Top Takeaways from Our Past Five Webinars

At Bamboo Health, webinars are one of the most engaging ways we connect, educate, and spread the word about new advancements in the industry. Through the outreach of our webinars, attendees can come together to listen to today’s most important and pressing topics surrounding behavioral and physical health.

In addition to our monthly Knowledge for Good webinars, Bamboo Health team members have also shared their expertise in webinars hosted by a variety of media outlets.

Let’s look back at some of the key takeaways and best talking points from some past webinars led by the Bamboo Health team.

ACO Reach Model Requirements

During the Knowledge for Good Webinar on May 25, 2022, Government Affairs Manager Molly Kane discussed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) new ACO Realizing Equity, Access, and Community Health (REACH) Model, launching on January 1, 2023.

This new program will replace the Global and Professional Direct Contracting (GPDC) Model and aims to improve care coordination and patient outcomes for Medicare members.

Molly discussed how organizations can ensure success and leverage interoperability during this transition by:

  • Maximizing revenue
    • Beneficiary engagement tactics that support retention
    • Processes to support maximizing quality scores
  • Maximizing shared savings
    • Care management resources and processes to minimize avoidable utilization
    • Beneficiary engagement tactics that support proactive preventative care

To watch the full webinar, click here.

Harnessing the Power of Interoperability to Cultivate Whole Person Care Collaboration across Providers, Patients, and Payers

Jay Desai, Senior Vice President of Strategy and Partnerships, hosted a webinar led by Healthleaders that outlined the importance of foundational interoperability in the healthcare industry and how organizations should focus on behavioral and physical health to create true whole person care.

Many healthcare information technologies are collecting a multitude of data to store across technology platforms to create greater interoperability across the care continuum.

During the discussion, Jay shared that Bamboo Health has seen seven billion queries on prescription drug monitoring for tens of millions of patients. With this valuable data, care teams can see a clear picture of their patients’ health and provide better, more-informed care for years to come.

To watch the full webinar, click here.

Controlled Substance Dispensation Trends Pre- and Post-PMP Gateway Implementation

On June 29, 2022, Bamboo Health Data Scientist Joe Carhart, Ph.D. teamed up with special guest Kara Slusser, director of INSPECT for the State of Indiana, for our June Knowledge for Good webinar.

The state of Indiana implemented PMP Gateway to prevent prescription drug misuse and improve overall patient outcomes. Joe and Kara shared a summary of dispensation data showing improvements in several outcomes after PMP Gateway implementation, including:

  • 18% average decrease in daily opioid dispensations
  • 241% faster decrease in sedative dispensations
  • 52% slowed increase in stimulant dispensations
  • 113% average increase in Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) dispensations

To watch the full webinar, click here.

988 is Live! What’s Next for Behavioral Health Crisis Response with Gina Gibson & Vatsala Kapur

In our July Knowledge for Good webinar, Senior Director of Government Affairs Vatsala Kapur and Senior Director of Crisis Solutions Gina Gibson discussed 988 legislations, crisis call center preparedness, and technology solutions to support crisis response.

During the discussion, we learned the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline saw a 45% increase in calls during the first week of the new live number – about 30,000 more calls than the previous week.

With a heightened demand for crisis response services, many states are leaning on technology solutions to help with the influx of calls. States can save valuable time coordinating care for an individual in crisis and increase interoperability with the OpenBeds and Crisis Management System solutions. With the help of these solutions, crisis call centers can close the gaps between assessment, dispatch, and treatment for those in need of care.

To watch the full webinar, click here.

What’s Next for E-Notifications?

During this webinar on December 15, 2021, Government Affairs Manager Molly Kane summarized the e-Notifications Hospital Condition of Participation (CoP) rule and how hospitals and health systems can achieve compliance by preparing for upcoming audits and surveys.

Molly focused on how e-notifications are a starting point for increased interoperability in the healthcare industry. Some key takeaways indicating possible trends in the future e-notifications include:

  • Real-time care coordination data will become the norm as we focus on interoperability
  • Broader array of types of providers and entities will start to receive e-notifications to provide effective, whole person care
  • More states and entities will push for additional data sharing around patient notifications

To watch the full webinar, click here.

To learn more about how we are making behavioral health care more accessible and coordinated, contact us today.

