House File 2587 - Introduced



                                       HOUSE FILE       
                                       BY  COMMITTEE ON HUMAN
                                           RESOURCES

                                       (SUCCESSOR TO HSB 693)

                                       (COMPANION TO SF 2265 BY
                                        COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RESOURCES)


    Passed House, Date               Passed Senate,  Date             
    Vote:  Ayes        Nays           Vote:  Ayes        Nays         
                 Approved                            

                                      A BILL FOR

  1 An Act providing for establishment of a mental health services
  2    system for children and youth.
  3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA:
  4 TLSB 5355HV 82
  5 jp/rj/14

PAG LIN



  1  1    Section 1.  NEW SECTION.  225C.51  DEFINITIONS.
  1  2    For the purposes of this division:
  1  3    1.  "Child" or "children" means a person or persons under
  1  4 eighteen years of age.
  1  5    2.  "Children's system" or "mental health services system
  1  6 for children and youth" means the mental health services
  1  7 system for children and youth implemented pursuant to this
  1  8 division.
  1  9    3.  "Functional impairment" means difficulties that
  1 10 substantially interfere with or limit a person from achieving
  1 11 or maintaining one or more developmentally appropriate social,
  1 12 behavioral, cognitive, communicative, or adaptive skills and
  1 13 that substantially interfere with or limit the person's role
  1 14 or functioning in family, school, or community activities.
  1 15 "Functional impairment" includes difficulties of episodic,
  1 16 recurrent, and continuous duration.  "Functional impairment"
  1 17 does not include difficulties resulting from temporary and
  1 18 expected responses to stressful events in a person's
  1 19 environment.
  1 20    4.  "Other qualifying mental health disorder" means a
  1 21 mental health crisis or any diagnosable mental health disorder
  1 22 that is likely to lead to mental health crisis unless there is
  1 23 an intervention.
  1 24    5.  "Serious emotional disturbance" means a diagnosable
  1 25 mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder of sufficient
  1 26 duration to meet diagnostic criteria specified within the most
  1 27 current diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders
  1 28 published by the American psychiatric association that results
  1 29 in a functional impairment.  "Serious emotional disturbance"
  1 30 does not include substance use and developmental disorders
  1 31 unless such disorders co=occur with such a diagnosable mental,
  1 32 behavioral, or emotional disorder.
  1 33    6.  "Youth" means a person eighteen years of age or older
  1 34 but under twenty=two years of age who met the criteria for
  1 35 having a serious emotional disturbance prior to the age of
  2  1 eighteen.
  2  2    Sec. 2.  NEW SECTION.  225C.52  MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
  2  3 SYSTEM FOR CHILDREN AND YOUTH == PURPOSE.
  2  4    1.  Establishing a comprehensive community=based mental
  2  5 health services system for children and youth is part of
  2  6 fulfilling the requirements of the division and the commission
  2  7 to facilitate a comprehensive, continuous, and integrated
  2  8 state mental health services plan in accordance with sections
  2  9 225C.4, 225C.6, and 225C.6A, and other provisions of this
  2 10 chapter.  The purpose of establishing the children's system is
  2 11 to improve access for children and youth with serious
  2 12 emotional disturbances and youth with other qualifying mental
  2 13 health disorders to mental health treatment, services, and
  2 14 other support in the least restrictive setting possible so the
  2 15 children and youth can live with their families and remain in
  2 16 their communities.   The children's system is also intended to
  2 17 meet the needs of children and youth who have mental health
  2 18 disorders that co=occur with substance abuse, mental
  2 19 retardation, developmental disabilities, or other
  2 20 disabilities.  The children's system shall emphasize
  2 21 community=level collaborative efforts between children and
  2 22 youth and the families and the state's systems of education,
  2 23 child welfare, juvenile justice, health care, substance abuse,
  2 24 and mental health.
  2 25    2.  The goals and outcomes desired for the children's
  2 26 system shall include but are not limited to all of the
  2 27 following:
  2 28    a.  Identifying the mental health needs of children and
  2 29 youth.
  2 30    b.  Performing comprehensive assessments of children and
  2 31 youth that are designed to identify functional skills,
  2 32 strengths, and services needed.
  2 33    c.  Providing timely access to available treatment,
  2 34 services, and other support.
  2 35    d.  Offering information and referral services to families
