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NNED – National Network to Eliminate Disparities in Behavioral Health

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News

Partner of the Month – November

October 17, 2024

In order to highlight pockets of excellence across the country, the NNED selects a partner organization to highlight once a month. Native American Health Center has been selected as the NNED Partner of the Month for November in observance of Native American Heritage Month.

Native American Health Center (NAHC) mission is to provide comprehensive services to improve the health and well-being of American Indians, Alaska Natives, and residents of the surrounding communities, with respect to cultural and linguistic differences. NAHC recognizes and respects all people’s cultures, identities, and traditions. NAHC utilize a holistic model of care, which treats each member as a whole person, acknowledging and responding to their physical, emotional, spiritual, and social service needs.

Some of the programs and services that are currently offered:

  • Medical
  • Dental
  • Behavioral Health
  • Women, Infants, Children (WIC)
  • School Based Health Centers
  • Community Wellness

Learn more about Native American Health Center and its mission to provide comprehensive services.

View a list of previous NNED Partners of the Month.

Filed Under: News

Connecting the Dots: Unifying Service Silos to Promote a More Equitable System of Care  

October 14, 2024

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Office of Behavioral Health Equity (OBHE) invites you to join us for a webinar that will explore breaking down service silos to increase service access for people who use drugs and those seeking recovery, particularly in underserved populations. Researchers have been studying the overdose epidemic in New York State since 2017. They surveyed approximately 300 people from rural, urban, and suburban communities on the front lines. Among them are local officials, members of law enforcement, health and other service providers, and people who use drugs and their families. We invite you to hear from them and other experts about their experiences and efforts to bridge care gaps and eliminate barriers to services.

Register Now!

Filed Under: News

Demand for Bilingual Spanish Health Care Services Is Growing — Can Utah Keep Up?

October 14, 2024

Medical facilities are required by federal law to provide free interpreter services by qualified professionals, but most patients prefer having a Spanish-speaking provider who fully comprehends the nuances. Latino Behavioral Health Services, a nonprofit offering mental health services in Spanish and English, reported upwards of a 300% increase in demand since the pandemic. The nonprofit said the need has always been there but that the community is becoming more educated about how and when to seek help.

Alliance Community Services has been at the forefront of connecting the Hispanic community with health and social resources since its founding in 2002. The nonprofit has a number of partnerships across the state, such as the Ventanilla de Salud program with the Mexican Consulate, which offers free or low-cost health screenings, Medicaid enrollment help and other services in Spanish for anyone in the community who is uninsured or underinsured. Lack of health insurance is one of the biggest issues. In fact, 22% of Hispanic Utahns are uninsured compared to only 6% of white Utahns, according to KFF, formerly the Kaiser Family Foundation.

An innovative subscription-based model from the recently launched Vamos! Health could help serve some of that uninsured population along the Wasatch Front. The clinic offers memberships from $60 a month for care from a team of bilingual and culturally fluent providers.

For many providers, fulfilling the Hispanic population’s health care needs goes far beyond simply hiring more Spanish-speaking staff. But training a new generation of health care providers is a yearslong endeavor. In the meantime, Utah has recognized community health workers can fill some of those gaps and create bridges between the health care system and the communities it has historically left behind.

Read more at StateLine.org.

Filed Under: News

Waianae Care Providers Want More Funding For Mental Health Programs

October 11, 2024

Health care providers in Waianae are calling for more resources to expand their services for a community shaken by high rates of gun violence in the last several years.

Government support and funding has remained stagnant for at least a decade while funding for other programs gutted during the 2008 recession have yet to be fully restored, providers said. Meanwhile, community organizations such as local churches have been doing what they can to fill in the gaps.

There have been at least nine murders and manslaughters on the Waianae Coast this year, according to Honolulu Police Department crime data. In the most recent incident over the Labor Day weekend, a man shot five people and killed three before he was shot and killed by a relative of the victims.

The center recently launched a trauma and resilience program to help residents dealing with the mental toll of violence, which includes workshops, individual counseling and group support sessions. The center is seeking $500,000 from the state and city to help support the program, but will continue those services even if the funding doesn’t come through, Executive Vice President Nicholas Hughey said. The center also needs additional financial assistance for its emergency room.