Leveraging Direct EHR Integration for Improved Clinical Efficiency and Patient Care

According to the U.S. Surgeon General’s recent Advisory on Building a Thriving Health Workforce, burnout among healthcare providers has reached “crisis levels,” citing research from the National Academy of Medicine finding that 35%-54% of nurses and physicians and 45%-60% of medical students and residents have reported symptoms of burnout. While the factors contributing to this burnout are many, the advisory from Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, Surgeon General, goes on to highlight the need to reduce administrative burdens and optimize technology as a way to help healthcare workers focus their time on what matters most – their patients.

“All technology companies and industry leaders that intersect with our healthcare system can play a role to improve health worker well-being,” the advisory said, calling on healthcare technology companies to, “design technology to serve the needs of health workers, care teams, and patients across the continuum of care.” Murthy cited the need to strengthen data integration across various platforms and health sectors, with example opportunities including simplifying electronic health records (EHR)-based workflows and enabling automated health data integration across systems to deliver a comprehensive patient view and ensure care coordination across providers.

At Bamboo Health, this is something that we aim for each day. We understand that healthcare chief information officers (CIOs) and chief medical information officers (CMIOs) face unique sets of challenges when implementing technology solutions for their organizations, ranging from the need to facilitate workflow consistency to complying with expanding regulatory requirements and beyond. Variables like these, combined with the COVID-19 pandemic and opioid epidemic, make for an overwhelming scenario. Therefore, we work hard to provide solutions that make accessing data and analytics easy by integrating the data directly in the clinical workflows within the EHR. The result of this system integration saves clinicians time and saves provider organizations money while ultimately enhancing patient care.

Enabling Direct Connection Between PDMPs and EHRs for Improved Clinical Workflow
One example of this in action is our PMP Gateway solution, which provides direct connection between prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) and EHRs for fast access to PDMP data in the clinical workflows. With a user-friendly interface and pre-built connectivity to 500+ EHRs, pharmacy management systems, and health information exchanges (HIEs), along with the support of multiple integration protocols to suit a variety of health IT systems, integration of PMP Gateway is closer to “flipping a switch” and no longer a tiresome, months-long project.

Embedded in the clinical workflow at the point of care, the platform displays real-time controlled substance prescribing data, often disconnected from current EHRs. These types of integrations provide users with a comprehensive view of prescription history, in one place. This eliminates the cumbersome, time-consuming task of multiple sign-ins that often hampers physicians and pharmacists when accessing PDMP data, namely, exiting the EHR to log into the state’s PDMP site to comply with state requirements to search patients’ drug histories before prescribing opioids or other controlled substances.

With PMP Gateway, systems also gain the benefit of a rules-driven data-integration service and platform that supports multiple protocols and multiple states with just one interface – enabling interstate data sharing through PMP InterConnect. This provides a full, longitudinal view of a patient’s multi-state history to help physicians and pharmacists query other states to better manage prescribed substances beyond state lines. And the service is fully supported 24/7/365, with any future changes required by the health system managed by Bamboo Health for all connected states.

By the numbers, PMP Gateway has proven to achieve significant time savings for providers, thus making them more efficient in their daily activities. Highlights include:

  • Provides a single point of access to 44 state PDMPs
  • More than 102 million transactions processed per month
  • Over 132,000 facilities with PMP Gateway integrated access
  • Over 1 million practitioners receive PDMP reports within their workflow
  • Over 5.2 million hours saved by practitioners every month through improved workflow efficiencies

Enhanced Care Coordination Begins with Real-Time Data at the Point-of-Care
While EHRs have and will continue to play an increasingly important role in the future of healthcare delivery, in order to maximize their clinical utility, we must make it as easy as possible for clinicians to access real-time data and actionable insights at the point-of-care. PMP Gateway’s ability to offer clinicians one-click access to the PDMP directly within the EHR is a great example of Bamboo Health doing just that. For health systems and physician practices, PMP Gateway simplifies integration of controlled substance prescription information into health IT systems. It eliminates the need for healthcare providers to build and sustain individual integrations with each state PDMP by providing a single access point with existing integration into most EHRs – saving clinicians time and enhancing patient care.

