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Emergency Behavioral Health Services
ALERT #24 ___________________ October 5, 2007 EMERGENCY BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVICES POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR EMERGENCY SERVICES PROGRAMS AND HOSPITAL EMERGENCY DEPARTMENTS FOR MBHP MEMBERS AND UNINSURED CONSUMERS The following information should be communicated immediately to other appropriate staff in your organization. The Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership (MBHP) is the company that manages behavioral health (mental health and substance abuse) services for MassHealth’s Primary Care Clinician (PCC) Plan Members*. Additionally, MBHP is contracted with the Department of Mental Health to manage most of the Emergency Services Programs (ESPs) across the Commonwealth. In that role, MBHP is issuing this Alert to hospital Emergency Departments (EDs), MBHP network providers, and other interested stakeholders in order to provide clarification and guidance relative to the management of behavioral health emergencies in the ED setting. More specifically, this Alert delineates the roles and responsibilities of the Emergency Services Programs (ESPs) and describes an individual’s progression through this system, with a goal of expediting his or her movement through the hospital ED and into acute behavioral health services, as medically necessary. ESPs function as a “safety net” for all citizens of the Commonwealth regardless of age, payer, or ability to pay. It is important to note that the policies and procedures in this Alert applies to those populations for whom the ESPs are contracted with MBHP to serve, which includes MBHP members, MassHealth (non-MCO enrolled) Members, uninsured consumers, and DMH consumers. However, it is also important to note that MassHealth also requires the four Managed Care Organizations (MCOs) contracted with MassHealth to utilize the ESP system for emergency behavioral health services for MassHealth MCO enrolled Members. -
Annual Report of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases Of
TH** •O0«-»iA Public Document No. 117 SECOND ANNUAL EEPOET Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Year ending November 30, 1917. BOSTON: WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS, 32 DERNE street. 1918. Publication of this Document approved by the Supervisor of Administration. TABLE OF CONTENTS. * PAGE Members of the Commission and List of Officers, 5 Letter of Transmission to Governor and Council, 7 Duties of the Commission, ..... 9,10 Activities of the Commission, ..... 10-15 Review of the Year: — All Classes under Care, ..... 16,17 The Insane, ....... 17-23 The Feeble-minded, . 23,24 The Epileptic, ....... 24,25 Report of the Pathologist, ..... 25-54 Reports of Committees on Nursing Service, . 54-61 Out-patient Departments, ..... 61-71 Commitments for Observation and Temporary Care, 71-73 Stability of Service, ...... 74,75 Capacity for Patients, ..... 76-78 Institutions : — Public 79-127 Private, . 127-130 Unlicensed Homes, . 131 Family Care of the Insane, .... 131-134 The Commission: — Proceedings of, . 135 Plans and Specifications, ..... 135 Estimates of State Expenses for 1918: — The Commission, 135, 136 Maintenance Appropriations, 136-138 Special Appropriations, .... 139-142 Financial Statement of Commission, 143, 144 Support Department, ..... 145-148 Deportations, ....... 148, 149 Transfers, ....... 150 Financial Department, . 150 General Matters : — New Legislation, ...... 151-160 Nineteen-year Statement as to Special Appropriations, 160-162 Financial Statistics, ....... 163-201 General Statistics, ....... 203-265 Directors^ of Institutions, ...... 266-278 Index, ......... 279-286 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from Boston Library Consortium IVIember Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/annualreportofma1917mass2 Members of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases. -
2017 Central Texas Runners Guide: Information About Races and Running Clubs in Central Texas Running Clubs Running Clubs Are a Great Way to Stay Motivated to Run
APRIL-JUNE EDITION 2017 Central Texas Runners Guide: Information About Races and Running Clubs in Central Texas Running Clubs Running clubs are a great way to stay motivated to run. Maybe you desire the kind of accountability and camaraderie that can only be found in a group setting, or you are looking for guidance on taking your running to the next level. Maybe you are new to Austin or the running scene in general and just don’t know where to start. Whatever your running goals may be, joining a local running club will help you get there faster and you’re sure to meet some new friends along the way. Visit the club’s website for membership, meeting and event details. Please note: some links may be case sensitive. Austin Beer Run Club Leander Spartans Youth Club Tejas Trails austinbeerrun.club leanderspartans.net tejastrails.com Austin FIT New Braunfels Running Club Texas Iron/Multisport Training austinfit.com uruntexas.com texasiron.net New Braunfels: (830) 626-8786 (512) 731-4766 Austin Front Runners http://goo.gl/vdT3q1 No Excuses Running Texas Thunder Youth Club noexcusesrunning.com texasthundertrackclub.com Austin Runners Club Leander/Cedar Park: (512) 970-6793 austinrunners.org Rogue Running roguerunning.com Trailhead Running Brunch Running Austin: (512) 373-8704 trailheadrunning.com brunchrunning.com/austin Cedar Park: (512) 777-4467 (512) 585-5034 Core Running Company Round Rock Stars Track Club Tri Zones Training corerunningcompany.com Youth track and field program trizones.com San Marcos: (512) 353-2673 goo.gl/dzxRQR Tough Cookies -
