• Behavioral Health Screening among Massachusetts Children Receiving Medicaid

      Savageau, Judith A.; Keller, David; Willis, Georgianna; Muhr, Kathleen; Aweh, Gideon; Simons, Jack; Sherwood, Emily (2016-11-01)
      OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of a Massachusetts Medicaid policy change (the Children's Behavioral Health Initiative; CBHI, which required and reimbursed behavioral health [BH] screening with standardized tools at well child visits and developed intensive home- and community-based BH services) on primary care practice examining the relationship of BH screening to subsequent BH service utilization. STUDY DESIGN: Using a repeated cross-sectional design, our 2010 and 2012 Medicaid study populations each included 2000 children/adolescents under the age of 21 years. For each year, the population was randomly selected and stratified into 4 age groups, with 500 members selected per group. Two data sources were used: medical records and Medicaid claims. RESULTS: The CBHI had a large impact on formal BH screening and treatment utilization among children/adolescents enrolled in Medicaid. Screening increased substantially (73%: 2010; 74%: 2012) since the baseline/premandate period (2007) when only 4% of well child visits included a formal screen. BH utilization increased among those formally screened but decreased among those with informal assessments. CONCLUSIONS: CBHI implementation transformed the relationship between primary care and BH services. Changes in regulation and payment resulted in widespread BH screening in Massachusetts primary care practices caring for children/adolescents on Medicaid.
    • Transforming Pediatrics to Support Population Health

      Seifert, Robert W.; Deignan, Hilary (2019-02-05)
      This report for The Connecticut Health Foundation & the Child Health and Development Institute of Connecticut, Inc., compiled by our Health Law & Policy experts, explores how payment reform could support improvements in child health services. Our experts point specifically toward pediatric primary care as a place where this change could take place. They share ideas for redesigning pediatric primary care to play a larger role in the health and well being of families, along with strategies for reform around how this kind of care is funded. Client/Partner: The Child Health and Development Institute of Connecticut