Moving forward, Bamboo Health remains committed to serving the best interests of the healthcare workers that we offer solutions to, so that they can most effectively care for their patients. Through our vision of cultivating care collaboration, we strive to give everyone the opportunity to thrive. Whether it be a physician, payer, or state, we help providers across the country work together on a shared platform with the unique data, insights, and clinical decision support tools needed to improve care coordination and enhance their patients’ physical and behavioral health.

For additional information on PMP Gateway:
Read our Ochsner Health Case Study to learn how our one-Click PDMP access and NarxCare Risk Analysis Tool helped reinvent Ochsner’s opioid prescribing.

Read our Norton Health Case Study to learn how Kentucky’s largest healthcare system integrated advanced technology and analytics to address the state’s opioid crisis.

Improving Access to Mental Healthcare for Children and Foster Care Families

Concerns for Children & Young Adults

Today, many children face the difficult reality of living with mental health issues. Mental healthcare disorders can greatly impact how children behave, interact, and learn as they get older. These disorders can have serious implications for a child’s emotions, greatly impeding their happiness and daily lives.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 1 in 6 children ages 2-8 have a mental, behavioral, or developmental disorder. The most diagnosed mental health disorders among children ages 3-17 include:

  • Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) – 6 million children
  • Anxiety – 5.8 million children
  • Behavioral problems – 5.5 million children
  • Depression – 2.7 million children

Living with one of these disorders is difficult enough, but many children are diagnosed with more than one mental health disorder. About 73.8% of children with depression also experienced anxiety, and 47.2% experienced behavioral issues.

The concern surrounding mental health issues increases as children reach adolescence during age 10-19. Adolescence marks a major transformation in a child’s life as they navigate new social, physical, and emotional health changes. Adolescents may experience increased anxiety around puberty, social acceptance, and finding independence.

In 2019, more than 1 in 3 high school students experienced persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness, marking a staggering 40% increase since 2009. Thoughts of suicide among the adolescent population have also increased. Out of American young adults age 15-24, 20% have reported serious thoughts of suicide. Sadly, about 14 in 100,000 young adults commit suicide.

These mental health issues are especially prominent in children facing adversity such as poverty, homelessness, abuse, hunger, and more. Many times, children and families living in difficult situations such as these are unable to access the critical behavioral healthcare they need to prevent further serious mental health issues later in life.

One specific population experiencing adverse childhood events are children in the foster care system. Like many children facing adversity, children in foster care have a higher risk of developing behavioral health issues. About 80% of the over 400,000 American children in foster care suffer from a mental health issue and are two times more likely to experience post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) than war veterans.

Current Challenges

Lack of knowledge and shortage of inpatient behavioral healthcare services and community-based alternatives can create major obstacles for foster care children and adolescents in need of treatment.

This presents a unique challenge as early diagnosis and intervention is essential for children living with behavioral disorders. Untreated mental illness may increase the risk of substance use disorder, homelessness, unemployment, incarceration, suicide, and more later in life.

“Untreated mental health disorders can have a debilitating impact on children’s healthful growth and throughout their transition to adulthood. … Our findings suggest alarming gaps in treatment for treatable mental health conditions among children. This could lead to increased, preventable risk for these and other health conditions becoming worse later in life.”

Daniel Whitney, Ph.D., Post-doctoral fellow with Michigan Medicine’s Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

It is clear limited access to treatment can deeply impact a child’s behavioral health for the rest of their lives. How can we do our part in providing technology to help ensure children in foster care get the critical mental health support they need to live long, happy lives?

Steps to Improvement

One of the first steps in improving these distressing numbers is to bridge the gap between availability of treatment and access to treatment for children in need. At Bamboo Health, we are dedicated to working with state governments to deliver technological innovation to address the behavioral health issues of all children, especially those in foster care.

How Bamboo Health Can Help

Through OpenBeds, our comprehensive treatment and referral network, states can foster collaboration between patients, providers, referral centers, and other stakeholders to improve patient outcomes. This solution offers the ability for healthcare professionals to access decision support tools and make digital referrals to appropriate behavioral health treatment facilities for children in need of care.

Changing the state of mental health for children and adolescents takes a village, and it’s time for us to act whether it be at a city, county, or state level. By improving access to care for adolescents in crisis, we can play our part in improving our country’s behavioral health crisis.

