Orange County NC Website
27 <br />MENTAL HEALTH TASK FORCE REPORT <br />State reports show that those offices are below the state average for getting patients from mental hospitals into <br />community treatment. "They have until the end of the month, or we will be taking action," said Leza Wainwright, a co- <br />director ofthe state mental health division. Administrators in the Wake and Orange offices say more people receive <br />follow-up care in their areas than the records show. <br />The state uses Medicaid spending to track patient care, and that misses people whose treatment is paid for with county <br />money, said Crystal Farrow, head of the Wake mental health office. Wake has been talking with the state for months <br />about getting more accurate counts. <br />"I'm pretty confident that reasonable people will be able to take a look at it and say Wake consumers are seen at least the <br />same rate as consumers across the state," she said. The local administrators said they did not expect their money to be <br />cut at the end of the year because it takes months to collect and evaluate information collected. <br />Connecting patients to community care after they leave hospitals is a key to getting the struggling mental health system <br />to work as envisioned. The effort is stymied by a lack of psychiatrists, a shortage of beds for psychiatric patients at <br />community hospitals and a lack of intensive mental health programs meant to serve the sickest people. <br />A report by a legislative office responsible for evaluating state programs exploded a commonly held assumption that <br />community care helps keep people out of hospitals. The report looked at care given to patients in 2007 who were <br />hospitalized at least once in 2006. People who received community services were more likely to be rehospitalized than <br />those who did not receive ongoing care. <br />Carol Ripple, a program evaluator, said it's likely that the most unstable patients who needed at least one return trip to <br />the hospital were also receiving community treatment. Most of the patients receiving community treatment are in "low- <br />intensity" programs, such as the skill-building program called community support. Only about 54 percent of patients <br />receiving community treatment saw a psychiatrist. <br />The information used to track patient treatment has limitations, Ripple said. One of her recommendations was to have the <br />state mental health division use electronic health records, which could improve care when patients move between <br />hospitals and private providers. <br />25 <br />