  3  1 to address service needs other than mental health.
  3  2    e.  Improving access to needed mental health services by
  3  3 allowing children and youth to be served with their families
  3  4 in the community.
  3  5    f.  Preventing or reducing utilization of more costly,
  3  6 restrictive care by reducing the unnecessary involvement of
  3  7 children and youth who have mental health needs and their
  3  8 families with law enforcement, the corrections system, and
  3  9 detention, juvenile justice, and other legal proceedings;
  3 10 reducing the involvement of children and youth with child
  3 11 welfare services or state custody; and reducing the placement
  3 12 of children and youth in the state juvenile institutions,
  3 13 state mental health institutes, or other public or private
  3 14 residential psychiatric facilities.
  3 15    g.  Increasing the number of children and youth assessed
  3 16 for functional skill levels.
  3 17    h.  Increasing the capacity to develop individualized,
  3 18 strengths=based, and integrated treatment plans for children,
  3 19 youth, and families.
  3 20    i.  Promoting communications with caregivers and others
  3 21 about the needs of children, youth, and families engaged in
  3 22 the children's system.
  3 23    j.  Developing the ability to aggregate data and
  3 24 information, and to evaluate program, service, and system
  3 25 efficacy for children, youth, and families being served on a
  3 26 local and statewide basis.
  3 27    k.  Supporting development of a tracking system so that the
  3 28 services provided by the children's system and by other
  3 29 systems can be coordinated.
  3 30    l.  Implementing and utilizing outcome measures that are
  3 31 consistent with but not limited to the national outcomes
  3 32 measures identified by the substance abuse and mental health
  3 33 services administration of the United States department of
  3 34 health and human services.
  3 35    m.  Identifying children and youth whose mental health or
  4  1 emotional condition, whether chronic or acute, represents a
  4  2 danger to themselves, their families, school students or
  4  3 staff, or the community.
  4  4    Sec. 3.  NEW SECTION.  225C.53  ROLE OF DEPARTMENT AND
  4  5 DIVISION == TRANSITION TO ADULT SYSTEM.
  4  6    1.  The department is the lead agency responsible for the
  4  7 development, implementation, oversight, and management of the
  4  8 mental health services system for children and youth in
  4  9 accordance with this chapter.  The department's
  4 10 responsibilities shall be fulfilled by the division.
  4 11    2.  The division's responsibilities relating to the
  4 12 children's system include but are not limited to all of the
  4 13 following:
  4 14    a.  Ensuring that the rules adopted for the children's
  4 15 system provide that, within the limits of appropriations for
  4 16 the children's system, children and youth shall not be
  4 17 inappropriately denied necessary mental health services.
  4 18    b.  Establishing standards for the provision of home and
  4 19 community=based mental health treatment, services, and other
  4 20 support under the children's system.
  4 21    c.  Identifying and implementing eligibility criteria for
  4 22 the treatment, services, and other support available under the
  4 23 children's system.
  4 24    d.  Ongoing implementation of recommendations identified
  4 25 through children's system improvement efforts.
  4 26    3.  An adult person who met the criteria for having a
  4 27 serious emotional disturbance prior to the age of eighteen may
  4 28 qualify to continue services through the adult mental health
  4 29 system.
  4 30    Sec. 4.  NEW SECTION.  225C.54  MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
  4 31 SYSTEM FOR CHILDREN AND YOUTH == INITIAL IMPLEMENTATION.
  4 32    1.  The mental health services system for children and
  4 33 youth shall be initially implemented by the division
  4 34 commencing with the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2008.  The
  4 35 division shall begin implementation by utilizing a competitive
  5  1 bidding process to allocate state block grants to develop
  5  2 services through existing community mental health centers,
  5  3 providers approved in a waiver adopted by the commission to
  5  4 provide services to a county in lieu of a community mental
  5  5 health center, and other local service partners.  The
  5  6 implementation shall be limited to the extent of the
  5  7 appropriations provided for the children's system.
  5  8    2.  In order to maximize federal financial participation in
  5  9 the children's system, the division and the department's
  5 10 Medicaid program staff shall analyze the feasibility of
  5 11 leveraging existing Medicaid options, such as expanding the
  5 12 home and community=based services waiver for children's mental
  5 13 health services, reviewing the feasibility of implementing
  5 14 other Medicaid options such as the federal Tax Equity and
