavioral Health Networks 1. Patient advocate in the hospital 2. Access to care within seven days 3. Pre-paid services in a coordinated network

  5. Community Benefit Behavioral Health Networks The six Intermountain Community Benefit Behavioral Health Networks provide the timely access of mental health services to uninsured patients by rallying community resources and offering a convenient location to receive services. PROBLEM RESULTS SERVICE AREAS Bear River Valley Cache Valley In recent years, agencies serving the unfunded 90.00% Dixie Salt Lake County and underfunded mentally ill population have 80.00% Sanpete Valley * Sevier Valley experienced a significant reduction in public 70.00% Utah Valley Weber & Davis County funding and other financial aid. This has led to 60.00% an increase in the number of people needing *under development 50.00% N care, and thus an increase in waiting times, 40.00% PATIENT STORY appointments, and treatments. Y 30.00% I have lived a sad life up ‘til now. I had a 20.00% SOLUTION big secret that I had been holding for the 10.00% last 24 years. I had been abused from the 0.00% The primary objective of these networks is to Self Pay Funded time I was 5-years-old until I was 12. Like increase timely access to appropriate care to a bad disease it would keep eating at me uninsured people that use hospital emergency and pulling me down deeper and deeper. departments as the only way to obtain 85% of self-pay patients received follow-up care in seven days compared to 75% of commercially and publically insured patients. treatment for mental illness and substance I found myself at the doctor’s office. She use disorders. These programs bring together suggested I see a counselor. I am glad I community agencies, health organizations and did because I have been given the tools public mental health providers to create a to help me dig out of the ground that I behavioral health community network was trapped under.

  6. Opioid Community Collaborative

  7. Intermountain partnered with Community Collaborative Public Awareness Intermountain Opioid and Education Utah Pharmaceutical Drug Community Project the UPDCP and other community partners to form the Provider Training Opioid Community and Patient Education Collaborative . Access to Treatment Advisory Prevention Committee Data The Opioid Community Collaborative and Evaluation To plan and implement strategies to Criminal Justice decrease the burden of pharmaceutical drug, misuse, abuse and overdose in the state of Utah, Naloxone addressing public awareness, provider education, and access to treatment.

  8. Public Awareness • 21 Intermountain pharmacies have medsafe receptacles • 4,277 pounds of medication have been disposed of over the past eleven months.

  9. Public Awareness • 82% of individuals surveyed in 2016 believed that prescription opioids have potential for abuse compared to 77% in 2011; • 35% of individuals surveyed in 2016 used drop boxes as compared to 16% in 2011.

  10. Provider Education Baseline prescribing data has been collected for surgeons, obstetricians, general surgeons, urologists, and podiatrists. Over 1,500 physicians have participated in continuing medical education regarding opioid prescribing. New data will be collected in 2016.

  11. Access to Treatment Abstinence Rate 100% 86% 90% 83% 80% 70% 70% 63.50% 63.50% 63.50% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% OCC Combined Target Population: Homeless Men Target Population: Women 9 Months MAT 9 Months TAU 96 patients including 7 pregnant women and 23 people • experiencing homelessness are currently in treatment. 84% of patients are receiving medication assisted treatment • in conjunction with counseling.

  12. Thank you Mikelle.Moore@imail.org 801.442.3554

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