Maryland State Trauma Registry Data Dictionary for Adult Patients April 21
Maryland State Trauma Registry Data Dictionary for Adult Patients April 21, 2017 Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Services Systems Richard Alcorta, M.D. F.A.C.E.P. Acting Co-Executive Director Patricia Gainer, J.D., M.P.A. Acting Co-Executive Director Melanie Gertner, B.S. Data Services Carole Mays, R.N., M.S., C.E.N. Trauma and Injury Specialty Care Program Cynthia Wright-Johnson, R.N., M.S.N. EMSC Program Maryland Designated Trauma Centers Trauma Program Managers Susie Burleson, R.N., B.S.N., M.S.N., M.B.A Meritus Medical Center Kari Cheezum, R.N., B.S.N., C.E.N. Peninsula Regional Medical Center Diana Clapp, R.N., C.C.R.N., B.S.N., N.R.P. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Marie Dieter, M.S.N., M.B.A., R.N., C.E.N. Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Jen Fritzeen, M.S.N., R.N. Children's National Medical Center Melissa Meyers, R.N., B.S.N., C.E.N. Suburban Hospital - Johns Hopkins Medicine Dawn Moreland, B.S.N., R.N. Prince George’s Hospital Center Kathy Noll, M.S.N., R.N. Johns Hopkins Hospital Lauren Heinrich Smith, M.S., A.C.N.P. Sinai Hospital Sandy Waak, R.N., C.E.N., T.C.R.N. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Elizabeth Wooster, R.N., B.S.N., M.S., Ms.E.M. Western Maryland Regional Medical Center Susan Ziegfeld, C.C.R.N., M.S.N., C.P.N.P. Johns Hopkins Hospital Special Acknowledgements ` Daniel A. -
Hospital Data Dictionary
HOSPITAL DATA DICTIONARY Texas Department of State Health Services EMS/Trauma Registry July 24, 2001 TABLE OF CONTENTS Definitions ii 2002 Data File Formats iii Respiratory Rate for Trauma Score 12 Revised Trauma Score 13 Sex 2 Patient Demographics Software Identification 31 Main Fields Systolic Blood Pressure 8 (*Shaded fields are required or Systolic Blood Pressure at Scene 21 conditionally required. See page Systolic Blood Pressure for Trauma Score 12 TDH Firm Number (EMS ID#) 24 number referenced for clarification) Time of Arrival 7 (Body Region) Injury Severity 18 Time of Arrival to First Hospital 28 (Body Region) Type of Injury 18 Time of Departure from First Hospital 29 Abbreviated Injury Scale 17 Time of Discharge or Death 15 Alcohol Level 8 Time of Dispatch 24 Alcohol Level Tested 8 Time of Injury 4 Billed Hospital Charges 20 Time of Leaving The Scene 25 Cause of Injury 4 Time of Scene Arrival 25 City of Residence 30 Time of Trauma Team Activation 30 Condition on Discharge 14 Total Reimbursement 20 County of Injury 4 Transfer Status (Is This a Transfer?) 27 County of Residence 5 Trauma Registry Number 1 Date of Arrival 7 Trauma Team Activation 30 Date of Arrival to First Hospital 28 Vehicle Extrication 26 Date of Birth 3 Verbal Response 10 Date of Departure from First Hospital 29 Verbal Response at Scene 22 Date of Discharge or Death 15 Date of Injury 3 Diagnoses 17 32 Diastolic Blood Pressure 8 Research Fields Eye Opening Response 11 Desired Fields 33 Eye Opening Response at Scene 23 Appendices Facility Number 2 Appendix A -Hospitals – see ID Numbers web First Hospital Number 27 Appendix B - EMS Providers -see ID Numbers web Glasgow Coma Score at Admission 11 Appendix C - County Code List………………. -
Directory National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs
NATSAP 2009 Directory National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs NATSAP 2009 DIRECTORY e only bee, th s th at e i m op ak H es “ h o n e y w i t h o u t f l o w e r s , ” - R o b e r t G r e e n I n g e r s o l l Schools and Programs for Young People Experiencing Behavioral, Psychiatric and Learning Diffi culties NATSAP • www.natsap.org • (301) 986-8770 1 NATSAP 2009 Directory NATSAP 2009 Directory TABLE OF CONTENTS Page About NATSAP ............................................................................................3 NATSAP Ethical Principles ..........................................................................4 Program Definitions ......................................................................................5-6 NATSAP Alumni Advisory Council ............................................................10 Questions to Ask Before Making a Final Placement ....................................11-14 Program Listing By Name ............................................................................11-14 Program Directory Listings ...........................................................................16-187 Program Listing By State ...............................................................................................188-192 By Gender ...........................................................................................193-195 By Age ................................................................................................195-199 By Program Type ................................................................................200-202 -