What is your state doing to help foster children in need? Tell us how we can help.

The Power of Interoperability in Healthcare: A Summary of Our Presentation on a HealthLeaders Webinar

Recently, Jay Desai, our Senior Vice President of Strategy & Partnerships, was a guest on a HealthLeaders webinar, where he presented: “Harnessing the Power of Interoperability to Cultivate Whole-Person Care Collaboration across Providers, Patients, and Payers.” Jay discussed the past, present, and future of interoperability and explained the importance of it from various perspectives. The following is a summary of Jay’s presentation. You can watch the full webinar recording here.

Today in America’s healthcare landscape, there is an ongoing shift from fee-for-service to value-based care, where providers are financially rewarded for positive health outcomes rather than paid based on volume. Although part of the impetus for this shift started with the federal government’s Medicare program, many private payers now participate, and tens of millions of Americans are enrolled in different types of value-based care programs.

While this evolution has led to better care, it has also fueled the fire for a greater level of interoperability for payers and providers. In short, interoperability is the ability of different technology platforms to consolidate and share patient information between them. With greater interoperability, payers and providers—including primary care physicians, specialists, and other care team members—have more complete views of their patients. They can even receive real-time alerts when their patients are admitted, discharged, or transferred to and from other facilities.

While that sounds simple enough, there are many players involved and a bright, yet complex future.

The Many Players Involved

Interoperability efforts span far and wide, starting with our federal government. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, better known as CMS, leads the charge with their Interoperability and Patient Access final rule, which “establishes policies that break down barriers in the nation’s health system to enable better patient access to their health information, improve interoperability and unleash innovation, while reducing burden on payers and providers.” In Washington D.C., there is also The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, known as ONC, which “is responsible for advancing connectivity and interoperability of health information technology (health IT).” Finally, there are a number of regional- or state-led health information exchanges, or HIEs, along with a mix of private and public companies working to collect and share patient data around behavioral and physical health and social determinants of health.

The Recent Progress

Over the past decade, much of the progress has been foundational. More and more patient data is being collected and stored across myriad technology platforms. Many healthcare information technology companies are responsible for this. CommonWell Health Alliance, for example, has seen two billion queries for 159 million patients. Here at Bamboo Health, we have seen seven billion queries around prescription drug monitoring for tens of millions of patients. And this is just the tip of the iceberg. There are billions of patient data points, albeit somewhat disconnected and difficult to share. The only logical question is, how do we share them? And how do we make them actionable?

The Transition from Foundational to Actionable

Fortunately, there has been a strong tailwind to push interoperability to this point. Now, we sit at the precipice, where we cross over from foundational to actionable. By actionable, we mean not only sharing data in real-time, but also being able to analyze and effectively use the data to create more detailed care plans and make more informed clinical decisions. This is the future of interoperability for payers and providers alike. It is a future where they will have more complete pictures of patients, which grants them the opportunity to offer better care. And it is a future where the patients themselves will live healthier, more fulfilling lives.

Will your organization be a part of the future of interoperability? Are you taking the right steps? Working with the right vendors? Pushing your state’s health department to innovate? Listen to the full webinar recording to learn more about interoperability and how your organization can be a part of its future.

A 988 Sustainability Conversation with Bamboo Health’s Vatsala Kapur

Vatsala Kapur is the senior director of government affairs at Bamboo Health. In the latest installment of our 988 Q&A series, we sit down with her to discuss 988 preparedness at the state level and what needs to happen infrastructure-wise to make the initiative sustainable beyond the recent July 16th launch.

Jump to:

Let’s talk a little bit about your journey to Bamboo Health. Can you tell us about your previous experience specific to the government sector?

I am passionate about improving health and healthcare, and more specifically, tackling care obstacles that are impacting underserved communities. The last decade of my career has reflected that mission. I’ve spent most of my professional life working in health and health IT policy, which included positions within two governor’s offices as well as with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

I’ve found that when the industry is looking to overcome healthcare challenges, technology often is an afterthought. This is partly because health IT is not well understood. As a result, I developed an expertise in technology-related issues in the healthcare space, which ultimately led me to Bamboo Health. Today, I’m growing a team responsible for managing all government affairs work, supporting strategy with hospital associations and health information exchanges and working with state governments.

