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Principles to Guide Allocation of New Revenue
Principles to Guide
Allocation of New Revenue
The gaps in the regional continuum of care cannot possibly be filled by additional County revenue alone. Structural change which pushes funding decision-making and control to a regional-level governance body is key to long term success.
The state is replete with examples of jurisdictions which have raised new revenue to fund behavioral health services and have little to show for it either because outcomes are not tracked, or because funding has been spread so thinly without a strategic purpose. To help focus decision-making, the RSCC recommends that the following principles guide the Council:
Investments should be evidencebased and advance desired system change not supported by the current payment structures.
Spending and outcomes should be tracked and reported transparently.
The most vulnerable populations should be priority. Investments should maximize leveraging of other community resources and align with the proposed Pierce County ACO Pilot and the Data Strategy Collective (discussed below).
Investments should balance the need for immediate service delivery with the need for increased investments in prevention.
Prioritize existing programs that do not have sustainable funding sources.
Focus on improvements best suited to the regional level (as opposed to those that require state- or federal-level investments for meaningful change).
Outcomes Indicative of System Change
The RSCC identified the following key system outcomes. These outcomes are measurable and are key proxies to gauge the performance of the overall system of care and the efficacy of new funding:
1 2 3 4 5 6
Suicide Rates
Emergency Department Utilization Rates Inpatient Recidivism/Readmission Rates: Hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, Evaluation and Treatment Facilities.
Jail utilization
Youth Emergency Department Admission Rates (from Mary Bridge)
Behavioral health referrals received by 2-1-1 in coordination with Family Resource navigators, including the presenting behavioral health symptoms and care needs