Muffled Voices of the Past: History, Mental Health, and HIPAA
INTERSECT: PERSPECTIVES IN TEXAS PUBLIC HISTORY 27 Muffled Voices of the Past: History, Mental Health, and HIPAA by Todd Richardson As I set out to write this article, I wanted to explore mental health and the devastating toll that mental illness can take on families and communities. Born out of my own personal experiences with my family, I set out to find historical examples of other people who also struggled to find treatment for themselves or for their loved ones. I know that when a family member receives a diagnosis of a chronic mental illness, their life changes drastically. Mental illness affects individuals and their loved ones in a variety of ways and is a grueling experience for all parties involved. When a family member’s mind crumbles, often that person— the brother or father or favorite aunt— is gone forever. Families, left helpless, watch while a person they care for exists in a state of constant anguish. I understood that my experiences were neither new nor unique. As a student of history, I knew that other families’ stories must exist somewhere in the recorded past. By looking back through time, I hoped to shine a light on the history of American mental health policy and perhaps to make the voices of those affected by mental illness heard. Doing so might bring some sense of justice and awareness to the lives of people with mental illness in the present in the same way that history allows other marginalized groups to make their voices heard and reshape the way people perceive the past. -
Texas House Select Committee on Mental Health Interim Report
Interim Report to the 85th Texas Legislature House Select Committee on Mental Health December 2016 HOUSE SELECT COMMITTEE ON MENTAL HEALTH TEXAS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES INTERIM REPORT 2016 A REPORT TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 85TH TEXAS LEGISLATURE FOUR PRICE CHAIRMAN COMMITTEE DIRECTOR SANDRA TALTON Select Committee On Mental Health DecemberJanuary 3,29, 2017 2016 Four Price P.O. Box 2910 Chairman Austin, Texas 78768-2910 The Honorable Joe Straus Speaker, Texas House of Representatives Members of the Texas House of Representatives Texas State Capitol, Rm. 2W.13 Austin, Texas 78701 Dear Mr. Speaker and Fellow Members: The Select Committee on Mental Health of the Eighty-fourth Legislature hereby submits its interim report including recommendations for consideration by the Eighty-fifth Legislature. Respectfully submitted, _______________________ Four Price, Chair ___________________________ ______________________________ Joe Moody, Vice Chair Representative Greg Bonnen ___________________________ ______________________________ Representative Garnet Coleman Representative Sarah Davis ___________________________ ______________________________ Representative Rick Galindo Representative Sergio Munoz ___________________________ ______________________________ Representative Andy Murr Representative Toni Rose ___________________________ ______________________________ Representative Kenneth Sheets Representative Senfronia Thompson ___________________________ ______________________________ Representative Chris Turner Representative James White -
User's Manual
MIEMSS Commercial Ambulance Licensing and Regulation COMMERCIAL—MAIS USER’S MANUAL July 2000 REV. 07/05/00 Table of Contents Page General Form Identification 1 Sample Commercial MAIS form. 2 Section 1 Location, Patient, and Provider Information 3 Section 2 Unit, Crew, Date, Origen and Destination Information 4 Section 3 Documentation of Response Times and Facility Codes 5 Section 4 Vital Signs, Transport Reason, Signs and Symptoms 6 Section 5 Airway/Ventilation, Circulation, and Other 7 Section 6 Care, Skills, Medications and Special Items 9 Section 7 Narrative 10 Appendix A Receiving Facility Codes 11 b GENERAL: FORM IDENTIFICATION MIEMSS RECORD—the TOP COPY is the SCANNABLE document to be submitted to MIEMSS. OFFICIAL COPY–is the legal copy of the record and should be retained at the company level. HOSPITAL COPY–is the copy to be left at the reciving facility. PLEASE DO NOT: Staple, tape, bend, or otherwise mutilate the top copy. This copy is fed through a scanner, stapling, taping, or attaching items such as ECG strips creates a significant problem. 1 2 SECTION 1: LOCATION, PATIENT, AND PROVIDER INFORMATION Response Location Record the location where you picked up the patient. Be as specific as possible. Ex. St. Joseph Hospital, Room 712B or 125 Smith Street, Bowie, MD Destination Record the location where you delivered the patient. Be as specific as possible. Ex. Garrett Memorial Hosp., Room 301 or 765 North Prospect Avenue, Cumberland, MD Patient Name Print the patient’s last name, first name, middle initial. Patient Address Print the patient’s residential address—include street address, city, and zip code. -
Built by Geniuses to Be Run by the Inmates