So, in your position you are often talking to healthcare policy leadership at the state level. How often are conversations around 988 coming up?

I’m hearing a lot about the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. I would say there is a spectrum of preparedness among states. Some states are meeting the letter of the law and others are focused on meeting the letter and the spirit of the law. This is often driven by the state funding environment, as states are considering how to find sustainability for their 988 systems.

Where do you currently see states putting the greatest emphasis when it comes to supporting 988?

Right now, a lot of states are focused on ensuring that the call centers are ready for additional call volume. Not many are thinking about creating an end-to-end system that helps to meet the holistic needs of this population, including dispatch and referral. A lot of states appear to be in wait-and-see mode right now because they’re trying to gauge what the call volume is going to look like.

My hypothesis is that over time – maybe over a few years – we’re going to see a diversion of calls from 911 to 988, and as a result, intake call volume will steadily increase. This should have a profound impact on how states invest in a system that supports these individuals over the lifecycle of their needs.

Let’s talk about 988 funding. Are there some states that simply have more fiscal resources to support the lifeline?

For starters, there is federal funding available to all states via the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Association (SAMHSA), but we are also seeing a lot of states exploring user fees to fund 988. It’s important to note that this isn’t a fee for calling into the hotline, rather it’s a small fee that’s added to cell phone subscriber bills. There are also some states that are exploring allocating funds from 911 and using them for 988 instead.

Anything else keeping states up at night as it relates to lifeline preparedness?

Besides call center staffing and lifeline funding, the biggest struggle states are starting to face is sustainability. States are wondering how they will get this initiative up and running, and then sustain it for years to come – just like 911.

It’s often difficult to recall that 911 only launched in 1968, and it’s taken decades to get the initiative where it is today. Given that, we can only expect the same with 988’s rollout. Luckily, it’s clear that the public supports 988. In fact, a recent poll conducted by the National Alliance on Mental Illness found that 89% agree that everyone, regardless of location or income, deserves access to quality mental health crisis responses and care. I think we’ll get there but we’ll need to have the funding in place and provide states with the time to determine how to best stand up their efforts.

What’s the advice you would give to officials as they seek to navigate the 988 mandate?

Anyone who’s had personal experiences with an individual in a behavioral health crisis knows that it is hard. We don’t have a holistic system for managing the needs of individuals with behavioral health conditions; rather, individuals and their caregivers oftentimes must cobble resources together.

My biggest suggestion to states is to take stock of their existing assets and infrastructure, both in terms of the call center capability as well as their referral network. Then, I’d urge them to think from a systems perspective about how to bring all the necessary infrastructure together in a patient-centric way.

More specifically, they should be looking at managing the patient referral process so it’s more streamlined and transparent. States can play an important role in helping create more systematization for when, where and how to get individuals the care they need when they need it.

I also think it’s important for states to tap individuals that have personally been in crisis and gain their perspective about what works and what doesn’t, so that whatever system is ultimately put in place is responsive to the needs of the individuals calling into 988, those staffing the call centers, and everyone else that touches that individual.

So what does the initial 988 mandate look like? How involved has the federal government been to help states prepare?

To date, the federal government has been giving states latitude in terms of implementation of 988 while also providing best practices, toolkits and other resources. That means every state from Alaska to Alabama is going to look different in terms of their 988 readiness. There are many states that have a lot of rural and frontier counties where access to behavioral health services was an issue even before 988 and those issues can’t be fixed overnight.

In your role at Bamboo Health are you having conversations with states today that are really forward-thinking about longer term 988 sustainability?

Bamboo Health recently partnered with two states to help them plan for their longer-term crisis responses. Further, all the states we have been partnering with are looking ahead. For example, many are determining how to sync 988 with their pre-existing 211 number, which helps people access social services in their area.

Are there any misconceptions about the 988 mandate that surprised you?

Leading up to July 16, some people thought that a switch would be flipped, and everything was going to operate seamlessly. Obviously, states have now learned that it’s not going to happen that fast, just as it didn’t with the implementation of 911.

Today, we take the 911 system for granted – when someone calls, dispatch happens quickly and expeditiously, but it took years for that to become the reality. From a government standpoint, I feel like there needs to be more of a policy construct or requirements tied to SAMHSA funding to really push states to think about all the infrastructure and be able to plan and pay for those needs holistically.