  5 15 Financial Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA) option for
  5 16 children with severe mental illness or emotional disturbance
  5 17 and Medicaid administrative funding, and determining the need
  5 18 for service enhancements through revisions to the Medicaid
  5 19 state plan and the federal state children's health insurance
  5 20 program and the healthy and well kids in Iowa program.
  5 21    3.  Initial block grants shall support a wide range of
  5 22 children, youth, and family services and initiatives including
  5 23 but not limited to school=based mental health projects, system
  5 24 reviews providing service gap analysis, status studies of the
  5 25 mental health needs of children and youth in representative
  5 26 areas of the state, and mental health assessment capacity
  5 27 development based in public and nonpublic schools and clinical
  5 28 settings using standard functional assessment tools.  The
  5 29 purpose of developing the assessment capacity is to determine
  5 30 childrens' and youths' degree of impairment in daily
  5 31 functioning due to emotional, behavioral, psychological,
  5 32 psychiatric, or substance use problems.
  5 33    4.  The initial block grants may also support an array of
  5 34 programs and services including but not limited to mobile
  5 35 crisis intervention services, or other support intended to
  6  1 prevent more intensive or in=patient interventions, skills
  6  2 training, intensive care coordination, and
  6  3 cognitive=behavioral and multisystemic family therapy.  In
  6  4 addition, support may be provided for prevention=oriented
  6  5 services including mental health consultations regarding home
  6  6 visits, child welfare, juvenile justice, and maternal and
  6  7 child health services, and consultation for preschool
  6  8 programs.
  6  9    5.  The division shall report regularly to the commission,
  6 10 general assembly, and governor concerning the implementation
  6 11 status of the children's system, including but not limited to
  6 12 an annual report submitted each January.  The report may
  6 13 address funding requirements and statutory amendments
  6 14 necessary to further develop the children's system.
  6 15                           EXPLANATION
  6 16    This bill provides for creation of a mental health services
  6 17 system for children and youth by the division of mental health
  6 18 and disability services of the department of human services.
  6 19    New Code section 225C.51 provides definitions of the terms
  6 20 "child" or "children", "children's system" or "mental health
  6 21 services system for children and youth", "functional
  6 22 impairment", "other qualifying mental health disorder",
  6 23 "serious emotional disturbance", and "youth".  "Youth" is
  6 24 defined to mean a person age 18 or older but less than age 22
  6 25 who met the criteria for having a serious emotional
  6 26 disturbance prior to age 18.
  6 27    New Code section 225C.52 states the purpose and the goals
  6 28 and outcomes desired for the children's system.  The purpose
  6 29 is to improve access for children and youth with serious
  6 30 emotional disturbances and youth with other qualifying mental
  6 31 health disorders to mental health treatment, services, and
  6 32 other support in the least restrictive setting possible so the
  6 33 children and youth can live with their families and remain in
  6 34 their communities.
  6 35    New Code section 225C.53 outlines the role of the
  7  1 department of human services as the lead agency for the
  7  2 children's system and designates the division of mental health
  7  3 and disability services to fulfill various responsibilities
  7  4 relating to the system.
  7  5    New Code section 252C.54 outlines requirements for the
  7  6 initial implementation of the system in FY 2008=2009 using
  7  7 competitive block grants through existing community mental
  7  8 health centers, providers approved to provide services in
  7  9 place of a community mental health center, and other local
  7 10 service providers, requiring the department to analyze options
  7 11 for leveraging additional Medicaid options, and engaging local
  7 12 school, child welfare, juvenile justice, mental health, and
  7 13 health care professionals.  Certain services, such as
  7 14 school=based mental health services and the development of
  7 15 mental health assessment capacity based in public and
  7 16 nonpublic schools and clinical settings, are required to be
  7 17 supported through the block grants.  The services supported
  7 18 may also include other services such as mobile crisis
  7 19 intervention services and prevention=oriented services.
  7 20    The division is required to regularly report on the status
  7 21 of the implementation to the mental health, mental
  7 22 retardation, developmental disabilities, and brain injury
  7 23 commission, governor, and general assembly, including an
  7 24 annual report each January.
  7 25 LSB 5355HV 82
  7 26 jp/rj/14