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IC3 Integrated Comprehensive Care for Children

Principal Investigator: Karen Hacker, MD MPH

Award: On July 1, 2004, The Institute for Community Health (ICH) and the Medical Care Foundation were awarded a grant from the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of Health Resources and Services Administration to work with the communities of Cambridge and Somerville on designing a model of care that integrates mental health and substance abuse services, with physical health care for children, adolescents and their families.

Background: For the communities of Cambridge and Somerville, current services for child and adolescent health are disconnected from behavioral health. Families must visit multiple venues, negotiate categorically funded programs, and essentially "manage their own care." Over the last 3 years, community groups have mobilized to address behavioral health, conducted needs assessments, and engaged political allies and stakeholders to commit to a collaborative planning process to design an integrated model of care for children, adolescents and families.

Results from these activities and recent reports confirm the need to integrate these services. In 2001, 50% of youth in Somerville and 38% in Cambridge have had sexual intercourse and 25% in Cambridge and 46% in Somerville did not use a condom at last intercourse. In Cambridge, suicide attempts among high school students have remained between 6% to 8% for the last six years as compared to the state rate of 6% and the national rate of 2.6 %. Somerville experienced 4 adolescent suicides and several young adult drug overdoses in the last few years. Both Cambridge and Somerville have struggled with adolescent substance abuse issues. In 2001, 2, 231 patients at CHA with substance abuse disorders were under 18 years. In January of 2004 there were 14 overdoses, including those from Oxycontin, 4 suicide attempts and one completed suicide in Somerville.

Goals: The ICH will provide facilitative leadership to this collaborative planning process. Representatives from Somerville and Cambridge community based agencies, mental health substance abuse and physical health providers, community coalitions, parents and youth will work together to design a final model which will then be submitted for an implementation grant. This collaborative project has several goals 1) engage a broad spectrum of stakeholders, including providers, parents, public and private sector managers, schools, youth, ethnic advocacy agencies and community-based organizations in a participatory strategic planning and design process 2) understand the needs of the community in order to design a model of Integrated Care 3) determine an appropriate model applicable to Cambridge and Somerville 4) design a culturally and developmentally appropriate, fiscally sustainable integrated, patient and family centered service system model 5) design and conduct process and outcome evaluations for planning and implementation 6) complete a proposal for Integrated Behavioral and Physical Health Care for Children, Adolescents, and their families.

Evaluation: Evaluation will be conducted by the Institute for Community Health along with Dr. Michael Murphy of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and Dr. Katherine Grimes of Harvard Medical School. Guiding questions include: 1) Are health outcomes in both the physical and behavioral health arena improved compared with usual care? 2) Are clients experiencing fewer problems negotiating the system? 3) Are clients more satisfied? 4) Does satisfaction vary by race/ethnicity, language, age and gender? 5) Is the new system cost-efficient compared with usual care?