So where does Bamboo Health fit when it comes to helping states comply with the 988 mandate?

Bamboo Health can be part of the longer-term solution to help states stand up a successful 988 program and continue it for years to come. With Bamboo Health’s Crisis Management System, 988 call centers are able to quickly identify resources and mobile response teams, and help facilitate individuals receiving the care they need, at the right time.

As a technology provider, we have gained extensive experience. We’re currently working with 14 states, as they navigate the behavioral health resource delivery landscape. As a team, we’ve learned a lot about what works, what doesn’t and what challenges states consistently face. We are well-positioned to support states in their 988 response and be thought partners in optimizing existing and planned resources.

Anything else you want readers to know about 988 from a policy perspective?

From a policy perspective, 988 is momentous. It is a bipartisan issue, one of the few that cut across the current divide in Washington D.C. As an industry, I believe we have an opportunity to positively impact our nation’s growing behavioral health challenges. However, as a first step we need to offer more assistance to states as they try to navigate the best path forward, including funding. The federal government can play a role in that, and we can, too.

For Additional Information

If you would like to learn more about 988 or how Bamboo Health can help support infrastructure development efforts for the national behavioral health lifeline, please check out our crisis management playbook.

988 Readiness Q&A With Bamboo Health’s Gina Gibson

“988,” the three-digit, easy-to-remember behavioral health version of 911, launched this month – connecting individuals via call, text, or chat to regional crisis centers through the existing National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. With the switch expecting to raise awareness and call volume, Bamboo Health is kicking off a 988 Q&A Series to provide an overview of the current crisis management landscape, where the nation stands, and how we’re partnering with states through our technology solutions.

In our inaugural Q&A, we sit down with Gina Gibson, senior director of behavioral health solutions, to discuss the upcoming launch of the 988 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, infrastructure readiness at the state level, and how Bamboo Health (partnered with its affiliate, OpenBeds Inc.) is well-positioned to support interoperability preparation for this groundbreaking behavioral health initiative.

Let’s start off talking about your position at Bamboo Health. What are your primary roles and responsibilities? What about the job most excites you?

At Bamboo Health, I serve as the crisis subject matter expert, partnering with states to design their crisis management systems and matching their need to the most appropriate Bamboo Health solution. What excites me the most about my role is that I get to work cross functionally across the enterprise, consult with states, and provide tangible solutions to real-world problems that directly impact individuals daily.

You bring extensive boots on the ground experience to Bamboo Health having served as chief operating officer of the contractor for the Georgia Crisis and Access Line. Can you talk a bit more about that experience and what it taught you about behavioral health resources needs?

I’ve worked in the behavioral health crisis management space for the past 11 years, most recently as chief operating officer of the contractor operating the statewide crisis call center hub in Georgia (GCAL) prior to joining Bamboo Health. As the COO, I oversaw the non-clinical administrative and program operations for GCAL (part of the NSPL network) and for blended mobile crisis response services serving roughly 2/3 of the state. I also had the opportunity to work with an Administrative Services Organization (ASO) partner and the state on 988 service delivery plans for both programs. It was during this time that I got to experience first-hand not only how great the need for behavioral health treatment resources truly is, but also the many obstacles that prevent or delay individuals from getting the help they needed in a timely fashion. For context, during my tenure at the center we had a staff of around 100 at any given time and averaged a volume of around 250,000 calls annually. The State of Georgia has funded this statewide call center since 2006 and, together with the entire crisis continuum structure, today serves as a model for other states seeking to build a similar model.

In your previous role, what did you see as the biggest obstacles when it came to connecting individuals in need with available behavioral health resources?

I think we can all agree that having enough staff in place to support behavioral health resource demand has been and will continue to be the number one obstacle we face when we look to address the escalating behavioral health crisis. Barriers to care such as lack of transportation or simply not knowing which resources are available and how to access them present challenges as well.

The good news is that technology, such as Bamboo Health’s Crisis Management System exists and is well-positioned to help 988 crisis centers, and others, to quickly identify available resources and facilitate individuals access to the treatment they need. This can free up staff to take even more calls or expedite coordination where someone needs more intensive treatment.