Bui lt by Geni us es to be Run by the Inmates Introduction This page ( http://www.historicasylums.org/ ) is an attempt to catalog and pre s e nt Ame ri c a's hi s tori c ps yc hi atri c hos pi tals ( s tate hospitals; insane asylums) founded mostly in the latter half of the 19th century. The site gives special emphasis on the facilities built on the "Kirkbride plan", but it is not necessarily limited to the Kirkbride hospitals. The Kirkbride plan and the resulting bui ldi ngs represented great ambiti on on the part of both ps ychi atri c caregi vers and archi tects . Known Ki rkbri de hos pi tals are i ndi cated by a cli ckable Ki rkbri de label Type: Kirkride in the listings. Asylums outside of this scope, such as ones constructed in the 20th century are also included. To some, the asylums of the 19th century represent a darker period in mental health care, with involuntary incarcerati on, barbaric and ineffective treatments, and abuse of patients. However, there is also a legacy of progressive institutional treatment left by Dorothea Dix, Thomas Story Kirkbride, John Galt, and others represented by these buildings and sites. The sites that remain stand in monument to the successes and failures of these reforms and their efforts. The treatments and philosophies seem rather outdated and quant today, but at the time were a considered to be great improvement in the treatment of people perceived in need of psychiatric care. A large proportion of these historic institutions are no longe r ps yc hi atri c hos pi tals . -
Ever Unconventional, Long Controversial | Local/State | the Bulletin Page 1 of 6
Ever unconventional, long controversial | Local/State | The Bulletin Page 1 of 6 Ever unconventional, long controversial The school’s history is a twisted one, involving atypical therapy methods and company mergers, good intentions and success stories, but also cases of what some, including the state, call abuse. The story behind the academy’s closure. By Keith Chu / The Bulletin Published: November 15. 2009 4:00AM PST An era ended when Mount Bachelor Academy closed Nov. 3, following allegations of child abuse by the state Department of Human Services. The private school for troubled teens, located 26 miles east of Prineville, was one of the last of its kind — a school whose methods originated in the Synanon self-help group, which was widely considered a cult by the late 1970s. It’s also a school that counts hundreds, if not thousands, Rob Kerr / The Bulletin file photo of devoted graduates and parents who swear that Mount The academy’s better days ... Many students and Bachelor Academy put their children on the right track, or parents attest to Mount Bachelor Academy’s successes. even saved their lives. In 2003, The Bulletin interviewed 18-year-old Pedro Macias and his mother, Sally, of Mexico City, on And for years, MBA was a flagship of Aspen Education graduation day. The “old” Pedro had been kicked out of Group, a company that grew to become one of the biggest school and had a problem with marijuana. But after his providers of therapeutic, emotional-growth and weight-loss time at the academy, “it’s an incredible change,” his facilities in the U.S. -
Ed 042 007 Institution Spons Agency Pub Date Edrs Price
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 042 007 VT 011 028 TITLE Helping All the Handicapped; The Report of the Massachusetts Vocational Rehabilitation Planning Commission. INSTITUTION Medical Foundation, Inc., Boston, Mass. SPONS AGENCY Oregon State Univ., Corvallis, Div. of Vocational, Adult, and Community Coll. Education.; Rehabilitation Services Administration (DREW), Washington, D.C. PUB DATE 31 Oct 68 NOTE 222p. EDRS PRICE EDRS Price MP-S1.00 HC-S11.20 DESCRIPTORS Disadvantaged Groups, *Handicapped, Job Placement, *Program Planning, State Federal Aid, *State Programs, *Vocational Rehabilitation IDENTIFIERS Massachusetts ABSTRACT This report by the Planning Commission culminates 2 years of public hearings and the investigations of 10 task forces on vocational rehabilitation. A broader definition of the disabled,one which includes the disadvantaged, is gaining acceptance, resulting in the need for expanded rehabilitation programs. This study provides the necessary guidelines for that expansion. Principal recommendations among the 200 made by the Commission include: (1) administrative reorganization at both state and community level, (2) increased services on a regional level through cooperation of qualified agencies, (3) improved placement efforts, including sheltered employment, (4) extension of the architectural barriers board to cover all buildings open to the public, (5) expanded services for the public offender, (6) adjustment to technological change, (7) strengthened research units, and (8) increased male recruitment and training of personnel. (BH) /IN HELPING ALL THE HANDICAPPED THE REPORT OF THE MASSACHUSETTS VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PLANNING COMMISSION ,k. *4- ' iR ci6e, 1,7 LOOM003 THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PLANNING COMMISSION BOSTON, MASS. 02116 His Excellency John A. Volpe October 31, 1968 Governor of the Commonwealth State House Boston, Massachusetts Dear Governor Volpe: On behalf of the members of the Vocational Rehabilitation Planning Commission, appointed in accordance with your Executive Order No.