Hale Naau Pono, a community mental health center right down the hill from the comprehensive health center has also struggled financially. It once provided a broad range of services under the state’s Assertive Community Treatment program, targeted at individuals dealing with acute mental health conditions.

Hale Naau Pono has been doing what it can with limited resources. It operates group homes that provide mental health services and assists adolescents in the state’s child welfare system, providing in-home therapy programs and working with children in foster care.

Read more at CivilBeat.org.

Filed Under: News

Biden-Harris Administration Awards More than $1.5 Billion in State and Tribal Opioid Response Grants to Advance the President’s Unity Agenda for the Nation

October 7, 2024

The Biden-Harris Administration, through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), announced more than $1.5 billion in awards for fiscal year 2024 State Opioid Response (SOR), Tribal Opioid Response (TOR) and SOR/TOR Technical Assistance grants. This grant funding is a critical investment in President Biden’s Unity Agenda for the Nation and the HHS Overdose Prevention Strategy, and supports evidence-based, holistic practices that address the overdose crisis through prevention; harm reduction, including naloxone and other opioid overdose reversal medications; treatment, including use of medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD); and recovery supports.

Awards for fiscal year 2024 (FY24) build on efforts to ensure opioid overdose reversal medication saturation across communities, ensuring these medications are in the hands of those most likely to experience or witness an overdose. The FY24 awards have an increased focus on services for transitional aged youth and young adults (ages 16-25 years); expand availability of MOUD in correctional settings; and emphasize the role of services that use a whole-person approach by considering an individual’s physical and mental health needs and their social supports. Additionally, TOR awards increased more than 14.5% over FY23 levels, and include a needs-based supplement to support tribes in counties with a high level of overdoses among Tribal members.

Since their inception in 2018, State and Tribal Opioid Response grants have funded treatment and recovery services for people in need across the country. For example, grantees reported more than 177,000 people received treatment for OUD and more than 56,000 people received treatment for stimulant use disorder between September 30, 2021, and September 29, 2022. During that same period, almost 480,000 people received recovery support services. Awards also support overdose prevention and response, with almost 2.7 million naloxone kits distributed and more than 92,000 reported overdose reversals between April 1, 2022 and March 31, 2023.

Read more at HHS.gov.

Filed Under: News

Black Farmers Face Specific, Outsized Challenges in Rural Mental Health Crisis

October 4, 2024

Farming is a demanding job saddled with stressors like increasingly unpredictable weather, rising input costs and changing commodity prices. On top of those issues, producers of color deal with the impacts of racism, which is linked to mental health conditions like depression and PTSD.

For years, mental health issues have been rising among people living on America’s farms and rural spaces. In Oklahoma, agriculture is a major sector of the economy. There were more than 70,300 farms in 2022, according to the latest Census of Agriculture from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Suicide rates are climbing faster in rural areas. They grew 46% in rural areas compared to about 27% in metro areas from 2000-2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Farmers and ranchers also have higher rates of depression and face barriers to accessing mental health care services, such as traveling longer distances to receive care, affording the costs of services and a shortage of behavioral health providers.

Although Black people often have higher rates of psychological distress than their white counterparts, they are less likely to receive care and get poorer quality of care. In 2018, Black people were also 1.5 times more likely to be uninsured than white people.

For decades, the number of Black producers and the amount of land they own has been sharply declining. One study found Black farmers lost about $326 billion in land wealth and income from 1920-1997. Historic discriminatory practices by the U.S. Department of Agriculture are a factor leading to the loss.

Today, socially disadvantaged producers, especially Black farmers, operate with a higher level of risk and get less government payments, according to a USDA survey. From 2018 to 2020, Black-owned farms were less than a third of the size of operations owned by farmers of other races. Stigma, lack of insurance coverage and travel distance are a few barriers preventing many rural residents from seeking mental health services, according to the Rural Health Information Hub.

Read more at KOSU.org.

Filed Under: News

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The NNED has been a multi-agency funded effort with primary funding by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). It is managed by SAMHSA and the Achieving Behavioral Health Excellence (ABHE) Initiative.
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