988 is positioned as a huge step forward towards addressing our nation’s behavioral health crisis. What about the initiative are your most enthusiastic about?

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline network is an amazing initiative. What may surprise you is that this resource has been available for some time, launching in 2005. Since then, calls grew from 50,000 in the first year to over 2.3 million in 2020. The goal for 988 is to make it easier for more people to access a lifeline center. When people call, text, or chat 988, they will be connected to trained staff that are part of the existing National Suicide Prevention Lifeline network.

The challenge that we see now, and will continue to see now that 988 has launched, is finding the workforce and making sure states have the adequate number of providers to support that network. At a minimum, someone needs to be there to answer the phone as 75-80% of incoming calls can be deescalated by call center representatives. For the rest of incoming calls, crisis call center personnel need access to additional resources such as the ability to dispatch mobile response teams to address individual needs, ensuring that callers get connected with the right level of care when and where they need it the most. Other callers may benefit from a referral to an inpatient or outpatient treatment facility and call centers need the ability to easily identify these resources and connect callers appropriately.

There is a lot of chatter about state preparation for 988. As someone who has worked at a behavioral health crisis center, what do you think states need to consider in order to make 988 work well?

My biggest piece of advice to states is that they shouldn’t try to do everything all at once. The top priority needs to be having staff ready and prepared to answer the phone when it rings. If enough licensed clinicians aren’t available, non-clinical paraprofessionals and/or volunteers can be trained and clinically supervised to do the work. These individuals need to have the passion to help. Sometimes a caller just wants someone on the other end to listen so they can tell their story.

Growing the provider network, incentivizing providers for performance and expanding/enhancing service delivery; as well as securing a continuous funding stream beyond time-limited grants are critical as well.

Having the right technology infrastructure in place seems like a critical step in the implementation process of 988. Why do you think some states are more prepared than others?

When it comes to 988, preparedness is not going to happen overnight. Some states already have a well-defined statewide “no wrong door” behavioral health system, while others are diligently working to identify and add the missing complement of service providers. Regardless of the state’s level of readiness, it’s essential that the technology used to support this initiative be a compliment and not a hinderance to users. When call agents can assign individuals to appropriate care quickly and accurately, clinical efficiency and patient outcomes improve.

Technology can help connect those dots threading the response process together. This is why interoperability is so important. For example, a crisis center employee should not have to go into multiple systems or gather extensive demographic data to help a patient access care. Instead, a native electronic health record system should be able to interface with a technology system. This is why states should seek interoperable solutions such as OpenBeds® for a bed registry and closed loop referral system and, built off the OpenBeds platform, the Crisis Management System for digital intake and assessment, as well as the ability to dispatch mobile crisis teams using GPS-enabled technology to get situational awareness about the availability of treatment resources using digital networks – all within one system.

It’s also worth highlighting that digitizing the crisis care continuum enables us to track how we are doing at connecting people to definitive assessment and treatment in order to drive improvements to the care delivery system. Nobody has a clear-eyed view of the system today, but technology tools are well-poised to help hold all stakeholders accountable to meeting the goals of the 988 initiative. This includes connecting people to definitive behavioral health assessments and treatments and keeping people out of the medical and criminal justice systems. Technology will also help us prevent people from re-entering the crisis care system.

In your opinion, how is Bamboo Health and OpenBeds helping states in terms of 988 readiness?

Bamboo Health has deep experience delivering behavioral health solutions at the state level for over a decade (and working with states in general for over 20 years). With the OpenBeds and Crisis Management solutions specifically, we have launched or are about to launch complementary clinician and public-facing portals to connect providers/consumers to SUD and mental health treatment in 14 states, working with approximately 1,000 treatment providers and several hundred hospitals across these states.

As a result of being deeply embedded in the delivery of behavioral health services at the local level, Bamboo Health and OpenBeds understand firsthand that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to address these community needs. What is unique about our team is that we can help evaluate our customers’ and partners’ pain points. Then, we match technology solutions to not only address their needs but also assist and aid users to make the most informed decisions possible across the individual’s care continuum.

