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In FY 2002, the Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS)
announced the availability of $5 million in funding for increasing service
capacity for older persons with mental health needs.
The three overall goals of the program are:
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To increase existing services, or to develop and implement new mental health
prevention, early intervention, and/or treatment services targeted to persons
65 years and older.
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To improve the quality and accessibility of mental health services to older
persons
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To engage in the building of system infrastructure that will support the
increased amount, quality, and accessibility of services to older persons.
Expanded infrastructure can include consensus building among key stakeholders,
community outreach and education, quality improvement activities, social
marketing, the inclusion of consumer and family participation in service
development and evaluation activities, and the building of service linkages
among providers.
There were two groups of awards made.
Group I Awards: Nine
TCE grants were made to help communities provide direct services and to build
the necessary infrastructure to support
expanded services for meeting the diverse mental health needs of older persons.
Each grantee was awarded no more than $400,000 in total costs (direct
and indirect) per year, for up to three years.
Between 10 and 15 percent of the total award was to be used to conduct a
local evaluation of the services expansion program.
The
nine TCE grantees are:
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COTTAGE
Expanded Elder Services Program,
Tucson, AZ
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ElderLynk
Expansion Program,
Kirksville, MO
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Project
Focus, City of
El
Paso,
El Paso, TX
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Senior
Behavioral Health Service Program,
University
of
California,
San Francisco,
San Francisco, CA
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Health
Improvement Program for the Elderly, Jewish Family and Children’s Service of
Southern Arizona, Inc.,
Tucson,
AZ
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Kajsiab
House,
Madison, WI
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La
Clinica del Pueblo, Washington DC
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Tiempo
de Oro, Valle del Sol,
Phoenix, AZ
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Senior
Outreach Program, Unity Health System,
Rochester,
NY
In order to achieve the above program goals, Group I applicants
must build service capacity, using elements from each of the four following
activity areas known to yield sustainable results.
These four capacity expansion activity areas are:
Expand the capacity to implement evidence-based outreach,
prevention, early intervention, and/or treatment services.
Activities include increasing direct services
provision, accurate identification of persons needing treatment through
assessment, increased outreach, staffing, training and cross-training for
staff, and sustainability planning.
Create service linkages between individuals and
groups that serve the targeted population (e.g., mental health providers who
specialize in geriatric mental heath and primary health care providers).
The building of service networks will ensure that outreach, assessment,
prevention, early intervention, and/or treatment will take place within the
target service systems or via linkages to specialty mental health services.
Provide community outreach
to communicate to the larger community the importance of mental health and the
capacity of well-executed preventive, early interventions, and treatments for
older persons with mental health needs.
Community outreach includes consensus building by communities and mental health
organizations for the adoption of evidence-based services.
Conduct program evaluation
to confirm results and to provide program feedback that will serve to enhance
the efficiency and effectiveness of further service expansion efforts. Group I
applicants must engage in local evaluation activities to demonstrate program
outcomes and the quality and completeness of the service implementation.
Group II Award: One cooperative agreement of $
900,000 per year was awarded to implement the
National Technical Assistance Center.
Named the Positive Aging Resource Center (PARC),
the overall mission of the center is
to improve the mental health of older adults by providing assistance in the
implementation and evaluation of innovative and evidence-based practices to
increase the quality of mental health services and to expand access for all
older adults including underserved, rural and ethnically diverse persons and
their families.
The PARC currently works with the nine TCE sites across the
nation to develop a systematic process for transferring knowledge about
research, best practices, and policies to assist in the development and
implementation of evidence-based, culturally competent, and financially
sustainable service programs. The PARC is devoted to educating older adults and
their families about signs and symptoms of mental health conditions, and
providing them with tools to more effectively participate in their own care
through the healthcare system.
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