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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A needs-based method for estimating the behavioral health staff needs of community health centers

TLDR
Estimates suggest that 90% of current health centers could not access mental health services or provide substance abuse services to fully meet patients’ needs in 2010, and this need will be magnified to serve 40 million patients.
Abstract
Background: Federally Qualified Health Centers are expanding to increase access for millions of more Americans with a goal of doubling capacity to serve 40 million people. Health centers provide a lot of behavioral health services but many have difficulty accessing mental health and substance use professionals for their patients. To meet the needs of the underserved and newly insured it is important to better estimate how many behavioral health professionals are needed. Methods: Using health center staffing data and behavioral health service patterns from the 2010 Uniform Data System and the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, we estimated the number of patients likely to need behavioral health care by insurance type, the number of visits likely needed by health center patients annually, and the number of full time equivalent providers needed to serve them. Results: More than 2.5 million patients, 12 or older, with mild or moderate mental illness, and more than 357,000 with substance abuse disorders, may have gone without needed behavioral health services in 2010. This level of need would have required more than 11,600 full time providers. This translates to approximately 0.9 licensed mental health provider FTE, 0.1 FTE psychiatrist, 0.4 FTE other mental health staff, and 0.3 FTE substance abuse provider per 2,500 patients. These estimates suggest that 90% of current centers could not access mental health services or provide substance abuse services to fully meet patients’ needs in 2010. If needs are similar after health center expansion, more than 27,000 full time behavioral health providers will be needed to serve 40 million medical patients, and grantees will need to increase behavioral health staff more than four-fold. Conclusions: More behavioral health is seen in primary care than in any other setting, and health center clients have greater behavioral health needs than typical primary care patients. Most health centers needed additional behavioral health services in 2010, and this need will be magnified to serve 40 million patients. Further testing of these workforce models are needed, but the degree of current underservice suggests that we cannot wait to move on closing the gap.

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References
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TL;DR: Three major aspects of mental health systems—the way they are financed, the configuration of services, and the outcome of services—are discussed, with a view to comparing comprehensive systems with an eye toward reform.
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Access to mental health services: are uninsured children falling behind?

TL;DR: In 1999, compared with insured children, uninsured children had dramatically reduced access to mental health services, and this suggests that recent legislative and market changes may have caused children who remain uninsured to be at a significant disadvantage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implications of a needs-based approach to estimating psychiatric workforce requirements.

TL;DR: It is suggested that only a coordinated, carefully orchestrated effort among national psychiatric organizations will ensure that the future psychiatric workforce is adequate to meet the needs of the mentally ill.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing a CMHC's impact: resident and gatekeeper awareness of center services.

TL;DR: The overall awareness findings generally supported those of other studies and were discussed in light of potential normative levels, methods for conducting surveys of this nature, response rates, and the increasing need to justify existence given the diminishing funding situation.
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If needs are similar after health center expansion, more than 27,000 full time behavioral health providers will be needed to serve 40 million medical patients, and grantees will need to increase behavioral health staff more than four-fold. More behavioral health is seen in primary care than in any other setting, and health center clients have greater behavioral health needs than typical primary care patients.