That’s why we are well-positioned to serve as a valuable technology partner to states during their 988 roll out. For starters, we have demonstrable behavioral health experience, and we understand the space from both a physical and mental health perspective. This is evident in our technology offerings and more specifically with our Crisis Management System capabilities, which leverage the foundational OpenBeds platform where referring providers can communicate with receiving providers, see bed availability in real-time, and refer patients to the appropriate level of care.

We have partnered with state government leaders to help them develop plans and infrastructure to support their communities’ adoption of 988 services, along with expert guidance around securing federal funding, to ensure a smooth launch. We also offer ongoing support across a state’s entire 988 ecosystem.

For Additional Information

If you would like to learn more about 988 or how Bamboo Health can help support infrastructure development efforts for the national behavioral health lifeline, please check out our crisis management playbook.

How is Your State Supporting 988 Crisis Response?

With the current state of behavioral health in the U.S., improved crisis response support for patients and providers is crucial. About 1 in 5 U.S. adults experience mental illness and over 26 million individuals with a mental illness go untreated.

The demand for improved collaboration and access to care continues to grow with 988, the new three-digit dialing code for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, launching on July 16. Individuals in crisis will be able to call or text 988 to be immediately connected to trained mental health professionals at over 180 regional centers.

OpenBeds has become a technology partner for several states to ensure they are prepared for the influx of requests through the 988 system in the future.

Our Crisis Management System, a solution through OpenBeds, connects the public, crisis call center professionals, mobile crisis response teams, local law enforcement agencies, hospitals, and treatment providers in real time to help individuals get the help they need quickly. Through this solution, crisis call center professionals can see availability and exact location of local mobile crisis response teams. Crisis call center counselors and providers can also track providers’ bed and appointment inventory and response steps and time stamps of a care event.

Through OpenBeds’ Crisis Management System, crisis call center professionals can assess the risk of the patient. For mild to moderate risk patients, call center counselors can use OpenBeds to find available beds at inpatient or outpatient treatment centers.

Previous technology forced emergency department (ED) providers to bounce between several applications to manually refer patients to behavioral health treatment centers. ED providers had trouble collecting real-time bed availability information for these facilities, such as what types of services were available and if the patient would be able to get the care they needed at the treatment center. This took up valuable time that could be spent caring for the patient and transporting them to the respective treatment center.

Now, with the OpenBeds solution, this time-consuming process has been eliminated for referring providers. OpenBeds allows providers to track real-time bed availability, easily refer patients to treatment facilities, and access referral patterns. With more streamlined care coordination, ED providers can ensure their patients are receiving the best care, leading to improved patient outcomes.

If there is a serious non-life or life-threatening risk to the patient, crisis call center professionals can see the availability and exact location of mobile crisis response teams to dispatch them to the patient’s location. From there, the mobile crisis response team can assess the risk of the patient and use OpenBeds to refer them to a behavioral health treatment center or transfer them to the ED.

Although 988 is being implemented nationally, each state is responsible for creating their own crisis response infrastructure. The federal government allocated $282 million to support the 180 regional crisis call centers, however, states must create their own plans to ensure their 988 program is strong enough to meet demand. The new number is estimated to help 6 million to 12 million individuals in the first year alone.

In addition to OpenBeds and the Crisis Management System, Treatment Connection is a patient-facing online assessment that helps individuals and their loved ones find mental health and substance use disorder (SUD) treatment near them. Treatment Connection can anonymously or non-anonymously refer patients to appropriate treatment centers based on the results from the self-assessment.

Like many other states, Delaware was impacted greatly by the opioid epidemic and experienced the second-highest drug overdose mortality rate in the country. Due to the high demand of behavioral health services, the state turned to OpenBeds for an easy-to-use, all-encompassing patient referral application.

Since the implementation of OpenBeds in October 2018, Delaware became the first state to make 100,000 referrals through the Delaware Treatment and Referral Network.

“This milestone represents a systematic improvement in identifying and treating individuals with substance use disorders. … That is 100,000 times where a pathway to treatment was made available for someone so they didn’t have to end up in the emergency room or worse.”

-Joanna Champney, Director of the Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health

OpenBeds is dedicated to supporting states and their crisis management efforts with OpenBeds, Treatment Connection, and the Crisis Management System through the rollout of 988 and beyond.

To learn more about how OpenBeds can support your state, visit our OpenBeds page.